Radu Nunweiller

Radu Nunweiller (born 16 November 1944) is a former Romanian central midfield football player and manager.[3]

Radu Nunweiller VI
Personal information
Full name Radu Nunweiller
Date of birth (1944-11-16) 16 November 1944
Place of birth Bucharest, Romania
Position(s) Midfielder
Youth career
1957–1962 Tânarul Dinamovist
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1962–1963 Viitorul Bucureşti 1 (0)
1963–1976 Dinamo Bucureşti 295 (38)
1976–1979 Corvinul Hunedoara 37 (2)
Total 333 (40)
National team
1966–1975 Romania[lower-alpha 1] 42 (2)
Teams managed
1981–1984 FC Martigny-Sports
1984–1987 FC Lausanne-Sport
1987–1988 FC Martigny-Sports
1989–1990 Etoile Carouge FC
1990–1995 CS Chênois
1998 FC Lausanne-Sport
2001–2002 FC Lausanne-Sport
2003 UTA Arad
2003–2006 Yverdon-Sport
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

He spent most of his coaching career in Switzerland.[4] He came from a family with six brothers, the oldest one of them, Constantin was a water polo player and the other five: Dumitru, Ion, Lică, Victor and Eduard were footballers, each of them having at least one spell at Dinamo Bucureşti, they are the reason why the club's nickname is "The Red Dogs".[5][6]

Honours

Player

Dinamo București

Manager

FC Lausanne-Sport
Yverdon-Sport

Notes

  1. Including one appearance for Romania's Olympic team.[1][2]

References

  1. "Radu Nunweiller". European Football. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  2. Radu Nunweiller at National-Football-Teams.com
  3. Radu Nunweiller at WorldFootball.net
  4. http://www.football.ch/sfl/777840/fr/Kader.aspx?pId=0&tId=197027
  5. "Fata primului "câine roșu", cele mai frumoase povești despre Lică Nunweiller și un îndemn pentru ultima etapă: "Tata v-ar fi zis să fiți Un suflet!"" [The girl of the first "red dog", the most beautiful stories about Lica Nunweiller, and an exhortation for the last stage: "Dad would have said be A Soul!"] (in Romanian). premium.gsp.ro. Retrieved 4 October 2017.
  6. "Destinul fratilor Nunweiller, cei care au dat numele de "cainii-rosii". "Nevestele ne-au indepartat"" [The Destiny of the Nunweiller Brothers, who gave the name of "Red Dogs". "The wives separated us"] (in Romanian). cancan.ro. Retrieved 4 October 2017.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.