Cătălin Grigore

Cătălin Grigore (born 6 October 1977) is a Romanian former football player. He played as a goalkeeper for teams such as: Petrolul Ploiești, Zimbru Chișinău or Politehnica Timișoara, among others.

Cătălin Grigore
Personal information
Date of birth (1977-10-06) 6 October 1977
Place of birth Voinești, Romania
Height 1.87 m (6 ft 1 12 in)
Playing position(s) Goalkeeper
Club information
Current team
Petrolul Ploiești (GK coach)
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1996–1999 Târgovişte 45 (0)
2000–2002 Petrolul Ploiești 22 (0)
2002–2003 Zimbru Chișinău 8 (0)
2003–2005 Politehnica Timișoara 34 (0)
2005–2006 CFR Timişoara 3 (0)
2006–2010 Unirea Urziceni 34 (0)
2010–2012 Astra Ploiești 23 (0)
2012–2013 CS Ștefănești 20 (0)
Total 189 (0)
Teams managed
2013–2016 Petrolul Ploiești (GK coach)
2016–2017 Dinamo București (GK coach)
2017–2018 Petrolul Ploiești (GK coach)
2018–2020 Dinamo București (GK coach)
2020– Petrolul Ploiești (GK coach)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 17 August 2020

Club career

He made his debut in the Divizia A at 19 for Chindia Târgovişte where he played until the 1999/2000 season.

His next destination was Petrolul Ploieşti where he did not make a great impact. After playing in 11 matches in his first season at the club, he lost his starting position.

In 2003, he moved to FCU Politehnica. His first year there brought him praise as a good goalkeeper, but as his performances during the next season were unconvincing, youngster Eduard Cristian Zimmermann replaced him. Since Marius Popa arrived at the club, Grigore has not been featured in any first division match. His subsequent move to Unirea is a consequence of this.

On 30 August 2010 he signed a two-year contract with Astra Ploieşti[1] coming as a free agent following the financial problems involving the former Romanian champions.

Titles

Season Club Title
2008-09 Unirea UrziceniLiga I
gollark: The solution is, of course, to move to wireless literally everything.
gollark: I mean, it's not too bad if your *cable* wears out, but it *is* if the device's does.
gollark: (somehow I wrote microUSB there, oops)
gollark: I'm comparing it to USB-A for point 4.
gollark: <@!111608748027445248> - Too many different things over identical looking physical connectors: a "USB-C" port might support power-delivery *input*, power-delivery *output*, Thunderbolt, two different incompatible kinds of video output, and various speeds from USB 2.0 to USB 3.2 Gen2x2 (whyyy).- The ports on devices can end up wearing out problematically, though I don't know if this is better or worse than on competitors like Lightning or µUSB.- A lot of peripherals still don't support it, though this is hardly *its* fault.- I think the smaller connector means you can't put as much weight on it safely, for bigger USB stick-y devices, though I am not sure about this.

References

  1. "Miranda and Grigore". FC Astra. Archived from the original on 14 September 2011. Retrieved 30 August 2010.


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