Bogdan Lobonț

(Redirected from Bogdan Lobont)

Bogdan Ionuț Lobonț (Romanian pronunciation: [boɡˈdan joˈnut͡s lobont͡s]; born 18 January 1978) is a Romanian professional football coach and former player[1] who played as a goalkeeper, currently assistant coach at Liga I club Rapid București.

Bogdan Lobonț
Lobonț with Romania in 2014
Personal information
Full nameBogdan Ionuț Lobonț
Date of birth (1978-01-18) 18 January 1978 (age 46)
Place of birthHunedoara, Romania
Height1.84 m (6 ft 0 in)
Position(s)Goalkeeper
Team information
Current team
Rapid București (assistant)
Youth career
1988–1995Corvinul Hunedoara
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1995–1997Corvinul Hunedoara40(0)
1997–1999Rapid București80(0)
2000–2006Ajax49(0)
2002Dinamo București (loan)22(0)
2006–2007Fiorentina17(0)
2007–2010Dinamo București71(0)
2009–2010Roma (loan)2(0)
2010–2018Roma20(0)
Total301(0)
International career
1997–1998Romania U2110(0)
1998–2018Romania86(0)
Managerial career
2018–2019Universitatea Cluj
2019Romania (assistant)
2020–2021Roma (scout)
2021–2022Romania U20
2023–2024Rapid București (GK coach)
2024Rapid București (caretaker)
2024–Rapid București (assistant)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

He amassed 87 appearances for the Romania national team between 1998 and 2018, representing the country in two European Championships.[2] He was popularly nicknamed Pisica ("The Cat") in Romania, due to his quick reflexes and relative small body frame for a goalkeeper.[3]

Club career

Early career

Lobonț began his career with hometown club Corvinul Hunedoara in the Romanian Divizia B.[4] He remained with the team until 1997, when he moved to Divizia A club Rapid București. Lobonț enjoyed success there, winning the 1998–99 league title.[5]

Ajax

In the summer of 2000, Lobonț was transferred by Dutch club AFC Ajax, for a fee of €3 million.[6] Injury and inexperience, however, kept him out of the starting team, and he was loaned to Dinamo București for the remainder 2001–02 season.[7]

Upon his return to Ajax, he became the team's primary goalkeeper. Although Lobonț struggled with occasional injuries, he played well when healthy in both the Eredivisie and the UEFA Champions League.[8]

Fiorentina

In January 2006, Lobonț was sold from Ajax to Italian Serie A club ACF Fiorentina,[9] which needed a goalkeeper after the injury of starting goalkeeper Sébastien Frey. Although he played particularly well, Frey's return meant that he would spend most of the time as a substitute.

Because he had also lost his place on the Romania national team, Lobonț made a surprise move back to Dinamo București in January 2007 and helped the club win the Liga I.[10]

Roma

On 31 August 2009, Italian Serie A team A.S. Roma signed Lobonț in a co-ownership deal from Dinamo, with an option for the club to buy him outright at the end of the season, for a fee of €1.5 million.[11] He made his first appearance for the Giallorossi on 4 October, coming off the bench after 23 minutes in a game against Napoli.[12] On 4 March 2012, he came on against Lazio because of Stekelenburg's red card. Because of starter Maarten Stekelenburg's injury, he was the temporary first goalkeeper in seven matches in the 2011–12 season.[13]

On 1 July 2013, Lobonț signed a new three-year contract with Roma which would keep him at the club until 2016.[14]Even though he had not featured in an Roma match for about four years, in 2016 he extended his contract with the team yet again, making Roma the last team of his playing career.[15]

International career

Lobonț training for Dinamo București in 2007

Lobonț was part of Romania national team's UEFA Euro 2000 and Euro 2008 squads.[2] He turned in a particularly strong performance in Romania's group stage game in Euro 2008 against world champions Italy, saving numerous well-placed shots and keeping his team's tournament hopes alive with a draw of 1–1.[16]

Lobonț played an important part for the national team, earning over 80 caps, starting from 1998. In May 2014, after fifteen years of service, he announced his retirement from the Romania national team, citing his age as an important factor.[17] In September 2017, after coach Christoph Daum's sacking, he was called to be part of the national squad in the final two matches of the World Cup 2018 qualification stage.[18]

He retired from professional football on 5 June 2018, earning his final cap for Romania in a 2–0 friendly win against Finland at the Ilie Oană Stadium in Ploiești.[19]

Career statistics

Club

[20]

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeagueNational CupEuropeOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Corvinul Hunedoara1995–96Divizia B600060
1996–9734000242
Total40000400
Rapid București1997–98Divizia A33010340
1998–99310102010350
1999–00160002000180
Total800204010870
Ajax1999–00Eredivisie000000
2000–0110000010
2001–0200000000
2002–03170306000260
2003–042401070320
2004–057000200090
2005–060000000000
Total4904015000680
Dinamo București (loan)2001–02Divizia A22010230
Fiorentina2005–06Serie A170170
2006–07000000
Total17000170
Dinamo București2006–07Liga I14020160
2007–08320104010380
2008–092500020180
Total710108010810
Roma (loan)2009–10Serie A20001030
Roma2010–1160003010100
2011–1290000090
2012–13501060
2013–14000000
2014–1500000000
2015–1600000000
2016–1700000000
2017–1800000000
Total220104010280
Career total301090310303440

International

[21]

Appearances and goals by national team and year
National teamYearAppsGoals
Romania199810
199950
200080
200130
200230
200390
200470
200580
200660
2007110
2008100
200930
201040
201100
201240
201330
201810
Total860

Managerial statistics

As of 10 May 2024
TeamFromToRecord
GWDLGFGAGDWin %
Universitatea Cluj8 November 201814 June 20191913243913+26068.42
Romania U2010 August 202130 June 20228305827−19037.50
Rapid București (caretaker)16 April 202419 May 202461141013−3016.67
Total33173135753+4051.52

Honours

Rapid București

Ajax

Dinamo București

Roma

Individual

References