CSA Steaua București (handball)
CSA Steaua București is a Romanian professional handball club based in Bucharest, Romania. It competes in the Romanian Handball League. They are part of the CSA Steaua sports organization.


Bucuresti
Location of Steaua București
CSA Steaua București clone ale fcsb=steaua | |||
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Full name | Clubul Sportiv al Armatei Steaua București | ||
Nickname(s) | Roș-Albaștrii (The Red and Blues) | ||
Short name | Steaua | ||
Founded | 1949 (in 11 players) 1958 (in 7 players) | ||
Arena | Sala Polivalentă (Capacity: 5,300) Sala Sporturilor Concordia (Capacity: 1,465) | ||
Head coach | Ovidiu Mihăilă | ||
League | Liga Națională | ||
2021–22 | Liga Națională, 5th of 14 | ||
Club colours | |||
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Website Official site |
Active departments of CSA Steaua | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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History
Founded in the late 1940s as part of the CSA Steaua army sports club. The handball section has won a record 28 national championships and 9 Romanian cups. Steaua won two EHF Champions League titles as well as reaching two further finals.
In 2006, they won the EHF Challenge Cup with Vasile Stîngă as their coach. The club played under various names throughout the years for sponsorship reasons.
Their biggest rival is Dinamo Bucharest with whom they contest the Bucharest derby.
Crest, colours, supporters
Naming history
Name | Period |
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ASA București | 1949–1950 |
CCA București | 1950–1961 |
Steaua București | 1961–2006 |
Steaua MFA București | 2006–2010 |
CSA Steaua București | 2010–2015 |
CSA Steaua Alexandrion | 2015–2017 |
CSA Steaua București | 2017–present |
Honours
Domestic competitions | European competitions |
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- Double
- Winners (6): 1980–81, 1984–85, 1989–90, 1999–00, 2000–01, 2007–08
Team
- Squad for the 2022–23 season[1]
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Technical staff
- Head coach:
Ovidiu Mihăilă
- Assistant coach:
Ștefan Laufceac
Transfers
- Transfers for the 2023–24 season
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Former club members
Notable former players
Silviu Băiceanu (1999–2003)
Ciprian Beșta (1991–1994)
Ștefan Birtalan (1970–1985)
Octavian Bizău (2017–2019)
Sebastian Bota (1991–1997)
Alexandru Buligan (1981–1982)
Ionuț Ciobanu (2005–2010, 2021-)
Alexandru Dedu (1991–1996)
Cristian Gațu (1968–1978)
Gheorghe Gruia (1961–1973)
Javier Humet (2018–2020)
Ionuț Iancu (2021–)
Josef Jakob (1963–1971)
Andrei Mihalcea (2018–)
Marius Novanc (2005–2010)
Alin Șania (2005–2009)
Ciprian Șandru (2021–)
Hansi Schmidt (1961–1963)
Tudor Stănescu (2016–)
Marius Stavrositu (2007–2010, 2017-2019)
Vasile Stîngă (1977–1989)
Werner Stöckl (1969–1981)
Marius Szőke (2011–2017)
Radu Voina (1972–1991)
Marin Vegar (2018–2019)
Ivan Matskevich (2015–2017)
João Pedro Silva (2019-2020)
Guilherme Valadão Gama (2019-2020)
Rodrigo Salinas Muñoz (2014-2015)
Nikola Kedžo (2017-2019)
Guillermo Corzo (2014–2015)
Ahmed Khairy (2020-2021)
Mohsen Babasafari (2017-2019)
Alireza Mousavi (2022-)
Nemanja Grbović (2018-2019, 2020-)
Milan Popović (2021-)
Samvel Aslanyan (2017-2021)
Miloš Kostadinović (2016-2018)
Krsto Milošević (2018-)
Stefan Vujić (2017-2019)
Mosbah Sanaï (2020-2021)
Obrad Ivezic (2007-2010)
External links
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