Sepsi OSK Sfântu Gheorghe explained

Clubname:Sepsi OSK
Upright:0.72
Fullname:Asociația Club Sportiv Sepsi OSK Sfântu Gheorghe[1]
Short Name:Sepsi
Ground:Sepsi Arena
Capacity:8,400
Owner:László Diószegi
Chairman:Attila Hadnagy
Mgrtitle:Head coach
Manager:Bernd Storck
League:Liga I
Season:2023–24
Position:Liga I, 5th of 16
Website:http://sepsiosk.ro/index.php/hu/
Current:2024–25 Sepsi OSK Sfântu Gheorghe season
Pattern La1:_sepsi2425h
Pattern B1:_sepsi2425h
Pattern Ra1:_sepsi2425h
Pattern Sh1:_sepsi2425h
Pattern So1:_color_3_stripes_white
Leftarm1:EF0000
Body1:EF0000
Rightarm1:EF0000
Shorts1:EF0000
Socks1:EF0000
Pattern La2:_sepsi2425a
Pattern B2:_sepsi2425a
Pattern Ra2:_sepsi2425a
Pattern Sh2:_sepsi2425a
Pattern So2:_color_3_stripes_red
Leftarm2:FFFFFF
Body2:FFFFFF
Rightarm2:FFFFFF
Shorts2:FFFFFF
Socks2:FFFFFF
Pattern B3:_adidasicon23cm
Pattern Sh3:_adidastirom23b
Leftarm3:7FFED1
Rightarm3:7FFED1
Shorts3:000000
Socks3:7FFED1

Asociația Club Sportiv Sepsi OSK Sfântu Gheorghe, commonly known as Sepsi OSK (in Hungarian ˈʃɛpʃi ˈoɛʃkaː/), Sepsi Sfântu Gheorghe (in Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan ˈsepsi ˈsfɨntu ˈɡe̯orɡe/), or simply Sepsi, is a Romanian professional football club based in Sfântu Gheorghe, Covasna County, that competes in the Liga I.

Founded in 2011, it achieved promotion to the top tier in six years by quickly climbing through the Romanian league system. Sepsi thus became the first team from Covasna—a county with a majority of Székely ethnics—to play in the Liga I. Since its promotion, it qualified for three Cupa României finals, claiming the trophy in the 2021–22 and 2022–23 seasons. As cup holders, Sepsi also participated in the 2022 and the 2023 Supercupa României, winning both.

Sepsi's club colours are red and white in honour of the local football tradition. After playing during its first years at the Municipal Stadium in Sfântu Gheorghe, the squad was moved to the namesake Sepsi Arena Stadium in 2021.

History

Formation and ascent (2011–2017)

László Diószegi and Dávid Kertész decided to start a new football club in the summer of 2011.[2] They picked the red and white colors to honor the football traditions of Sfântu Gheorghe and chose the name OSK as an acronym reminiscent of the defunct Olt Sport Klub.[2] They wanted the name of the city to be also included in the club's name, so they chose the prefix Sepsi form Sepsiszentgyörgy, which is the Hungarian name of the city.[2] In order to be able to enroll to Liga V they signed a collaboration agreement with Clubul Sportiv Școlar from Sfântu Gheorghe and formed a junior team.[2]

In their debut season, they won the Liga V competition of Covasna County and were promoted to Liga IV.[2] They finished second in their first Liga IV season, eight points behind local Viitorul Sfântu Gheorghe.[3] Valentin Suciu—who would eventually guide them to Liga I—was appointed manager in 2013.[4] At the end of the 2013–14 campaign, Sepsi OSK effortlessly won the Liga IV competition of Covasna County and qualified for the Liga III promotion play-off,[5] where they faced the champion of Vrancea County, Selena Jariștea. Following a 1–1 draw after extra time, they won 6–5 on penalties, being subsequently promoted to the third division.[6]

After a satisfying third place in the 2014–15 Liga III, promotion to Liga II was set as the objective for the next season.[2] They won the 2015–16 Liga III and were promoted, which represented a notable performance for the team at the time.[7] In the summer of 2016, Attila Hadnagy joined the team and became its captain. As he scored 28 goals in 31 games, the unexpected happened in the season which followed. They finished second in the 2016–17 Liga II and were promoted to Liga I, the top tier of the Romanian football league system.[8] [9]

Top league years (2017–present)

As a last step in becoming fully professional in 2017, the club started a series of investments into infrastructure which included the creation of training grounds for its youth center and building a UEFA Category 4 stadium. In the years which followed the promotion, Sepsi OSK managed to stay in the Liga I, qualifying for the first time to the championship play-offs in the 2018–19 season.

In the summer of 2020, Sepsi reached the Cupa României final for the first time, but lost it 0–1 to FCSB at the Ilie Oană Stadium in Ploiești. On their route to the last game of the competition, Sepsi eliminated Ripensia Timișoara, Astra Giurgiu, Petrolul Ploiești and Politehnica Iași; in all but one of the five matches "the Székelys" scored at least three goals.

In the 2020–21 season, Sepsi entered the championship play-offs for the second time in their history. They finished fourth place and went on to defeat Viitorul Constanța 1–0 in the European play-offs, which meant they would take part for the first time in European competitions. Sepsi was drawn against Slovakian side Spartak Trnava in the second round of the UEFA Conference League, but were eliminated due to a 3–4 penalty shoot-out loss after two draws.

The club secured a European spot again at the end of the 2021–22 campaign by winning the Cupa României final—left midfielder Marius Ștefănescu scored a double to bring Sepsi a 2–1 win over Voluntari at the Stadionul Rapid-Giulești in Bucharest.[10] The club went on to win the 2022 Supercupa României with the same score against league champions CFR Cluj.

On 24 May 2023, Sepsi claimed its second consecutive national cup after a 5–4 penalty shoot-out defeat of Universitatea Cluj at the Stadionul Municipal in Sibiu, with goalkeeper Roland Niczuly saving three penalty shots.[11] The club also repeated its performance in the Supercupa României, winning the 2023 edition 1–0 against Farul Constanța.

Ownership and finances

Co-founder and present owner László Diószegi is an entrepreneur who runs the Diószegi chain of bakeries. After starting with a bakery shop opened in Sfântu Gheorghe by his family and another associate in the 1990s, the business grew to sell bakery products through several shops in Romania and England.[12]

In comparison to other Liga I teams at the end of 2019, Sepsi OSK stood out with by far the highest revenue obtained from corporate sponsorship deals and having the least debt.[13] Some of the companies that have or had sponsorship deals with Sepsi OSK include Hungarian firms Gyermelyi, OTP Bank and MOL.

Sepsi OSK was granted in total 2 billion Hungarian forints between 2017 and 2018 by the Hungarian government to be used for developing club infrastructure, thus contributing with approximately €6 million to build a youth center and the new stadium.[14]

Grounds

Municipal Stadium

Sepsi OSK holds its home games at the Municipal Stadium in Sfântu Gheorghe. Located in the Simeria neighbourhood, it has a capacity of 5,200 seats. After the Liga I promotion of Sepsi OSK the Municipal Stadium did not meet the Liga I licensing requirements. As a result, Sepsi OSK was forced to hold all of its autumn 2017 home games at the Silviu Ploeșteanu Stadium in Brașov[15] and the first two 2018 home games at the Ilie Oană Stadium in Ploiești.[16]

Meanwhile, the structure of the stand was fortified to support TV-radio cabins in 2017. Also the seating capacity was increased the same year with 1,500 seats donated to Sepsi OSK from the demolished Ferenc Puskás Stadium.[17] The old floodlight system of DAC was also donated to Sepsi OSK and installed in the stadium in 2018.[18] As a result, Sepsi OSK was able to play its first ever Liga I game in Sfântu Gheorghe on 19 March 2018.[19] Ownership of the stadium was transferred from the Romanian Ministry of Youth and Sport to the City Council of Sfântu Gheorghe in 2019.[20]

Sepsi OSK Stadium

The construction of a new UEFA Category 4 stadium with a capacity of 8,450 seats was started on a lot near Sepsi Arena in the summer of 2018.[21] The new Sepsi OSK Stadium was opened with a league match against FC Voluntari in 2021.[22]

Support

Being the first team from Covasna County—a county with a majority of ethnic Szeklers/Hungarians—to achieve promotion to the top tier of Romanian football, Sepsi OSK is widely supported among Hungarians. In the 2018–19 season home game attendance fluctuated between 2,000 and 3,500, with an average of 2,682 spectators per game.

The only known organised supporter group of the club is named Székely Légió which is Hungarian for "Szekler Legion". The group traces its origins to the supporters of the defunct Olt Sport Klub from the 1970s.[23] Members of the group are known for showing their support for Sepsi OSK through singing before, during and after the game regardless of the result.[23]

Honours

Domestic

Leagues

Cups

Players

First-team squad

[24] [25]

Out on loan

Club officials

Board of directors

RoleName
Owner and president László Diószegi
Vice-president Dávid Kertész
General Director Attila Hadnagy
Technical director Gyula Berecz
Head of Youth Center Development Lóránt Veress
Youth Center Director Valentin Suciu
Organizer of Competitions Attila Czine
Delegate Endre Mátyás
Head of Order and Safety Pál Huszti
Press Officer Edit Kiss
Head of Secretary Elvira Török

Current technical staff

RoleName
Head coach Bernd Storck
Assistant coaches Mátyás Czuczi
László Kulcsár
Goalkeeping coach Cornel Cernea
Video Analyst Ákos Kertész
Fitness coaches Bogdan Aldea
Ervin Fodor
Club doctor Gheorghe Popa
Kinetotherapist Victor Grigoraș
Masseurs Cătălin Gheța
Leonard Silișteanu
Storeman Attila Nistor

Records and statistics

League and cup history

Season Tier Division Place Cupa României
1 TBD align=center
1 Liga I 5th align=center Group Stage
1 Liga I 6th align=center bgcolor=goldWinners
1 Liga I 7th align=center bgcolor=goldWinners
1 Liga I 4th Round of 32
1 Liga I 9th bgcolor=silverFinal
1 Liga I 6th Quarter-finals
Season Tier Division Place Cupa României
1 9th Round of 32
2 Liga II align=center bgcolor=silver2nd (P) Round of 32
3 Liga III (Seria I) align=center bgcolor=gold1st (P) Third Round
3 Liga III (Seria I) align=center bgcolor=bronze3rd Third Round
4 Liga IV (CV) align=center bgcolor=gold1st (P)
4 Liga IV (CV) align=center bgcolor=silver2nd
2011–12 5 Liga V (CV) align=center bgcolor=gold1st (P)

European record

Notes:
SeasonCompetitionRoundClubHomeAwayAgg.
2021–22UEFA Europa Conference League2QR Spartak Trnava1–1 0–01–1
2022–23UEFA Europa Conference League2QR Olimpija Ljubljana3–10–2 3–3
3QR Djurgårdens1–31–32–6
2023–24UEFA Europa Conference League2QR CSKA Sofia4–02–06–0
3QR Aktobe1−11−02−1
PO Bodø/Glimt2−22−3 4−5

Player records

Bold indicates players who play still at the club.

Most appearances

RankPlayerYearsLeagueCupEuropeOtherTotal
1 Roland Niczuly2016–24620123281
2 Marius Ștefănescu2017–20241602093192
3 Adnan Aganović2020–202413013113157
4 Pavol Šafranko2019–2021,2022–20241331462155
5 Radoslav Dimitrov2019–20231141362135
6 Branislav Niňaj2021–112982131
7 Nicolae Păun2019–9912123126
8 Florin Ștefan2018–2021,2023–1141000124
Gabriel Vașvari2018–20221101121
10 Andres Dumitrescu 2020–2023,202483992103

Top scorers

RankPlayerYearsLeagueCupEurope OtherTotal
1 Marius Ștefănescu2017–20243151037
2 Attila Hadnagy2016–20193300033
3 Pavol Šafranko2019–2021,2022–20243020032
4 Alexandru Tudorie2022–20231811020
5 Cosmin Matei2022–1233119
6 István Fülöp2017–20221620018
7 Ibrahima Tandia2018–20191600016
Gabriel Vașvari2018–2022
9 Adnan Aganovic2020–20241201114
10 Goran Karanović2019–2020940013
Nicolae Păun2019–8230
Mario Rondón2022–202410201

Managers

Listed according to when they were appointed manager of Sepsi OSK. (C) means caretaker.

Notable former players

The footballers enlisted below have had at least 50 league appearances for Sepsi OSK or they have had international cap(s) for their respective countries at senior level and at least 20 league appearances for Sepsi OSK.

Romania
Algeria
Argentina
Bulgaria
Croatia
Guinea
Hungary
Ivory Coast
Mali
Moldova
Netherlands
North Macedonia
Philippines
Slovakia
Spain
Sudan
Switzerland
Venezuela

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ACS Sepsi OSK Sfântu Gheorghe. Romanian Football Federation. ro. 4 August 2021.
  2. Web site: Sepsi OSK – Istorie scrisă în șase ani . 2 January 2021 . ro . Sepsi OSK – History written in six years.
  3. Web site: Liga a IV-a, Seniori, sezon 2012/2013 Asociatia Judeteana de Fotbal Covasna frf-ajf.ro. Romanian Football Federation. ro. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20181023081823/http://www.frf-ajf.ro/covasna/competitii-fotbal/liga-a-iv-a-seniori-1004.html. 23 October 2018.
  4. News: Măcicășan . Vlad . 11 July 2017 . Nici Mourinho n-a reușit așa ceva. Cazul unic al antrenorului lui Sepsi care a promovat echipa din Liga a 4-a în Liga 1. Valentin Suciu povestește cum visele devin realitate . Neither Mourinho didn't achieve this. The unic case of the Sepsi manager who promoted from Liga IV to Liga I. Valentin Suciu tells us how dreams become reality . ro . PROSPORT . București . 2 December 2020.
  5. Web site: Liga a IV-a, Seniori, sezon 2013/2014 Asociatia Judeteana de Fotbal Covasna frf-ajf.ro. Romanian Football Federation. ro. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20181023080553/http://www.frf-ajf.ro/covasna/competitii-fotbal/liga-a-iv-a-seniori-1713.html. 23 October 2018.
  6. Web site: Echipele promovate in Liga 3 in urma meciurilor de baraj!. The teams which promoted to the Liga 3 following the play-off. Sport Total FM. ro. 21 June 2014.
  7. Web site: Sepsi OSK Sfântu Gheorghe, a doua echipă promovată matematic în Liga 2. Judeţul Covasna are din nou club în eşalonul secund după o pauză de 12 ani. Sepsi OSK Sfântu Gheorghe, the second team mathematically promoted to the Liga 2. Covasna County has a club in the second tier after a twelve-year pause. ProSport. ro. 15 May 2016.
  8. Web site: Sepsi, surpriza ligii secunde, visează la prima ligă. Cum ar putea beneficia de investiţiile guvernului maghiar echipa din Sfântu Gheorghe. "Am putea face faţă". Sepsi, the shock of the second league, dreams of the first league. How the Sfântu Gheorghe-based team could benefit from the investments of the Hungarian Government. "We could deal with this situation". ProSport. ro. 13 May 2017.
  9. Web site: A doua echipă promovată în Liga 1! Sepsi și-a asigurat locul în prima divizie » Toate rezultatele din Liga a 2-a. The second team promoted to the Liga 1! Sepsi secured its place in the first division » All the Liga 2 results. Gazeta Sporturilor. ro. 28 May 2017.
  10. Web site: FOTO Finala Cupei României: Sepsi – FC Voluntari 2-1! Ștefănescu aduce Cupa la Sfântu Gheorghe!. PHOTO Romanian Cup Final: Sepsi - FC Voluntari 2–1! Ștefănescu brings the Cup to Sfântu Gheorghe!. Romanian Football Federation. ro. 19 May 2022. 21 May 2022.
  11. Web site: Niczuly, eroul finalei, a dezvăluit secretul loviturilor de departajare: "Două ore, în ziua meciului!" + "E un moment istoric pentru noi". Niczuly, the hero of the final, revealed the penalty shoot-out secret: "Two hours, on the day of the match" + "It's a historic moment for us". Gazeta Sporturilor. ro. 25 May 2023. 25 May 2023.
  12. Web site: Pâinea secuiască de 7 milioane de euro, apreciată şi de prinţul Charles. "Secretul afacerii este să faci lucrurile cu inima". The Szekler bread worth 7 million euros, also fancied by Prince Charles. "The secret of the business is to put heart into things". Adevărul. ro. 27 August 2015. 1 March 2019.
  13. News: ANALIZĂ FINANCIARĂ. Sepsi şochează Liga 1: venituri uluitoare cu care surclasează toate celelalte cluburi . FINANCIAL ANALYSIS. Sepsi shocks Liga 1: beating all other teams with its unbelievable revenue . Gazeta Sporturilor. ro. 23 April 2020. 1 May 2020 .
  14. News: Sipos . Zoltán . 12 December 2018 . Will the Hungarian government bring Sekler football to success? . Átlátszó Erdély . Cluj Napoca . 1 January 2020.
  15. News: Miu . Sever Ioan . 11 May 2017 . Dacă promovează în Liga I, Sepsi OSK va juca meciurile de acasă la Brașov . If promoted to Liga I, Sepsi OSK will play its home games at Brașov . ro . Covasna Media . Sfântu Gheorghe . 11 June 2017.
  16. News: 23 January 2018 . Sepsi OSK nu va putea juca nici la Sfântu Gheorghe, nici la Braşov. Unde au loc primele două etape „acasă” din 2018 . Sepsi OSK won't be able to play its home games at Sfântu Gheorghe or Braşov. Where will the first two "home" games of 2018 take place? . ro . We Radio . Sfântu Gheorghe . 12 March 2018.
  17. News: Miu . Sever Ioan . 27 November 2016 . VIDEO: 1.500 de scaune pentru stadionul din Sfântu Gheorghe . VIDEO: 1,500 seats for the stadium of Sfântu Gheorghe . ro . Covasna Media . Sfântu Gheorghe . 4 April 2017.
  18. News: Nagy . Zsolt . 1 August 2018 . Sepsi: példaértékű segítség a Dunaszerdahelytől . Sepsi: exemplary help from Dunaszerdahely . hu . Nemzeti Sport . Budapest . 4 September 2018.
  19. News: 19 March 2018 . VIDEO + FOTO Sepsi inaugurează stadionul cu 3 penalty-uri și două puncte pierdute la ultima fază . VIDEO + PHOTO Sepsi inaugurates the stadium with 3 penalties and two points lost in the last minute . ro . Gazeta Sporturilor . București . 20 March 2018.
  20. News: 17 January 2019 . După zece ani de cereri, Guvernul transferă Primăriei Sfântu Gheorghe stadionul pe care joacă Sepsi OSK . After 10 years of asking, the Government transfers the home stadium of Sepsi OSK to the City Council of Sfântu Gheorghe . ro . G4 Media . București . 19 February 2019.
  21. News: Kovács . Zsolt . 18 June 2018 . Itt épül az új sepsiszentgyörgyi futballstadion . Here will the new stadium of Sfântu Gheorghe be built . hu . Maszol . Cluj Napoca . 1 January 2021.
  22. News: 25 November 2020 . Încă un stadion nou în Liga 1 . Another Liga I stadium . ro . Telekom Sport . București . 2 January 2021.
  23. News: Kovács . Zsolt . 14 November 2017 . Akik magyarul szurkolnak a román stadionokban – ismerjük meg a Székely Légiót . Those who cheer in Hungarian at Romanian stadiums – let's meet the Székely Légió . hu . Maszol . Cluj Napoca . 12 November 2019.
  24. Web site: Jucători. Players. Sepsi OSK. ro. 15 February 2022.
  25. Web site: ECHIPĂ. Squad. LPF. ro. 15 July 2022.