Football Coaching Legend Passes Away
The most successful coach in the history of Romanian football, and one of the greatest coaches in international football, Mircea Lucescu, has died.
Sorin Iordan, 08.04.2026, 14:00
A former international footballer and one of the most successful coaches in the history of world football, Mircea Lucescu, passed away on Tuesday night, aged 80, at the University Emergency Hospital in Bucharest, after a major heart arrhythmia episode. On April 3, he had suffered a heart attack, had gone into a coma, and doctors were unable to save him.
Born in 1945 in Bucharest, Lucescu was the coach of Romania’s national football team between 1981 and 1986, and took the team to the 1984 European Football Championship in France, at a time when only the best 8 teams in Europe took part in the final tournament.
He then coached Dinamo Bucharest, a team with which he won a national title, two Romanian Cups, and qualified for the semi-finals of the 1990 Cup Winners’ Cup. Then he went to Italy, where he coached Pisa, Brescia and Reggiana. Italian fans called him ‘Il Luce’, a nickname taken over by the entire football community. In 1997, he returned to the country for a short time and won the Romanian Cup with Rapid Bucharest. Back in Italy, he was appointed as head coach of the famous Internazionale Milano, a post he lost just a few months later. He returned to Rapid Bucharest, which he led to the title again in 1999.
Between 2000 and 2002, Mircea Lucescu coached Galatasaray Istanbul, with whom he won the European Super Cup and the Turkish championship. In the summer of 2002, he moved to rivals Beşiktaş Istanbul, with whom he won the champion title and reached the quarterfinals of the UEFA Cup. In 2004, he took over the Ukrainian team Shakhtar Donetsk, which he would transform into a European football powerhouse. With Lucescu as a coach, Shakhtar won 8 national championships, 6 Ukrainian Cups, 7 Super Cups and the UEFA Cup in 2009. He then coached the Russian team FC Zenit Saint Petersburg and the Turkish national team between 2017 and 2019. Between 2020 and 2023, he took over the helm of Dinamo Kyiv, with which he won a Ukrainian champion title. In 2024, after a 38-year break, Lucescu returned to the Romanian national team, which he led until April 2, 2026, a few days before passing away.
Mircea Lucescu’s death shook the international football community. Sports personalities, current and former footballers, the clubs he managed, politicians, diplomats and businessmen mourn the death of the Romanian coach. A legend whose legacy will endure for future generations is how FIFA and UEFA call him, while his former students and colleagues describe him as a mentor, a coach who shaped characters and built generations. Praised by international media as “a football visionary,” Mircea Lucescu was, according to Romania’s president, Nicuşor Dan, “an ambassador of Romania on the great stadiums of the world.”
All of Mircea Lucescu’s achievements were due to his work ethic and his love for football, a sport to which he dedicated his life until his very last moments. As the great Romanian coach put it himself, in 2025, “Wherever I’ve been, I have left something behind. That’s why at 80 years old, I can say that I’m satisfied with the life I’ve had.” (AMP)