László Balint

For the Hungarian football player, see László Bálint.
László Balint
Personal information
Full name György László "Gyuszi" Balint
Date of birth (1979-03-29) 29 March 1979
Place of birth Braşov, Romania
Height 1.79 m (5 ft 10 in)
Playing position Full back, Centre back
Youth career
1988-199 FC Brașov
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1998–2000 Rapid Energia Braşov 37 (9)
2000–2001 Romradiatoare Braşov 26 (2)
2001–2005 FC Braşov 65 (1)
2005–2006 CFR Cluj 13 (0)
2006–2007 UTA Arad 29 (0)
2007–2009 Unirea Urziceni 19 (1)
2009 Gloria Bistriţa 1 (0)
2009 Diósgyőri VTK 15 (0)
2010–2011 Unirea Tărlungeni 16 (2)
Teams managed
2010–2014 Unirea Tărlungeni
2014–2015 FC Braşov (assistant)
2015–2016 Academica Clinceni

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.


László Balint (born 29 March 1979, in Braşov) is a Romanian football manager of Hungarian descent.[1] He has been a player-manager in the 2010–2011 season,[2][3] after signing as a player in March 2010.[4]

In his early career as a footballer, he played for Rapid Energia Braşov, Romradiatoare Braşov, before joining FC Braşov in 2001, where he played for four seasons in Liga I. After the club's relegation he moved to CFR Cluj, under player-coach Dorinel Munteanu, reaching with his new club into the Intertoto Cup finals of 2005. The following season he transferred to another Liga I club, UTA Arad. In 2007, he is brought by Dan Petrescu into the squad of Unirea Urziceni, a team that would gain its first championship title in history two years later. After that, followed short spells at Gloria Bistriţa and Diósgyőr in the Hungarian First Division, before signing as a player-manager for Unirea Tărlungeni in the Romanian Liga III, a club near his hometown of Braşov. Under his management, Unirea Tărlungeni promoted for the first time in history in the Romanian Liga II. After coaching Unirea Tărlungeni for a year in Romanian Liga II în January 2015 was employed by FC Brașov as assistant coach for the second part of the 2014-2015 Romanian Liga I, followed by an employment as head-coach at Academica Clinceni în the Romanian Liga II. Currently he is unemployed.[5]

Honours

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.