Cosmin Olăroiu

Cosmin Aurelian Olăroiu (born 10 June 1969) is a Romanian football manager and former player, who is in charge of UAE Pro League club Sharjah.[1]

Cosmin Olăroiu
Olăroiu during his tenure as manager of Steaua București (2007)
Personal information
Full nameCosmin Aurelian Olăroiu
Date of birth (1969-06-10) 10 June 1969 (age 55)
Place of birthBucharest, Romania
Height1.87 m (6 ft 2 in)
Position(s)Centre back
Team information
Current team
Sharjah (head coach)
Youth career
0000–1988Steaua București
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1988–1989Carpați Nehoiu
1989–1990Gloria Buzău
1990–1991MECON București
1991–1992Girueta București
1992–1995Naţional București80(8)
1995–1997Universitatea Craiova37(2)
1997–2000Suwon Samsung Bluewings98(7)
2000JEF United Ichihara (loan)10(0)
Total225(17)
Managerial career
2001–2002Naţional București
2002Steaua București
2003–2004Naţional București
2005Politehnica Timişoara
2005–2007Steaua București
2007–2009Al-Hilal
2009–2010Al-Sadd
2011–2013Al Ain
2013–2017Shabab Al-Ahli
2014–2015Saudi Arabia
2018–2021Jiangsu Suning
2021–Sharjah
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

As a manager, he guided Steaua București to the Divizia A title and Romanian Supercup both in 2006, and led his side to the semi-finals of the UEFA Cup in the same year.[2]

He is considered one of the greatest managers in the Arabian Peninsula, having led the most decorated clubs of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and United Arab Emirates – Al Hilal, Al Sadd, Al Ain and Al Ahli – to new trophies. In 2020, he guided Jiangsu Suning to their first-ever title in China.

Club career

As a player, Olăroiu's best-known clubs he played for are Universitatea Craiova and Naţional București. However, he also played with success in K League for Suwon Samsung Bluewings where he helped the club to win two K League titles in 1998 and 1999. He also won the Korean League Cup and twice the Super Cup.[2] He finished his playing career with JEF United Ichihara in 2000.

Coaching career

Early years

He started his coaching career during the 2000–01 season at Naţional București, leading them to a respectable 7th place in his first season.[2] During the following season, he guided the club to a second-place finish in the league, finishing above clubs such as Steaua and Rapid București.[3]

In the summer 2002, Olăroiu signed for Steaua București.[4] He resigned after only seven league games, blaming the decision on a lack of support from the board and players. The club president Viorel Păunescu re-appointed Victor Piţurcă, former manager before 2002 who wanted to return to head-coaching and was still highly regarded by the players.[5]

After leaving Steaua București, Olăroiu returned to Național București, this time as a general manager. In 2003, he was named head coach again, replacing Walter Zenga.[6]

In the winter of 2004, Olăroiu joined FCU Poli Timişoara and brought with him the best players from Național București. He led them to a near historical fourth-place finish in Divizia A, but in November 2005 he was sacked by the club's owner Marian Iancu.[2]

Steaua Bucharest

Just some days after, Olăroiu was appointed manager by Gigi Becali, the new president, and this time owner, of Steaua București, to replace Oleh Protasov.[7] His first championship title as coach came in June 2006 and then one month later, he led the club to the conquest of the Supercupa României. In May 2006, Olăroiu's side reached the semi-finals of the 2005–06 UEFA Cup.[8] He also helped Steaua to qualify for the UEFA Champions League group stages,[9] where they played against Dinamo Kiev, Real Madrid and Olympique Lyon.[2] Steaua secured a third place and a spot in the UEFA Cup knockout rounds.[2]

Al-Hilal

Olăroiu in Arabian Gulf

In June 2007, Olăroiu signed for Al-Hilal. In 2008, he again proved his coaching worth, winning the Saudi Premier League and the Crown Prince Cup in his first season in charge. He led his side to a second Crown Prince Cup title before leaving the club in February 2009, while leading them to the first position in the league.[10]

Al-Sadd

In April 2009, he signed a two-year contract with Al-Sadd.[11] In December 2010, Olăroiu announced his resignation as club boss immediately after leading his side to the Qatari Stars Cup.[12]

On 5 May 2011, Olăroiu was named supervisor for Steaua București for the last three matches of Liga I in the 2010–11 season and the 2011 Cupa României Final. Steaua's assistant coach, Gabriel Caramarin took charge of the team as caretaker manager, for the last remaining games.[2]

Al Ain

In the summer of 2011, Cosmin Olăroiu was hired as Al Ain manager on a two-year contract. He steered the club away from the relegation zone, before leading them to the UAE Pro-League title in the 2011–12 season.[13] On 18 September 2012, he also won the UAE Super Cup with Al Ain.[14]

He then repeated the performance the following season, winning a consecutive title for Al Ain.[15] In June 2013, Olăroiu signed a contract extension with Al Ain reportedly worth €4 million a season after penning new two-year deal.[16] However, the contract was terminated on 1 July 2013.

Al Ahli

On 6 July 2013, it was announced that Olăroiu signed a three-year contract with Dubai side Al Ahli.[17] On 30 August, Olăroiu won his first match in charge of Al Ahli against his former club Al Ain in the Super Cup final.[18] In April 2014, Cosmin Olăroiu mathematically won his third consecutive league title as Al Ahli won over arch rivals Al Wasl 2–1.[19] During his first season in charge, Olăroiu won three domestic titles and was awarded as Coach of the Year by the Arabian Gulf League in 2014.[20]

He guided the club to their first AFC Champions League final in 2015, losing 1–0 on aggregate to China's Guangzhou Evergrande.

In the 2016–17 season, Olăroiu became one of the highest paid managers in world football,[21] earning a sum of €6.5 million annually.[22]

Saudi Arabia

On 15 December 2014, it was announced that he will train the Saudi Arabia national football team for 2015 AFC Asian Cup as temporary coach.[23] His first match in charge was a 4–1 loss to Bahrain in a friendly match. Olăroiu's side also lost two next matches, including a 1–0 loss to China in 2015 AFC Asian Cup in Saudi Arabia's first match at the tournament. They won their next match 4–1 against North Korea but lost 3–1 their final match against Uzbekistan and were eliminated in the group stages. The results is a consequence of his not knowing his players well, having only been appointed in a hurriedly temporary agreement. At the end of the tournament, Olăroiu returned to his club position.

Jiangsu Suning

On 28 March 2018, Olăroiu was appointed at Jiangsu Suning in the Chinese Super League, replacing Fabio Capello.[24] He took charge of his first match on 1 April in a home game against Tianjin Teda, which Jiangsu won 2–1.[25]

In his third season, Jiangsu Suning won the Super League title for the first time in the club's history.[26] However, the club folded before the start of 2021 season.

Sharjah

On 10 November 2021, Olăroiu returned to the United Arab Emirates to help an out of form Sharjah stay competitive in the UAE Pro League.[27]

Managerial statistics

As of 8 April 2024
TeamFromToRecord
GWDLGFGAGDWin %
Național București1 January 200130 June 2002462412106437+27052.17
Steaua București1 July 200215 October 2002723265+1028.57
Național București10 September 200331 December 200447229167453+21046.81
Politehnica Timişoara1 January 20057 November 20052916854418+26055.17
Steaua București16 December 200530 June 20077340181511057+53054.79
Al Hilal1 July 200728 February 200956371459330+63066.07
Al Sadd1 January 200924 December 20105933151114264+78055.93
Al Ain7 June 20116 July 2013604371014457+87071.67
Shabab Al Ahli7 July 20132 December 2017142794221252131+121055.63
Saudi Arabia15 December 201431 January 2015410369−3025.00
Jiangsu Suning28 March 201810 February 202189442718166106+60049.44
Sharjah10 November 2021present99502722189124+65050.51
Total7123911821391,289691+598054.92

Honours

Player

Suwon Samsung Bluewings

Manager

Steaua București

Al Hilal

Al Sadd

Al Ain

Shabab Al Ahli

Jiangsu Suning

Sharjah

Individual

References