| CS Minaur Baia Mare | |||
|---|---|---|---|
|  | |||
| Full name | Club Sportiv Minaur Baia Mare | ||
| Short name | Minaur | ||
| Founded | 1974 | ||
| Arena | Sala Sporturilor Lascăr Pană | ||
| Capacity | 2,048 seats | ||
| Head coach | Alexandru Sabou | ||
| League | Liga Națională | ||
| 2022–23 | Liga Națională, 2nd of 14 | ||
| Club colours | |||
| 
 | |||
| Website Official site | |||
CS Minaur Baia Mare, commonly known as CS Minaur or simply Minaur, is handball team based in Baia Mare, Maramureș, Romania.


History
| Active departments of CS Minaur Baia Mare | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 
 | 
HC Minaur Baia Mare was founded on May 15, 1974. Thus, it became the first sports club in the country specializing exclusively in handball. Its name means Gold Mine, referring to the gold mines around Baia Mare. From the very beginning, Minaur has been playing exclusively in the first division of the Romanian handball championship. In the beginning, they played in golden jerseys. The first entry to the Romanian Handball Cup was won by Minaur in 1977/1978. In 1978/79, they reached the semi-finals of the EHF Cup Winners' Cup undefeated, with two victories, where they were dismissed by SC Magdeburg. He will be second in the 1979/80 and 1980/81 seasons. In 1980/81, EHF Cup Winners' Cup reached the semi-finals again, where it was eliminated against TuS Nettelstedt. In these years, Minaur is the only rural team from the Romanian league that plays on the international stage, often much more successfully than the Bucharest clubs. In 1985, he achieved the first Romanian international handball success when he defeated the Soviet ZTR Zaporizhzhia in the final of the EHF Cup. Then, in 1988, he repeated the success. 24 years after the foundation, in 1998, the dream of every Baia Mare handball lover came true: HC Minaur became the champion of Romania! A year later, in 1999, the success was repeated, the team became champions again. The team was last champion in 2015. In 1979, 1981 and 1986, Minaur reached the semi-finals of the EHF Cup Winners' Cup.
Crest, colours, supporters
Kit manufacturers
| Period | Kit manufacturer | 
|---|---|
| - 2017 |  Hummel | 
| 2017 - 2018 |  Nike | 
| 2018 - 2019 |  Erima | 
| 2019 - present |  Hummel | 
Kits
| HOME | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|          .png.webp) 2016–17 |            2017-18 |          .png.webp) 2019–20 |          .png.webp) 2020–21 |          .png.webp) 2021–23 | |
| AWAY | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|          .png.webp) 2016–17 |            2017-18 |          .png.webp) 2019–20 |          .png.webp) 2020–21 |          .png.webp) 2021–22 |          .png.webp) 2022–23 | 
| THIRD | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|          2017-18 |           2018–19 |          .png.webp) 2020–21 |          .png.webp) 2021-22 | ||
Team
Current squad
- Squad for the 2023–24 season[1]
|  CS Minaur Baia Mare | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 | ||||
Technical staff
- Head Coach:  Alexandru Gheorghe Sabou Alexandru Gheorghe Sabou
- Fitness Coach:  Raul Nistor Raul Nistor
Transfers
- Transfers for the 2023–24 season
- Joining  
 Hayder Al-Khafadji (GK) (from Hayder Al-Khafadji (GK) (from Hammarby IF) Hammarby IF)
 Gabriel Cumpănici (CB) Gabriel Cumpănici (CB)
 Tudor Botea (LB) Tudor Botea (LB)
 Nikola Ivanović (RB) (from Nikola Ivanović (RB) (from HT Tatran Prešov) HT Tatran Prešov)
- Leaving  
 Călin Mihai Căbuț (LB) Călin Mihai Căbuț (LB)
 Tudor Bogdan Bugulet (RW) Tudor Bogdan Bugulet (RW)
 Gabriel Teca (PV) Gabriel Teca (PV)
 Mihai Dobra (CB) Mihai Dobra (CB)
Accomplishments
Domestic
- Liga Națională:
- Gold: 1998, 1999, 2015
- Silver: 1980, 1981, 1985, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995,2022,2023
- Bronze: 1974, 1975, 1976, 1978, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1996, 1997, 2003, 2004, 2005
 
- Cupa României:
- Winners: 1978, 1983, 1984, 1989, 1999, 2015
- Finalists: 1985, 2023
 
International
- EHF Cup:
- Winners: 1985, 1988
 
- EHF European Cup:
- Runners up: 2022
 
- EHF Cup Winners' Cup:
- Semifinalists: 1979, 1981, 1986
 
European record
EHF Cup and EHF European League
| Season | Round | Club | Home | Away | Aggregate | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1984–85  Winners | 1/16 |  İTÜ Istanbul | 45–17 | 41–23 | 86–40 | 
| 1/8 |  Helsingør IF | 32–25 | 26–19 | 58–44 | |
| 1/4 |  Lokomotíva Trnava | 37–22 | 32–29 | 69–51 | |
| 1/2 |  WAT Margareten | 37–19 | 28–25 | 65–44 | |
| Finals |  SIL Zaporizhzhia | 22–17 | 14–18 | 36–35 | |
| 1987–88  Winners | 1/16 |  HT Tatran Prešov | 32–21 | 26–21 | 58–42 | 
| 1/8 |  HK Drott | 28–18 | 19–29 | 47–47 (a) | |
| 1/4 |  Hellerup IK Copenhagen | 24–16 | 20–25 | 44–41 | |
| 1/2 |  FC Barcelona | 24–22 | 21–22 | 45–44 | |
| Finals |  Granitas Kaunas | 23–20 | 20–21 | 43–41 | 
EHF ranking
- As of 14/07/2022[2]
| Rank | Team | Points | 
|---|---|---|
| 32 |  CD Bidasoa | 155 | 
| 33 |  TBV Lemgo | 150 | 
| 34 |  CS Minaur Baia Mare | 141 | 
| 35 |  Alingsås HK | 139 | 
| 36 |  PAUC Handball | 136 | 
| 37 |  Bjerringbro-Silkeborg Håndbold | 135 | 
| 38 |  BM Logroño La Rioja | 132 | 
Former club members
Notable former players
 Octavian Bizău (2015–2016) Octavian Bizău (2015–2016)
 Ionuț Ciobanu (2019–2021) Ionuț Ciobanu (2019–2021)
 Gheorghe Covaciu (1980–1989) Gheorghe Covaciu (1980–1989)
 Alexandru Csepreghi (2004–2007, 2018–) Alexandru Csepreghi (2004–2007, 2018–)
 Ștefan Birtalan (1967–1970) Ștefan Birtalan (1967–1970)
 Iosif Boroș (1977–1987) Iosif Boroș (1977–1987)
 Viorel Fotache (2007–2015, 2022–) Viorel Fotache (2007–2015, 2022–)
 Valentin Ghionea (2003–2005) Valentin Ghionea (2003–2005)
 Radu Ghiță (2015) Radu Ghiță (2015)
 Petru Pop (1992–1999, 2006–2010, 2011–2012) Petru Pop (1992–1999, 2006–2010, 2011–2012)
 Răzvan Pop (2005–2016, 2017–) Răzvan Pop (2005–2016, 2017–)
 Ionuț Ramba (2015, 2020-2021) Ionuț Ramba (2015, 2020-2021)
 Marius Sadoveac (2014–2016) Marius Sadoveac (2014–2016)
 Alin Șania (2000–2003) Alin Șania (2000–2003)
 Maricel Voinea (1977–1989) Maricel Voinea (1977–1989)
 Gabriel Teca (2021–) Gabriel Teca (2021–)
 Ivan Karačić (2015–2016) Ivan Karačić (2015–2016)
 Ivan Milas (2014–2015) Ivan Milas (2014–2015)
 Anderson Mollino (2021–) Anderson Mollino (2021–)
 José Toledo (2020–2021) José Toledo (2020–2021)
 Patricio Martínez (2014–2015) Patricio Martínez (2014–2015)
 Teo Čorić (2019–2020) Teo Čorić (2019–2020)
 Antonio Pribanić (2015–2016) Antonio Pribanić (2015–2016)
 Tomáš Číp (2019-) Tomáš Číp (2019-)
 Milan Kotrč (2019-) Milan Kotrč (2019-)
 Pierre-Yves Ragot (2017–2018) Pierre-Yves Ragot (2017–2018)
  Nikola Eklemović (2014–2015) Nikola Eklemović (2014–2015)
 Tamás Iváncsik (2015–2016) Tamás Iváncsik (2015–2016)
 Péter Tatai (2014–2016) Péter Tatai (2014–2016)
  Uroš Vilovski (2015–2016, 2018) Uroš Vilovski (2015–2016, 2018)
 Stevan Vujović (2021–) Stevan Vujović (2021–)
 Inal Aflitulin (2015) Inal Aflitulin (2015)
 Cristian Malmagro (2014–2015) Cristian Malmagro (2014–2015)
 Miloš Dragaš (2017-2018) Miloš Dragaš (2017-2018)
  Stefan Vujić (2021-) Stefan Vujić (2021-)
 Artem Kozakevych (2022–) Artem Kozakevych (2022–)
 Vladyslav Ostroushko (2015–2016) Vladyslav Ostroushko (2015–2016)
 Anton Terekhov (2021–) Anton Terekhov (2021–)
References
External links



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