Resultados

Roménia - Liga III 05/19 15:00 9 Steaua de Bucareste II v Unirea Bascov L 1-3
Roménia - Liga III 05/13 15:00 8 CS Dinamo Bucuresti v Steaua de Bucareste II L 1-0
Roménia - Liga III 05/05 15:00 7 [4] FCSB II v Muscelul Câmpulung [5] L 0-1
Roménia - Liga III 05/02 15:00 6 [4] FC Pucioasa v FCSB II [3] L 1-0
Roménia - Liga III 04/21 14:00 4 [2] Unirea Bascov v FCSB II [3] D 0-0
Roménia - Liga III 04/14 14:00 3 [2] FCSB II v CS Dinamo Bucuresti [1] L 2-4
Roménia - Liga III 04/07 14:00 2 Muscelul Câmpulung v FCSB II W 1-3
Roménia - Liga III 03/31 12:00 1 FCSB II v FC Pucioasa L 1-4
Roménia - Liga III 03/18 13:00 17 CSM Flacara Moreni v FCSB II W 0-2
Roménia - Liga III 03/10 13:00 16 FCSB II v Unirea Bascov D 1-1
Roménia - Liga III 12/03 12:00 15 CS Tunari v FCSB II L 6-2
Roménia - Liga III 11/25 12:00 14 FCSB II v CS Dinamo Bucuresti L 2-3

Estat.

 TotalCasaVisitante
Partidas disputadas 5 2 3
Wins 0 0 0
Draws 1 0 1
Losses 4 2 2
Goals for 1 1 0
Goals against 6 4 2
Clean sheets 1 0 1
Failed to score 4 1 3

Wikipedia - FCSB II

Fotbal Club FCSB II (Romanian pronunciation: [fet͡ʃeseˌbe]), commonly known as FCSB II was a Romanian football club from Bucharest. The team was founded in 1982 as Steaua Mizil when Colonel Victor Stănculescu received an order from the Minister of Defense to establish a satellite team for Steaua Bucharest, dissolved in 1997 and refounded in 2004 and in 2016. It was the reserve team of FCSB.

History

1982–1997: Steaua Mizil

In 1982, when Colonel Victor Stănculescu received an order from the Minister of Defense to establish a satellite team for Steaua Bucharest. Tică Danilescu was chosen by Victor Stănculescu to be the creator and the man who will take care of the second team and the star academy. The conditions were extraordinary at Mizil. Rapid Mizil would merge with ICIM Ploiești, taking over from it players and the place in the third division, the 1982-83 edition, where it was active. At the end of the next edition of the championship, 1983-84, Steua Mizil promoted to Division B, after an extremely close match with Chimia Brazi. In the first edition, 1984-85, he participated under the name A.S. Mizil, which then changed and became the Steaua Mizil. This team had the same logo as the Steaua Bucharest club.

This club-satellite relationship meant that juniors from the teams of Steaua Bucharest arrived at Mizil year after year for the experience they could get from the tough competition of the Divizia B. At the end of the 1996-97 championship edition, the team was relegated to the third league and disbanding.

2004–present: FCSB II

The team was founded in 2004 under the name Steaua II București to train younger players. In 2009, it was promoted to Liga II and spent two seasons there, finishing 13th and 14th respectively, before being disbanded. It reappeared in 2016, and was admitted to Liga III to fill the places left unoccupied by the county champions who won the play-off matches and were unable to join the league. The team does not have the right to promotion.

O Steaua de Bucareste II é um clube de futebol romeno com sede em Bucareste. Foi fundado em 1947 como equipe reserva do Steaua de Bucareste e atualmente joga na Liga II, a segunda divisão do futebol romeno.

O Steaua de Bucareste II manda seus jogos no estádio Stadionul Steaua, com capacidade para 30.586 espectadores. O estádio foi inaugurado em 1974 e é conhecido por sua atmosfera eletrizante.

O Steaua de Bucareste II tem uma longa e rica história, tendo conquistado vários títulos ao longo dos anos. O clube venceu a Liga II três vezes, em 1979, 1984 e 1988. Também venceu a Copa da Romênia duas vezes, em 1971 e 1986.

O Steaua de Bucareste II é um clube muito popular na Romênia e tem uma grande torcida. O clube é conhecido por seu estilo de jogo ofensivo e por sua capacidade de produzir grandes jogadores.

Alguns dos jogadores mais famosos que já jogaram pelo Steaua de Bucareste II incluem Gheorghe Hagi, Marius Lăcătuș, Dan Petrescu e Adrian Ilie.