俱樂部友誼賽 09/30 13:00 - 布加勒斯特星 v CS克盧日 W 3-0
俱樂部友誼賽 09/16 14:00 - Vojvodina諾威薩 v 布加勒斯特星 W 0-3
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 04/17 11:00 1 [4] 布加勒斯特星 v 加拉茨Arcada [1] L 1-3
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 04/16 15:00 1 [4] 布加勒斯特星 v 克拉約瓦大學 [3] L 1-3
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 04/15 11:00 1 [4] 布加勒斯特星 v 劄勒烏市政 [2] L 2-3
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 04/10 15:00 1 [4] 布加勒斯特星 v 加拉茨Arcada [1] L 2-3
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 04/09 11:00 1 [2] 克拉約瓦大學 v 布加勒斯特星 [4] L 3-1
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 04/08 15:00 1 [3] Municipal Zalau v 布加勒斯特星 [3] L 3-0
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 03/28 14:00 1 [2] 布加勒斯特星 v 烏尼瑞達伊 [6] W 3-0
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 03/27 15:00 1 [7] CS克盧日 v 布加勒斯特星 [3] W 0-3
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 03/20 15:00 22 Municipal Zalau v 布加勒斯特星 - View
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 03/13 16:00 1 [3] 布加勒斯特星 v Explorari Baia Mare [9] W 3-0
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 03/13 15:00 21 布加勒斯特星 v Timisoara - View
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 03/12 15:00 1 [2] Municipal Zalau v 布加勒斯特星 [4] W 0-3
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 03/10 15:00 20 布加勒斯特星 v 布加勒斯特迪納摩 - View
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 03/06 15:00 19 克拉約瓦大學 v 布加勒斯特星 - View
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 02/28 16:00 1 [5] 布加勒斯特星 v Stiinta布格勒斯特 [8] W 3-0
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 02/27 16:00 1 [5] 克拉約瓦大學 v 布加勒斯特星 [3] L 3-1
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 02/27 15:00 18 布加勒斯特星 v CSM肯皮亞圖爾濟 - View
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 02/17 15:00 16 布加勒斯特星 v Explorari Baia Mare - View
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 02/13 16:30 1 [3] 布加勒斯特星 v CSU布拉索夫 [11] W 3-0
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 02/13 15:00 15 CS克盧日 v 布加勒斯特星 - View
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 02/12 13:00 1 [1] 加拉茨Arcada v 布加勒斯特星 [2] L 3-0
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 02/06 15:00 14 布加勒斯特星 v Stiinta布格勒斯特 - View
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 01/30 15:00 13 加拉茨Arcada v 布加勒斯特星 - View
羅馬尼亞盃 01/29 09:00 - 加拉茨Arcada v 布加勒斯特星 L 3-0
羅馬尼亞盃 01/28 09:00 - Explorari Baia Mare v 布加勒斯特星 W 0-3
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 01/17 12:00 7 [5] 布加勒斯特迪納摩 v 布加勒斯特星 [1] L 3-0
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 01/16 10:00 7 [10] CSU大學 v 布加勒斯特星 [2] W 0-3
羅馬尼亞A1聯賽 12/13 14:00 6 [6] CS克盧日 v 布加勒斯特星 [1] W 1-3

Wikipedia - CSA Steaua București

Clubul Sportiv al Armatei Steaua București, commonly known as CSA Steaua București (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈste̯awa bukuˈreʃtʲ]) or simply Steaua, is a major multi-sports club based in Bucharest and run by the Ministry of National Defence. It is one of the most successful clubs in Romania and among the most successful multi-sport clubs in Europe. Founded on 7 June 1947 as Asociația Sportivă a Armatei București (Army Sports Association Bucharest), the club changed its name several times before settling on to Steaua (English: The Star) in 1961.

The club is most known for its football team, also called CSA Steaua București. Other sections belonging to the club are rugby, ice hockey (autonomous – Hochei Club Steaua Suki București), handball, water polo, basketball, volleyball, athletics, swimming, gymnastics, boxing, rowing, canoeing, shooting, weightlifting, fencing, tennis, cycling, and judo.

History

On 7 June 1947, at the initiative of several officers of the Romanian Army, the first Romanian sports club of the Army was born through a decree signed by General Mihail Lascăr, High Commander of the Romanian Royal Army. The club was to be called ASA București (Asociația Sportivă a Armatei București – English: Army Sports Association), with seven different sections (football, fencing, volleyball, boxing, shooting, athletics, and tennis), and its leadership was entrusted to General-Major Oreste Alexandrescu. The decision had been adopted on the ground that several officers were already competing for different clubs, premise to a good nucleus for forming future competitive teams. This was also the year of the club's first national title, achieved by Gheorghe Viziru in tennis.

Previous names Period
Asociația Sportivă a Armatei (ASA) București 1947–1948
Clubul Sportiv Central al Armatei (CSCA) București 1948–1950
Casa Centrală a Armatei (CCA) București 1950–1961
Clubul Sportiv al Armatei (CSA) Steaua București 1961–present
The trophy room
Stamp of CSA Steaua, 2007

As the Romanian Royal Army turned into the People's Army following the coup d'état at the end of 1947, which saw Romania transformed from a monarchy to a Communist inspired people's republic, several name changes carried on. On June 5, 1948, by Order 289 the Ministry of National Defence, ASA became CSCA (Clubul Sportiv Central al Armatei – English: Central Sports Club of the Army), together with the society's first crest (an A-labeled red star, symbol of the Red Army, on a blue disc). In March 1950, CSCA changed its name to CCA (Casa Centrală a Armatei, English: "Central House of the Army"). In 1961, CCA changed its names for the final time to CSA Steaua București (Clubul Sportiv al Armatei Steaua – English: Army Sports Club Steaua). The name Steaua is Romanian for The Star and was adopted because of the presence, just like in any other Eastern-European Army team, of a red star (turned yellow now, to symbolize Romania's tri-colour red, yellow and blue flag) on their badge.

9 April 1974 witnessed the inauguration of the country's most modern sports complex at that time, Complexul Sportiv Steaua (Steaua Sports Complex), comprising a central football-use arena (30,000 capacity Stadionul Ghencea), six other training pitches also used by the rugby team and mini-hotel for the athletes. Today, Complexul Sportiv Steaua has been leased on a 49-year period to the football club, planning for renovation.

Over the years, the club's most successful sections on an international scale have been those of handball (European champions twice), football (European champions once), volleyball, gymnastics, tennis, athletics, shooting, fencing, rowing, and canoeing. Former tennis star Ilie Năstase began his professional career at the club.