Adrian Mutu

Adrian Mutu
Mutu playing for Fiorentina in 2007
Personal information
Date of birth (1979-01-08) 8 January 1979 (age 45)[1]
Place of birth Călinești, Romania
Height 1.81 m (5 ft 11 in)
Position(s) Forward, attacking midfielder
Youth career
1987–1996 Argeș Pitești
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1996–1998 Argeș Pitești 41 (11)
1998–1999 Dinamo București 33 (22)
1999–2000 Inter Milan 10 (1)
2000–2002 Hellas Verona 57 (16)
2002–2003 Parma 31 (18)
2003–2004 Chelsea 27 (6)
2005 Livorno 0 (0)
2005–2006 Juventus 33 (7)
2006–2011 Fiorentina 112 (54)
2011–2012 Cesena 28 (8)
2012–2014 Ajaccio 37 (11)
2014 Petrolul Ploiești 14 (4)
2015 Pune City 10 (4)
2016 ASA Târgu Mureș 4 (0)
Total 437 (161)
International career
1995 Romania U16 2 (1)
1996–1997 Romania U18 14 (8)
1998–2000 Romania U21 12 (6)
2000–2013 Romania 77 (35)
Managerial career
2016 ASA Târgu Mureș (player/assistant)
2016–2017 Dinamo București (general manager)
2017–2018 Romania (sporting director)
2018 Voluntari
2018–2019 Al Wahda U21
2020–2021 Romania U21
2021 FC U Craiova
2022–2023 Rapid București
2023 Neftchi Baku
2024 CFR Cluj
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Adrian Mutu (Romanian pronunciation: [adriˈan ˈmutu] ; born 8 January 1979) is a Romanian professional football manager and former player. During his playing career, he was deployed as a forward or an attacking midfielder.

Mutu started his career playing two years for Argeș Pitești and half a season for Dinamo București, before joining Inter Milan in Italy midway through the 1999–2000 Serie A. After only ten games with the Nerazzurri, he left for Hellas Verona and then Parma, for which he scored 39 goals in the next three years. His excellent form brought him a €22.5 million transfer to Chelsea and a nomination for the Ballon d'Or in 2003.[2][3] Following a failed drug test, he was released and returned to Serie A to join Juventus. After the 2006 Italian football scandal and the relegation of Juventus to Serie B, Mutu decided to join Fiorentina, where he played consistently for the next five years. He then had a season at Cesena and French club Ajaccio, before returning to his native country with Petrolul Ploiești in 2014. After two more brief spells with Pune City and ASA Târgu Mureș, Mutu retired from professional football in 2016.

A controversial figure off the field, Mutu received widespread attention following a positive test for cocaine while playing for Chelsea in 2005, which resulted in his immediate release from the club, a subsequent seven-month ban from the Football Association, and Mutu later being ordered to pay £15.2 million in damages to his former employers, the largest financial penalty in FIFA history.[4] He has unsuccessfully tried to appeal the fine numerous times, and was banned for a second time in 2010 following a positive test for sibutramine while at Fiorentina.

From his international debut in 2000, Mutu played 77 matches for the Romania national team and scored 35 goals, a joint record alongside Gheorghe Hagi. He was included in the country's squads at the UEFA European Championship in 2000 and 2008. A four-time winner of the Romanian Footballer of the Year award, only Gheorghe Popescu and Gheorghe Hagi have received the award more times, with six and seven wins, respectively.

  1. ^ "Adrian Mutu". Barry Hugman's Footballers. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  2. ^ Pierrend, José Luis (1 February 2006). "European Footballer of the Year ("Ballon d'Or") 2003". RSSSF. Archived from the original on 7 September 2022. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  3. ^ "Dumitru Macri, primul fotbalist român nominalizat la Balonul de Aur! Gică Hagi, aproape de succes în 1994" [Dumitru Macri, the first Romanian footballer nominated for the Golden Ball! Gica Hagi, almost successful in 1994] (in Romanian). Fanatik.ro. 30 November 2018. Archived from the original on 28 November 2021. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  4. ^ "Mutu loses Chelsea damages appeal". 31 July 2009. Archived from the original on 28 November 2021. Retrieved 1 August 2009.