CS Mioveni

{{Short description|Football club in Mioveni, Romania}}

{{distinguish|FC Dacia Pitești}}

{{Infobox football club

| clubname = CS Mioveni

| image = Cs mioveni.png

| upright = 0.8

| alt = CS Mioveni crest

| caption =

| fullname = Clubul Sportiv Mioveni

| nickname = {{nowrap|Galben-verzii (The Yellow and Greens)}}

| short name = Mioveni

| founded = {{Start date and years ago|df=yes|2000|8|15}}
as AS Mioveni 2000

| ground = Orășenesc

| capacity = 10,000{{cite web|url=http://www.csmioveni.ro/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=125&Itemid=114|title=Stadion|trans-title=Stadium|publisher=CS Mioveni|language=Romanian|access-date=18 April 2017|archive-date=19 April 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170419102045/http://www.csmioveni.ro/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=125&Itemid=114|url-status=live}}

| owner = Mioveni Town

| chairman = Vacant

| mgrtitle = Head coach

| manager = Vacant

| league = Liga II

| season = 2024–25

| position = Liga II, 21st of 22 (excluded)

| website ={{URL|https://csmioveni.ro/}}

| current = 2024–25 CS Mioveni season

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Clubul Sportiv Mioveni ({{IPA|ro|ˌklubul sporˈtiv mi.oˈvenʲ}}), commonly known as CS Mioveni or simply Mioveni, was a Romanian professional football club based in Mioveni, Argeș County, that competed in the Liga II.

The team was founded in 2000 as AS Mioveni and began playing the fourth division. The following year, it merged with nearby Dacia Pitești and took its berth in the Divizia C. The club made its first appearance in the top division in the 2007–08 campaign as Dacia Mioveni, and in 2010 settled on the current name of CS Mioveni.

"The Yellow and Greens" played their home matches at the Stadionul Orășenesc, which has a seating capacity of 10,000 persons.

History

{{for|the history of Dacia Pitești|FC Dacia Pitești}}

=First years and ascension (2000–2011)=

The club was founded in 2000 under the name AS Mioveni (Mioveni Sports Association). After one season in the Liga IV, AS Mioveni merged with Dacia Pitești in 2001 and took its place in the Liga III, while the club changed its name to AS Dacia Mioveni, only to change it soon after that to CS Dacia Mioveni (Dacia Mioveni Sports Club).

In its first season of division football, Dacia finished 3rd in the Liga III. The next season however, the team finished top of series IV of the Liga III and therefore, in the summer of 2003 they promoted to the Liga II where they activated for four years without any outstanding performance.

At the end of the 2006–07 season, Dacia Mioveni finished runner-up in the Liga II, Seria II, and promoted for the first time in history to the Liga I.

Dacia's best performance was the only appearance in the Liga I, in the 2007–08 season, when they finished 16th and were relegated. During the same season Dacia Mioveni reached the semi-finals of the Cupa României, being eliminated by CFR Cluj, after an impressive win in the quarterfinals against Dinamo București, with 1–0.

class="wikitable" style="text-align: left" align="right"
style="background:green;color:yellow;border:1px solid yellow;" |Period

! style="background:green;color:yellow;border:1px solid yellow;" |Name

2000–2001

|align=left|AS Mioveni 2000

2001–2010

|align=left|Dacia Mioveni

2010–present

|align=left|CS Mioveni

In the summer of 2010 the club was renamed, CS Mioveni being the new name. The club officials took this decision because Automobile Dacia refused to sponsor the club, instead sponsoring Italian club Udinese Calcio.{{citation needed|reason=The Udinese Calcio deal was made by Renault Italia SpA, the company that actually sells Dacia-badged cars in Italy, it is not clear how that could affect a potential deal from Romania-based Automobile Dacia S.A.|date=June 2018}}

Even if the club had finished the 2010-11 Liga II season on the third position, the club promoted in the Liga I because the second placed FC Bihor Oradea had problems with the licence.{{Cite web |url=http://www.bihon.ro/decizie-frf-dacia-mioveni-a-promovat-baraj-intre-vointa-sibiu-si-sageata-navodari/939553 |title=Decizie FRF: Dacia Mioveni a promovat, baraj intre Vointa Sibiu |date=22 June 2011 |access-date=2011-06-22 |archive-date=2012-03-14 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120314191200/http://www.bihon.ro/decizie-frf-dacia-mioveni-a-promovat-baraj-intre-vointa-sibiu-si-sageata-navodari/939553 |url-status=live }}

=A second league constant and a new promotion (2011–present)=

CS Mioveni relegated again in the Liga II at the end of the 2011–12 edition, after finishing on the bottom of the league, with only 12 points won in 34 rounds. After this season, "the yellow and greens" spent no less than 9 years in the antechamber of the Romanian top-flight, the team from Automobile Dacia's town becoming a classic of the Liga II. Most of the time, Mioveni was too good to relegate in the third tier, but not good enough to promote back in the first division. In these nine years, the club obtain the following rankings: 2nd (2014–15), 3rd (2019–20), 4th (2015–16, 2016–17), 7th (2018–19), 8th (2012–13, 2013–14) and 9th (2017–18).

Mioveni promoted back to the Liga I at the end of the 2020–21 season, when after a ranking on the 3rd place, they won the promotion/relegation play-offs (2–1 on aggregate) against top-flight club FC Hermannstadt.{{Cite news|title=Hermannstadt - CS Mioveni 1-2 » S-a încheiat prima finală pentru Liga 1! "Blestemul" a fost rupt: revine după 9 ani în "A"|url=https://www.gsp.ro/fotbal/liga-1/hermannstadt-cs-mioveni-returul-barajului-633231.html|publisher=gsp.ro|date=2 June 2021|access-date=14 June 2021|archive-date=3 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210603052521/https://www.gsp.ro/fotbal/liga-1/hermannstadt-cs-mioveni-returul-barajului-633231.html|url-status=live}}

Ground

{{mainarticle|Stadionul Orășenesc (Mioveni)}}

CS Mioveni plays its home games on Stadionul Orășenesc, a 10,000-seat arena, in downtown Mioveni. Between 2013 and 2015 the stadium was renovated and "the yellow and greens" played their home matches on Nicolae Dobrin Stadium in Pitești. Second team of the club, CS Mioveni II, also used to play its home matches on Colibași Stadium, stadium used also by the first team as a training ground.

Support

CS Mioveni has never had many supporters in Argeș County, most of the public opting for much more familiar and successful FC Argeș. Over the time the club had sporadically an organized group of supporters, especially between 2006 and 2011, when the club was in the Liga I, twice and important rivalries with FC Argeș were born.

=Rivalries=

CS Mioveni does not have many important rivalries, the only important one is against FC Argeș Pitești, commonly known as Argeș Derby or the Derby of Argeș. In the past, Mioveni had also a local rivalry against Internațional Curtea de Argeș.

Honours

=Domestic=

==Leagues==

==Other performances==

Notable former players

The footballers enlisted below have had international cap(s) for their respective countries at junior and/or senior level and/or significant caps for CS Mioveni.

{{For|a list of all former and current CS Mioveni players with a Wikipedia article|Category:CS Mioveni players}}

;Romania

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;Brazil

;Central African Republic

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Notable former managers

{{For|a list of all former and current CS Mioveni managers with a Wikipedia article|Category:CS Mioveni managers}}

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{{div col end}}

League history

{{col-begin}}

{{col-2}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%"

! Season

TierDivisionPlaceCupa României
2024–252Liga IIalign=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC| 21st (R)Third round
2023–242Liga II5thPlay-off round
2022–231Liga Ialign=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC| 16th (R)Quarter-finals
2021–221Liga I12thRound of 32
2020–212Liga IIalign=center bgcolor=#BF8D5B| 3rd (P)Fourth Round
2019–202Liga IIalign=center bgcolor=#BF8D5B| 3rdRound of 16
2018–192Liga II7thRound of 16
2017–182Liga II9thRound of 16
2016–172Liga II4thQuarter-finals
2015–162Liga II (Seria II)4thRound of 32
2014–152Liga II (Seria II)align=center bgcolor=silver| 2ndQuarter-finals
2013–142Liga II (Seria II)8thFourth Round
2012–132Liga II (Seria II)8thRound of 32

{{col-2}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%"

! Season

TierDivisionPlaceCupa României
2011–121Liga Ialign=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC| 18th (R)Round of 32
2010–112Liga II (Seria II)align=center bgcolor=#BF8D5B| 3rd (P)Fourth Round
2009–102Liga II (Seria II)align=center bgcolor=#BF8D5B| 3rdRound of 32
2008–092Liga II (Seria II)6thRound of 32
2007–081Liga Ialign=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC| 16th (R)Semi-finals
2006–072Liga II (Seria II)align=center bgcolor=silver| 2nd (P)
2005–062Divizia B (Seria II)8th
2004–052Divizia B (Seria II)7th
2003–042Divizia B (Seria II)align=center bgcolor=bronze| 3rdRound of 32
2002–033Divizia C (Seria IV)align=center bgcolor=gold| 1st (C, P)
2001–023Divizia Calign=center bgcolor=bronze|3rd
2000–013Divizia C6th

{{col-end}}

References

{{Reflist}}