Rainea in 1980 | |||
Born |
(1933-11-19)19 November 1933 Brăila, Romania | ||
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Died |
1 April 2015(2015-04-01) (aged 81) Galați, Romania | ||
Other occupation | Technician, Footballer | ||
Domestic | |||
Years | League | Role | |
1964–1984 | Liga I | Referee | |
International | |||
Years | League | Role | |
1967–1989 | FIFA-listed | Referee |
Nicolae Rainea (19 November 1933 – 1 April 2015), nicknamed The Locomotive of the Carpathians, was a Romanian football referee and player. Among the most highly regarded referees of his generation, he is considered one of the best international officials of the 70s and 80s and, arguably, the finest Romanian referee of all time.
Career
Nicolae Rainea played football in the lower leagues of Romania for Laminorul Brăila, Metalul Piatra Neamț and Constructorul Bârlad, he retired in 1959 to start his career as a referee, making his debut in Liga I in 1965. He refereed at three FIFA World Cups (1974, 1978, 1982), the UEFA Euro 1980 Final, the 1983 European Cup Final, the second leg of the 1978 European Super Cup and the second leg of the 1978 UEFA Cup Final.
Rainea officiated the Italy v Argentina game at the 1982 World Cup. He was linesman in a later match between France and Northern Ireland.
Honours and legacy
Rainea was decorated by two presidents of Romania, Ion Iliescu and Traian Băsescu. He was made honorary citizen of Galați where he resided and served four local council terms.
Nicolae Rainea Stadium in Galați is named after him.
Personal life and death
In 2011, he celebrated 50 years of marriage. He had a son and a daughter, both living in Sweden.
After an untreated mild cold turned into a pulmonary edema, Rainea suffered a cardiac arrest while in hospital and died on 1 April 2015 in Galați. He was 81 years old.
References
- UEFA Obituary
- REFEREES FROM ROMANIA
- "Cel mai titrat arbitru român, Nicolae Rainea, a murit din cauza unor complicaţii pulmonare şi cardiace severe" [Romanian top referee Nicolae Rainea died due to severe pulmonary and cardiac complications] (in Romanian). mediafax.ro. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- "Nicolae Rainea a fost "Regele" arbitrajului" [Nicolae Rainea was the "King" of the arbitration] (in Romanian). evz.ro. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
- ^ "Povestea fostului mare arbitru Nicolae Rainea, omul care a înconjurat planeta de cinci ori FOTO". Adevărul. 29 December 2011.
- "Nicolae Rainea, cel mai mare arbitru român al tuturor timpurilor, a murit în această dimineaţă. Citeşte un interviu de colecţie acordat Gazetei: "Am făcut performanţă în cele 3 mari domenii din viaţa mea"". GSP. Retrieved 1 April 2015.
External links
- (in German) Profile
Preceded by Dusan Maksimović | 1978 UEFA Cup Final Nicolae Rainea |
Succeeded by Ian Foote |
Preceded by Károly Palotai | 1978 European Super Cup Nicolae Rainea |
Succeeded by Adolf Prokop |
Preceded by Sergio Gonella | 1980 UEFA Euro Final Nicolae Rainea |
Succeeded by Vojtech Christov |
Preceded by Georges Konrath | 1983 European Cup Final Nicolae Rainea |
Succeeded by Erik Fredriksson |
Referees at UEFA Euro 1980 | |
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UEFA European Championship final referees | |
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This biographical article related to Romanian football is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |
- Sportspeople from Brăila
- 1933 births
- AFC Dacia Unirea Brăila players
- Romanian football referees
- 2015 deaths
- 1982 FIFA World Cup referees
- 1978 FIFA World Cup referees
- 1974 FIFA World Cup referees
- Romanian sportsperson-politicians
- Social Democratic Party (Romania) politicians
- Councillors in Romania
- UEFA Euro 1980 referees
- UEFA European Championship final referees
- Romanian men's footballers
- Deaths from pulmonary edema
- 20th-century Romanian sportsmen
- Romanian football biography stubs