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FC Dacia Chișinău

Fotbal Club Dacia Chișinău, commonly known as Dacia Chișinău or simply Dacia, was a Moldovan football club based in Chișinău, which last played in the village of Speia, Anenii Noi. They participated in the Divizia Națională, the top division in Moldovan football.

Dacia Chișinău
Full nameFotbal Club Dacia Chișinău
Nickname(s)
  • Galben-albaștrii (The Yellow-Blues)
  • Lupii (The Wolves)
Founded1999; 25 years ago (1999)
Dissolved2018; 6 years ago (2018)
GroundStadionul Dacia
Capacity8,550 (3,300 seats)
2017Divizia Națională, 4th of 10 (withdrew)

The club's name came from Dacia, an ancient civilization which covered parts of modern Moldova. Established in 1999, it entered the Moldovan "A" Division in 2000 and was promoted to the first division two years later. They won their first league title in the 2010–11 season, thereby qualifying for the preliminaries of the UEFA Champions League. The team has also taken part in the Europa League on five occasions, but never reached the group stage. The club was disbanded after the 2017 Moldovan National Division season.[1]

History edit

Early history (1999–2002) edit

FC Dacia was founded in 1999 by Marin Livadaru, Igor Ursachi, Valeriu Plujnic and Alexandru Șcaruba. The team was composed of goalkeeper Ghenadie Gariuc and outfield players including Alexandru Golban, Cornel Popov, Ruslan Rașcu, Serghei Coșciug, Cornel Gafton, Veaceslav Titov, Alexandru Tracalov. The club's initial aim was to compete in the Moldovan "A" Division (second tier). [citation needed] Dacia debuted in this league during the 2000–01 season, while Gabriel Stati took over as president in autumn 2000. The club came 4th in its first season before being promoted to the top-flight Moldovan National Division the following season.

National Division (2002–10) edit

Dacia won their first National Division match 1–0 against Nistru Otaci, and ended the 2002–03 season in 4th with qualification to the Intertoto Cup as a result. Here they defeated the Faeroese club GÍ Gøta and Albanian side Partizani Tirana, against whom they five unanswered goals over the two-legged fixture (2–0 and 3–0). Dacia were subsequently eliminated by Germans Schalke 04, losing both legs (1–0 and 2–1).

Before the 2003–04 season, former Dacia player and second-team coach Emil Caras took over as head coach, leading the side to 5th place in the league and a Moldovan Cup semi-final defeat against fellow Chișinău-based side Zimbru Chișinău. Durfing that cup-run, Dacia recorded the victory in its history, 9–0 against FC Florești.

The 2004–05 season saw Dacia qualify for the UEFA Cup for the first time after a third-place finish in the league. The Wolves also finished as runners-up in the Moldova Cup after a dramatic loss to Nistru Otaci. Dacia were knocked out of the 2005-06 UEFA Cup in the first round against the Swiss Challenge League team FC Vaduz, losing 2–0 away but winning the home leg 1–0 though Vladimir Jăpălău. The subsequent league campaign ended in sixth position, along with defeat in the Moldova Cup semi-finals against Nistru Otaci. However, Dacia was the winner of a friendly tournament named the Turkmenistan President's Cup in February 2006, winning 4–3 in the final and collecting $20,000 US dollars as a prize.

After finishing 4th in the 2006–07 season, Dacia qualified for the 2007 Intertoto Cup, and advanced past the Azerbaijani club Baku FC in the first round via a penalty shoot-out, with Dacia's goalkeeper Mihai Moraru saving. It took another shoot-out in the second round to defeat Swiss club St Gallen. Dacia's third-round opponents were German club Hamburg, whose team of internationals revolving around Dutch playmaker Rafael van der Vaart drew 1–1[2] in Moldova, but won 4–0[3] in the return leg to knock Dacia out. The Yellow Wolves received a high assessment from local experts and Dacia were named the Top Team of 2007 by the Moldova Football Association. [citation needed]

The subsequent 2007–08 league campaign brought Dacia's highest-placed finish as of then, partly due to new vice-president Timur Kuriev who found Russian investors. After the mid-season break, Dacia won five matches in a row to cut their deficit behind holders and league leaders Sheriff Tiraspol to a single point before their encounter on 30 March, which was won by Sheriff. By finishing in second, Dacia made the qualifying rounds of the UEFA Cup and were defeated 4–2 on aggregate by Serbian club Borac Čačak in the first round.

Dacia finished as runners-up to Sheriff again in 2008–09, and also reached their second Moldovan Cup final, which they lost 2–0 to Sheriff on 23 May.[4] During the season, manager Emil Caras moved to FC Tiraspol and was replaced by the Ukrainian Roman Pilipchuk, while at the end of the season Victor Bulat received the People's Choice Award. Dacia started the 2009-10 Europa League in the second qualifying round where they were defeated 3–0 on aggregate by Slovak team MŠK Žilina.

In the 2009–10 season, Dacia were in the third place over the mid-season break, two points off first, but ended the season in 5th. Pilipchuk was replaced as manager by Veaceslav Semionov, and Rustam Polonkoev took over as president. The team made the Moldovan Cup final for the second consecutive season, and were again defeated 2–0 by Sheriff Tiraspol.[5]

League success (2010–2018) edit

Dacia began the 2010–11 season in a Europa League qualifier against Montenegrin club FK Zeta, winning on the away-goals rule after a 1–1 aggregate draw, and were then knocked out 2–0 on aggregate by Swedish team Kalmar FF. The Russian coach Igor Dobrovolskiy was appointed as head coach of Dacia before the league season began. Dacia were the sole unbeaten side in the league by their 17th match, which they lost 3–0 to Sheriff Tiraspol. Following that result, they remained unbeaten for the remaining 22 league games of the season. Dacia won their first, and so far only, Moldovan National Division title in 2010–11, finishing 9 points ahead of runners-up Sheriff and denying the Tiraspol club an eleventh consecutive title.

Also that season, Dacia signed an agreement with the Buiucani sports school to create a reserve team, Dacia Buiucani.

Before the 2011–12 season, Dacia won the revived Moldovan Super Cup against Iskra-Stal Rîbnița, with the only goal of the game coming from new signing Vasili Pavlov. In July 2011, Dacia made their UEFA Champions League debut in the second qualifying round, against Georgian champions Zestafoni. Despite winning the home leg 2–0, Dacia lost 3–0 in the return leg and were eliminated.[6] Dobrovolski was replaced with Igor Negrescu during the league season, and Dacia finished as runners-up as Sheriff regained their title.

Dacia entered the 2012-13 UEFA Europa League in the first qualifying round, where they beat Slovenians Celje 1–0 in each leg.[7] In the second qualifying round, against IF Elfsborg of Sweden, Dacia won the first leg 1–0 before losing the second 2–0 away and were subsequently eliminated.[8]

On 13 March 2018, Dacia announced that they would not be participating in the 2018 Moldovan National Division.[9]

Club rivalries edit

Chișinău Derby edit

Dacia's local rival has always been FC Zimbru Chișinău.

Domestic edit

Season League Moldovan Cup Europe Top goalscorer
Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Name League
2000–01 Divizia "A" 4 30 16 8 6 45 20 56
2001–02 1 30 23 6 1 69 13 75 Round of 16
2002–03 Divizia Națională 4 28 8 8 8 24 28 32 Quarter-finals
2003–04 5 24 9 8 11 26 28 35 Semi-finals IC 3rd round
2004–05 3 28 14 3 11 38 31 45 Runners-up   Serghei Jăpălău 10
2005–06 6 28 7 9 12 28 39 30 Semi-finals UC 1st round
2006–07 4 36 13 16 7 36 30 55 Quarter-finals
2007–08 2 30 19 5 6 60 28 62 Quarter-finals IC 3rd round   Djaba Dvali 13
2008–09 2 30 20 3 7 47 17 63 Runners-up UC 1st round   Ghenadie Orbu 8
2009–10 5 33 16 10 7 54 30 58 Runners-up EL 2nd round   Oleksandr Zgura 12
2010–11 1 39 27 11 1 66 16 92 Semi-finals EL 2nd round   Ghenadie Orbu 22
2011–12 2 33 24 5 4 63 17 77 Semi-finals UCL 2nd round   Vasily Pavlov 12
2012–13 2 33 18 12 3 47 19 66 Quarter-finals EL 2nd round   Ghenadie Orbu 9
2013–14 5 33 18 7 8 68 29 61 Semi-finals EL 2nd round   Miloš Krkotić 14
2014–15 2 24 17 4 3 48 13 55 Runners-up   Petru Leucă 11
2015–16 2 27 20 5 2 44 12 65 Semi-finals EL 2nd round   Serhiy Zahynaylov 11
2016–17 2 30 22 3 5 54 15 69 Quarter-finals EL 1st round   Maksym Feshchuk
  Georgi Sarmov
7
7
2017 4 18 7 5 6 23 26 26 Quarter-finals EL 1st round   Alexandru Pașcenco
  Bratislav Punoševac
4
4

European edit

As of match played 6 July 2017
Competition Pld W D L GF GA GD
UEFA Champions League 2 1 0 1 2 3 –1
UEFA Cup/Europa League 26 8 5 13 20 35 -15
UEFA Intertoto Cup 12 5 3 4 15 12 +3
Total 40 14 8 18 37 50 -13
Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2003 UEFA Intertoto Cup 1R   1–0 4–1 5–1  
2R   Partizani Tirana 2–0 3–0 5–0  
3R   Schalke 04 1–2 0–1 1–3  
2005–06 UEFA Cup 1QR   Vaduz 1–0 0–2 1–2  
2007 UEFA Intertoto Cup 1R   Baku 1–1 1–1 2–2 (3–1 p)  
2R   St. Gallen 0–1 1–0 1–1 (3–0 p)  
3R   Hamburg 1–1 0–4 1–5  
2008–09 UEFA Cup 1QR   Borac Čačak 1–1 1–3 2–4  
2009–10 UEFA Europa League 2QR   MŠK Žilina 0–1 0–3 0–4  
2010–11 UEFA Europa League 1QR   Zeta 0–0 1–1 1–1 (a)  
2QR   Kalmar 0–2 0–0 0–2  
2011–12 UEFA Champions League 2QR   Zestafoni 2–0 0–3 2–3  
2012–13 UEFA Europa League 1QR   Celje 1–0 1–0 2–0  
2QR   Elfsborg 1–0 0–2 1–2  
2013–14 UEFA Europa League 1QR   Teuta Durrës 2–0 1–3 3–3 (a)  
2QR   Chornomorets Odesa 2–1 0–2 2–3  
2015–16 UEFA Europa League 1QR   Renova 4–1 1–0 5–1  
2QR   MŠK Žilina 1–2 2–4 3–6  
2016–17 UEFA Europa League 1QR   Kapaz 0–1 0–0 0–1  
2017–18 UEFA Europa League 1QR   Shkëndija 0–4 0–3 0–7  

Honours edit

Leagues edit

Cups edit

Managers edit

Chairman edit

Name Year's Activity
Gabriel Stati 1999–2010
Adlan Shishhanov 2010–11
Zinaida Jioară 2011–13
Adlan Shishhanov 2013–17

References edit

  1. ^ "FC Dacia Chișinău se desființează. Suporterii intenționează să salveze echipa" (in Romanian). deschide.md. 20 March 2018. from the original on 24 May 2018. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  2. ^ FC Dacia Chișinău – Hamburger SV : 1–1 2015-01-31 at the Wayback Machine Match report from Scorespro.com
  3. ^ Hamburger SV – FC Dacia Chișinău : 4–0 2015-01-31 at the Wayback Machine Match report from Scorespro.com
  4. ^ "Moldova Cup 2008/09". RSSSF. from the original on 2 November 2012. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  5. ^ "Moldova 2009/10". RSSSF. from the original on 19 December 2017. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-04-04. Retrieved 2012-11-22.
  7. ^ uefa.com. "UEFA Europa League 2012/13 - History - Matches – UEFA.com". UEFA.com. from the original on 16 August 2017. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  8. ^ uefa.com. "UEFA Europa League 2012/13 - History - Matches – UEFA.com". UEFA.com. from the original on 16 August 2017. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  9. ^ . fcdacia.md (in Russian). FC Dacia Chișinău. 13 March 2018. Archived from the original on July 2, 2022. Retrieved 19 October 2018.

External links edit

  • (in Romanian, Russian, and English) (archived 1 November 2011)
  • (in Romanian) (archived 23 August 2009)
  • at DiviziaNationala.com (in Romanian) (archived 18 July 2010)

dacia, chișinău, this, article, about, defunct, team, dacia, chișinău, active, club, dacia, buiucani, fotbal, club, dacia, chișinău, commonly, known, dacia, chișinău, simply, dacia, moldovan, football, club, based, chișinău, which, last, played, village, speia. This article is about the defunct team Dacia Chișinău For the active club see Dacia Buiucani Fotbal Club Dacia Chișinău commonly known as Dacia Chișinău or simply Dacia was a Moldovan football club based in Chișinău which last played in the village of Speia Anenii Noi They participated in the Divizia Națională the top division in Moldovan football Dacia ChișinăuFull nameFotbal Club Dacia ChișinăuNickname s Galben albaștrii The Yellow Blues Lupii The Wolves Founded1999 25 years ago 1999 Dissolved2018 6 years ago 2018 GroundStadionul DaciaCapacity8 550 3 300 seats 2017Divizia Națională 4th of 10 withdrew Home coloursAway colours The club s name came from Dacia an ancient civilization which covered parts of modern Moldova Established in 1999 it entered the Moldovan A Division in 2000 and was promoted to the first division two years later They won their first league title in the 2010 11 season thereby qualifying for the preliminaries of the UEFA Champions League The team has also taken part in the Europa League on five occasions but never reached the group stage The club was disbanded after the 2017 Moldovan National Division season 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1999 2002 1 2 National Division 2002 10 1 3 League success 2010 2018 2 Club rivalries 2 1 Chișinău Derby 2 2 Domestic 2 3 European 3 Honours 3 1 Leagues 3 2 Cups 4 Managers 4 1 Chairman 5 References 6 External linksHistory editEarly history 1999 2002 edit FC Dacia was founded in 1999 by Marin Livadaru Igor Ursachi Valeriu Plujnic and Alexandru Șcaruba The team was composed of goalkeeper Ghenadie Gariuc and outfield players including Alexandru Golban Cornel Popov Ruslan Rașcu Serghei Coșciug Cornel Gafton Veaceslav Titov Alexandru Tracalov The club s initial aim was to compete in the Moldovan A Division second tier citation needed Dacia debuted in this league during the 2000 01 season while Gabriel Stati took over as president in autumn 2000 The club came 4th in its first season before being promoted to the top flight Moldovan National Division the following season National Division 2002 10 edit Dacia won their first National Division match 1 0 against Nistru Otaci and ended the 2002 03 season in 4th with qualification to the Intertoto Cup as a result Here they defeated the Faeroese club GI Gota and Albanian side Partizani Tirana against whom they five unanswered goals over the two legged fixture 2 0 and 3 0 Dacia were subsequently eliminated by Germans Schalke 04 losing both legs 1 0 and 2 1 Before the 2003 04 season former Dacia player and second team coach Emil Caras took over as head coach leading the side to 5th place in the league and a Moldovan Cup semi final defeat against fellow Chișinău based side Zimbru Chișinău Durfing that cup run Dacia recorded the victory in its history 9 0 against FC Florești The 2004 05 season saw Dacia qualify for the UEFA Cup for the first time after a third place finish in the league The Wolves also finished as runners up in the Moldova Cup after a dramatic loss to Nistru Otaci Dacia were knocked out of the 2005 06 UEFA Cup in the first round against the Swiss Challenge League team FC Vaduz losing 2 0 away but winning the home leg 1 0 though Vladimir Jăpălău The subsequent league campaign ended in sixth position along with defeat in the Moldova Cup semi finals against Nistru Otaci However Dacia was the winner of a friendly tournament named the Turkmenistan President s Cup in February 2006 winning 4 3 in the final and collecting 20 000 US dollars as a prize After finishing 4th in the 2006 07 season Dacia qualified for the 2007 Intertoto Cup and advanced past the Azerbaijani club Baku FC in the first round via a penalty shoot out with Dacia s goalkeeper Mihai Moraru saving It took another shoot out in the second round to defeat Swiss club St Gallen Dacia s third round opponents were German club Hamburg whose team of internationals revolving around Dutch playmaker Rafael van der Vaart drew 1 1 2 in Moldova but won 4 0 3 in the return leg to knock Dacia out The Yellow Wolves received a high assessment from local experts and Dacia were named the Top Team of 2007 by the Moldova Football Association citation needed The subsequent 2007 08 league campaign brought Dacia s highest placed finish as of then partly due to new vice president Timur Kuriev who found Russian investors After the mid season break Dacia won five matches in a row to cut their deficit behind holders and league leaders Sheriff Tiraspol to a single point before their encounter on 30 March which was won by Sheriff By finishing in second Dacia made the qualifying rounds of the UEFA Cup and were defeated 4 2 on aggregate by Serbian club Borac Cacak in the first round Dacia finished as runners up to Sheriff again in 2008 09 and also reached their second Moldovan Cup final which they lost 2 0 to Sheriff on 23 May 4 During the season manager Emil Caras moved to FC Tiraspol and was replaced by the Ukrainian Roman Pilipchuk while at the end of the season Victor Bulat received the People s Choice Award Dacia started the 2009 10 Europa League in the second qualifying round where they were defeated 3 0 on aggregate by Slovak team MSK Zilina In the 2009 10 season Dacia were in the third place over the mid season break two points off first but ended the season in 5th Pilipchuk was replaced as manager by Veaceslav Semionov and Rustam Polonkoev took over as president The team made the Moldovan Cup final for the second consecutive season and were again defeated 2 0 by Sheriff Tiraspol 5 League success 2010 2018 edit Dacia began the 2010 11 season in a Europa League qualifier against Montenegrin club FK Zeta winning on the away goals rule after a 1 1 aggregate draw and were then knocked out 2 0 on aggregate by Swedish team Kalmar FF The Russian coach Igor Dobrovolskiy was appointed as head coach of Dacia before the league season began Dacia were the sole unbeaten side in the league by their 17th match which they lost 3 0 to Sheriff Tiraspol Following that result they remained unbeaten for the remaining 22 league games of the season Dacia won their first and so far only Moldovan National Division title in 2010 11 finishing 9 points ahead of runners up Sheriff and denying the Tiraspol club an eleventh consecutive title Also that season Dacia signed an agreement with the Buiucani sports school to create a reserve team Dacia Buiucani Before the 2011 12 season Dacia won the revived Moldovan Super Cup against Iskra Stal Ribnița with the only goal of the game coming from new signing Vasili Pavlov In July 2011 Dacia made their UEFA Champions League debut in the second qualifying round against Georgian champions Zestafoni Despite winning the home leg 2 0 Dacia lost 3 0 in the return leg and were eliminated 6 Dobrovolski was replaced with Igor Negrescu during the league season and Dacia finished as runners up as Sheriff regained their title Dacia entered the 2012 13 UEFA Europa League in the first qualifying round where they beat Slovenians Celje 1 0 in each leg 7 In the second qualifying round against IF Elfsborg of Sweden Dacia won the first leg 1 0 before losing the second 2 0 away and were subsequently eliminated 8 On 13 March 2018 Dacia announced that they would not be participating in the 2018 Moldovan National Division 9 Club rivalries editChișinău Derby edit Dacia s local rival has always been FC Zimbru Chișinău Domestic edit Season League Moldovan Cup Europe Top goalscorer Div Pos Pl W D L GS GA P Name League 2000 01 Divizia A 4 30 16 8 6 45 20 56 2001 02 1 30 23 6 1 69 13 75 Round of 16 2002 03 Divizia Națională 4 28 8 8 8 24 28 32 Quarter finals 2003 04 5 24 9 8 11 26 28 35 Semi finals IC 3rd round 2004 05 3 28 14 3 11 38 31 45 Runners up nbsp Serghei Jăpălău 10 2005 06 6 28 7 9 12 28 39 30 Semi finals UC 1st round 2006 07 4 36 13 16 7 36 30 55 Quarter finals 2007 08 2 30 19 5 6 60 28 62 Quarter finals IC 3rd round nbsp Djaba Dvali 13 2008 09 2 30 20 3 7 47 17 63 Runners up UC 1st round nbsp Ghenadie Orbu 8 2009 10 5 33 16 10 7 54 30 58 Runners up EL 2nd round nbsp Oleksandr Zgura 12 2010 11 1 39 27 11 1 66 16 92 Semi finals EL 2nd round nbsp Ghenadie Orbu 22 2011 12 2 33 24 5 4 63 17 77 Semi finals UCL 2nd round nbsp Vasily Pavlov 12 2012 13 2 33 18 12 3 47 19 66 Quarter finals EL 2nd round nbsp Ghenadie Orbu 9 2013 14 5 33 18 7 8 68 29 61 Semi finals EL 2nd round nbsp Milos Krkotic 14 2014 15 2 24 17 4 3 48 13 55 Runners up nbsp Petru Leucă 11 2015 16 2 27 20 5 2 44 12 65 Semi finals EL 2nd round nbsp Serhiy Zahynaylov 11 2016 17 2 30 22 3 5 54 15 69 Quarter finals EL 1st round nbsp Maksym Feshchuk nbsp Georgi Sarmov 7 7 2017 4 18 7 5 6 23 26 26 Quarter finals EL 1st round nbsp Alexandru Pașcenco nbsp Bratislav Punosevac 4 4 European edit As of match played 6 July 2017 Main article FC Dacia Chișinău in European football Competition Pld W D L GF GA GD UEFA Champions League 2 1 0 1 2 3 1 UEFA Cup Europa League 26 8 5 13 20 35 15 UEFA Intertoto Cup 12 5 3 4 15 12 3 Total 40 14 8 18 37 50 13 Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate 2003 UEFA Intertoto Cup 1R nbsp GI 1 0 4 1 5 1 nbsp 2R nbsp Partizani Tirana 2 0 3 0 5 0 nbsp 3R nbsp Schalke 04 1 2 0 1 1 3 nbsp 2005 06 UEFA Cup 1QR nbsp Vaduz 1 0 0 2 1 2 nbsp 2007 UEFA Intertoto Cup 1R nbsp Baku 1 1 1 1 2 2 3 1 p nbsp 2R nbsp St Gallen 0 1 1 0 1 1 3 0 p nbsp 3R nbsp Hamburg 1 1 0 4 1 5 nbsp 2008 09 UEFA Cup 1QR nbsp Borac Cacak 1 1 1 3 2 4 nbsp 2009 10 UEFA Europa League 2QR nbsp MSK Zilina 0 1 0 3 0 4 nbsp 2010 11 UEFA Europa League 1QR nbsp Zeta 0 0 1 1 1 1 a nbsp 2QR nbsp Kalmar 0 2 0 0 0 2 nbsp 2011 12 UEFA Champions League 2QR nbsp Zestafoni 2 0 0 3 2 3 nbsp 2012 13 UEFA Europa League 1QR nbsp Celje 1 0 1 0 2 0 nbsp 2QR nbsp Elfsborg 1 0 0 2 1 2 nbsp 2013 14 UEFA Europa League 1QR nbsp Teuta Durres 2 0 1 3 3 3 a nbsp 2QR nbsp Chornomorets Odesa 2 1 0 2 2 3 nbsp 2015 16 UEFA Europa League 1QR nbsp Renova 4 1 1 0 5 1 nbsp 2QR nbsp MSK Zilina 1 2 2 4 3 6 nbsp 2016 17 UEFA Europa League 1QR nbsp Kapaz 0 1 0 0 0 1 nbsp 2017 18 UEFA Europa League 1QR nbsp Shkendija 0 4 0 3 0 7 nbsp Honours editLeagues edit Divizia Națională Winners 1 2010 11 Runners up 7 2007 08 2008 09 2011 12 2012 13 2014 15 2015 16 2016 17 Divizia A Winners 1 2001 02 Cups edit Cupa Moldovei Runners up 4 2004 05 2008 09 2009 10 2014 15 Supercupa Moldovei Winners 1 2011Managers edit nbsp Igor Ursachi 1999 2003 nbsp Emil Caras 2003 May 3 2008 nbsp Vasile Coșelev caretaker May 3 2008 Oct 2 2008 nbsp Roman Pylypchuk Oct 2 2008 Aug 31 2009 nbsp Sergiu Botnaraș caretaker Sep 1 2009 Dec 10 2009 nbsp Veaceslav Semionov caretaker Dec 23 2009 Jul 5 2010 nbsp Igor Dobrovolski Jul 5 2010 May 7 2012 nbsp Igor Negrescu caretaker May 7 2012 Jun 4 2012 nbsp Igor Dobrovolski Jun 4 2012 Jun 8 2013 nbsp Igor Negrescu Jun 8 2013 Jan 9 2014 nbsp Dejan Vukicevic Jan 9 2014 Nov 2 2014 nbsp Veaceslav Semionov caretaker Nov 2 2014 Jan 20 2015 nbsp Oleg Kubarev Jan 20 2015 Mar 9 2015 nbsp Veaceslav Semionov caretaker Mar 9 2015 Apr 26 2015 nbsp Igor Dobrovolski Apr 26 2015 Aug 4 2015 nbsp Oleg Valeriyovych Bezhenar Aug 4 2015 2017 Chairman edit Name Year s Activity Gabriel Stati 1999 2010 Adlan Shishhanov 2010 11 Zinaida Jioară 2011 13 Adlan Shishhanov 2013 17References edit FC Dacia Chișinău se desființează Suporterii intenționează să salveze echipa in Romanian deschide md 20 March 2018 Archived from the original on 24 May 2018 Retrieved 28 May 2018 FC Dacia Chișinău Hamburger SV 1 1 Archived 2015 01 31 at the Wayback Machine Match report from Scorespro com Hamburger SV FC Dacia Chișinău 4 0 Archived 2015 01 31 at the Wayback Machine Match report from Scorespro com Moldova Cup 2008 09 RSSSF Archived from the original on 2 November 2012 Retrieved 29 August 2017 Moldova 2009 10 RSSSF Archived from the original on 19 December 2017 Retrieved 29 August 2017 UEFA Champions League 2011 12 History Dacia Zestafoni UEFA com Archived from the original on 2015 04 04 Retrieved 2012 11 22 uefa com UEFA Europa League 2012 13 History Matches UEFA com UEFA com Archived from the original on 16 August 2017 Retrieved 29 August 2017 uefa com UEFA Europa League 2012 13 History Matches UEFA com UEFA com Archived from the original on 16 August 2017 Retrieved 29 August 2017 Fcdacia md Oficialnoe zayavlenie Dachiya ne budet uchastvovat v chempionate Moldovy fcdacia md in Russian FC Dacia Chișinău 13 March 2018 Archived from the original on July 2 2022 Retrieved 19 October 2018 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to FC Dacia Chișinău Official site in Romanian Russian and English archived 1 November 2011 Fans website in Romanian archived 23 August 2009 FC Dacia Chișinău at DiviziaNationala com in Romanian archived 18 July 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title FC Dacia Chișinău amp oldid 1219780998, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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