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CSM Suceava

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CSM Suceava
Full nameClub Sportiv Municipal Suceava
Founded1957; 68 years ago (1957)
Dissolved1997; 28 years ago (1997)
GroundStadionul Areni, Suceava
Capacity12,500
Websitehttp://www.csm-suceava.ro/

CSM Suceava, full name Clubul Sportiv Municipal Suceava, was a sports club from Suceava, Romania. It is notable for its football team which played one season in the Divizia A, the highest Romanian league at that time.[1]

History

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Cetatea Sucevei football team—named after the Medieval Seat Fortress of Suceava—was founded in 1932 and included players such as Lazăr Andrian, Fleghel, Ioanițchi, Cosmovici, N. Scobeniuc, Marcean, A. Scobeniuc, Hariga, Semenov, Cozma, Buliga, Curcă, Schwartz, Curcă, Borosan, Salpeter, and Radu Dan.[2]

Cetatea Sucevei initially competed in the Eastern League Championship, a regional series. Later, the team participated in the Eastern League of Divizia C, the newly formed third division of Romanian football. Initially, the Eastern League of Divizia C was organized into a single group, but it was later expanded into two groups. During their first season in Divizia C, Cetatea Sucevei finished 7th, last in the Eastern League, and achieved 2nd place in Group II of the Eastern League in the 1937–38 season of the third division.[3]

In 1946, after World War II and the rise of the communist regime, Romanian football underwent drastic changes as the new Soviet model was implemented. This model required all sports associations to align with trade unions or governmental institutions. As a result, Cetatea Sucevei was absorbed into CFR Ițcani, a team from a village that later became a neighbourhood of Suceava.[4][5]

In 1950, another team was founded near the abattoir in the village of Burdujeni—which also later became a neighbourhood of Suceava—named Spartac Burdujeni.[6][7]

In the 1953 season, Spartac Burdujeni won the Suceava Regional Championship and qualified for the promotion play-off for Divizia B. However, it finished 5th in Series I, held in Ploiești. Despite this, the second division was expanded starting the following season, and along with the four group winners, an additional eight teams—including Spartac—were promoted to the 1954 Divizia B.

Chronology of names
Name Period
Progresul Suceava 1957–1959
Victoria Suceava 1959–1960
Dinamo Suceava 1960–1964
Viitorul Suceava 1964–1965
Chimia Suceava 1965–1972
CSM Suceava 1972–1993
Bucovina Suceava 1993–1997

CSM Suceava was founded on 19 July 1972,[8] incorporating the sections of football, track and field, rugby, and volleyball. During the years, more sections were added and offered to its members, among them archery, baseball, boxing, Greco-Roman wrestling, handball, ice hockey, rowing, speed skating, and swimming. The current setup includes archery, boxing, ice hockey, rugby, track and field, volleyball, and wrestling.[9]

Being one of the founding sections, the football team rose through the ranks of the Romanian league system before eventually gaining promotion to the Divizia A at the end of the 1986–87 season.[10][11] However, competition there proved to be too strong and relegation back to Divizia B was the logical consequence, a league in which the team played for the rest of its existence.[12] Before the 1993–94 season, the name was changed to Bucovina Suceava, after the name of the region Bukovina.[13]

Bucovina at the end of the 1996–97 season, merged with Foresta Fălticeni, creating the most successful team in the history of Suceava County, the new team being called Foresta Suceava, with the home ground in Suceava, on Stadionul Areni. Bucovina became the second team of Foresta Fălticeni, being called Foresta II Fălticeni, playing his matches on Nada Florilor, Fălticeni.[14]

Honours

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Liga II

Liga III:

Former managers

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References

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  1. ^ "Romania 1987/88". rsssf.org. 24 April 2003. Retrieved 5 September 2015.
  2. ^ "Istoria fotbalului sucevean în imagini și cuvinte" [The history of Suceava football in images and words] (in Romanian). svnews.ro. 4 December 2013. Archived from the original on 2 January 2025. Retrieved 2 January 2025.
  3. ^ "Season 1937-38 - Edition 2". romaniansoccer.ro. Retrieved 2 January 2025.
  4. ^ "Istoria fotbalului sucevean" [The history of football in Suceava] (in Romanian). sportsv.ro. 18 February 2017. Archived from the original on 25 May 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2025.
  5. ^ Mihai Ionescu & George Tudoran, Fotbal de la A la Z – Editura Sport-Turism 1984.
  6. ^ "Amintiri despre echipele de fotbal Spartac și Flamura Roșie Burdujeni" [Memories of the Spartac and Flamura Roșie Burdujeni football teams] (in Romanian). crainou.ro. 19 June 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2025.
  7. ^ "Istoria fotbalului sucevean în imagini – II – echipa anilor 50" [The history of Suceava football in pictures – II – the team of the 50s] (in Romanian). svnews.ro. 17 December 2013. Archived from the original on 2 January 2025. Retrieved 2 January 2025.
  8. ^ "Istoria fotbalului sucevean (VI)" [History of Suceava football (VI)] (in Romanian). svnews.ro. 19 February 2014. Archived from the original on 2 January 2025.
  9. ^ "Clubul Sportiv Municipal Suceava". csm-suceava.ro.
  10. ^ "Goobix: Fotbal: România: Echipe: CSM Suceava". goobix.com.
  11. ^ "CSM Suceava – Istoria meciurilor". romaniansoccer.ro.
  12. ^ "CSM Suceava 1987". Ripensia Sport Magazin. 5 March 2015.
  13. ^ "Istoria fotbalului sucevean în imagini. Anii 80, perioada de glorie a echipei CSM Suceava" [The history of Suceava football in pictures. The 80s, the glory days of the CSM Suceava team] (in Romanian). svnews.ro. 11 May 2014.
  14. ^ "Evoluția denumirilor echipelor de-a lungul anilor" [Evolution of team names over the years] (in Romanian). romaniansoccer.ro. Retrieved 2 September 2020.
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