Petre Steinbach (1 January 1906 â 1996), was a Romanian football midfielder and manager.
Steinbach was born on 1 January 1906 in Temesvár, Austria-Hungary, being of Banat Swabian ethnicity, and began playing football in 1925 at CAM TimiÃÂoara. In 1928 he went for one year at ColÃÂea BraÃÂov, afterwards moving to Unirea Tricolor BucureÃÂti. After playing three years in the regional league, he made his Divizia A debut on 4 September 1932 in Unirea Tricolor's 4âÂÂ1 home win over AMEF Arad. During his ten-season spell at Unirea, the team earned a second place in the 1933âÂÂ34 season. Subsequently, Steinbach led the club to the 1936 Cupa României final as a player-coach, playing the entire match in the 5âÂÂ1 loss to Ripensia TimiÃÂoara. He made his last Divizia A appearance on 10 April 1938 in a 6âÂÂ1 loss to Chinezul TimiÃÂoara, totaling 90 games with five goals in the competition. Unirea Tricolor was relegated at the end of that season, but he stayed with the club for one more year, helping it earn promotion back to the first league. Steinbach finished his playing career in 1940 at Olympia BucureÃÂti.
Steinbach was selected by coach Constantin RÃÂdulescu to be part of Romania's squad for the 1930 World Cup in which he did not play. His debut came on 12 October 1930, when RÃÂdulescu used him in a 5âÂÂ3 away loss to Bulgaria in the 1929âÂÂ31 Balkan Cup. In the same tournament he also played in the rematch, a 5âÂÂ2 victory, and appeared in two 4âÂÂ2 away wins over Yugoslavia and Greece respectively, helping Romania win the competition. He played the entire match in Romania's first meeting against France, a home friendly that ended with a 6âÂÂ3 victory. Steinbach played three games in the 1932 Balkan Cup, captaining the team for the first time in a 3âÂÂ0 away win over Greece. He also played three games during the 1931âÂÂ1934 Central European Cup for Amateurs and two in the 1933 Balkan Cup, including a 7âÂÂ0 victory against Bulgaria, with both tournaments being won by Romania. During his 18th and last cap for the national team, he was captain in a 7âÂÂ1 friendly loss to Sweden.
In 1933 and 1938, Steinbach spent a month each year in England, studying football training sessions, including Arsenal's. He began coaching in 1934 while still playing for Unirea Tricolor BucureÃÂti, reaching the 1936 Cupa României final, which they lost 5âÂÂ1 to Ripensia TimiÃÂoara.
After World War II, Steinbach, because of his German origins, was sent for a while to forced labor in the USSR. Joseph Stalin considered that German people doing forced labor was a way for the Germans to pay "war reparations". Sent to work at a lead mine in the Donbas region, Steinbach was working in inhumane conditions. However, according to the sports journalist Lucian Oprea, one of the bosses in the region found out that among the deportees there was a former footballer, who also played in the Romanian national team. Thus Steinbach was taken out of the camp and put in charge of training a local team. He managed to get the team promoted to a higher echelon and was eventually released, returning to Romania.
In 1947 he became coach at ITA Arad, helping the team win the title, using only 14 players in the process. In the same season the club won the Cupa României, but Steinbach left before the final, Gusztáv Juhász leading the team in the 3âÂÂ2 win over CFR TimiÃÂoara. In 1948 he coached Romania for a short period of time, leaving after a 9âÂÂ0 away loss to Hungary in the 1948 Balkan Cup. Afterwards he went to coach Rapid BucureÃÂti with whom he finished runner-up in the 1948âÂÂ49 and 1950 seasons. After The Railwaymen were relegated in 1951, he helped them gain promotion back to the first league after one year.
Steinbach worked for a few years at Dinamo BucureÃÂti's youth center where he taught players such as Ion and LicàNunweiller, Ion PârcÃÂlab, Iosif Varga and Florin Halagian. His biggest junior-level performance was reaching the 1960 European Under-18 Championship final with Romania's under-18 team, losing with 2âÂÂ1 to Hungary. Following the tournament in Vienna, Steinbach was arrested for "unknown reasons" when he arrived back in Romania.
In the following years he worked at Farul ConstanÃÂa in the first league, then had a spell in West Germany at Weiden where he was recommended by Helmut Schön. Subsequently, he returned in the country in 1968 to coach lower league side, CeahlÃÂul Piatra NeamÃÂ, afterwards having his last first league spell at ASA Târgu Mureàin 1969. Steinbach has a total of 190 matches as a manager in the Romanian top-division, Divizia A, consisting of 78 victories, 36 draws and 76 losses.
Steinbach wrote his first book in 1937 titled Fotbalul nostru (Our football) which received a positive review from Camil Petrescu. He wrote another volume titled Fotbalul se joacàrâzând (Football is played with laughter), released in 1972. He also wrote for a few years an analysis column in the Sportul popular newspaper.
Steinbach died in 1996 at age 90 in Germany, a country where he had settled in 1975.
Unirea Tricolor BucureÃÂti
Romania
Unirea Tricolor BucureÃÂti
ITA Arad
Rapid BucureÃÂti
Romania U18