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Gheorghe Hagi (born February 25 1965), nicknamed "The Carpathian Maradona" is a Romanian football player who played for the Romanian national team in three FIFA World Cups. A hero in his homeland, he has won his country's Player of the Year award a record six times, and was recently named Romania's player of the century.
He was born in Săcele, Constanţa county in an Aromanian family.
During the 1994 World Cup, Hagi made highlights by scoring vital goals for Romania, including a 40yd lob against Colombia. Having played for Farul Constanţa (1979/1980 and 1982/83), Luceafărul Bucharest (1980/1982), Sportul Studenţesc (1983/1986), Steaua Bucharest (1986/1990), Real Madrid (1990/1992), Brescia (1992/1994) and FC Barcelona (1994/1996), Hagi then joined Galatasaray, the Turkish club team that captured the UEFA Cup title in 2000. Prior to his third retirement in 2001, he won 125 international caps, scoring 35 goals.
Hagi has since returned to football as a coach. He became the Head Coach of the Romanian national team in 2001, although he only lasted six months as the team failed to qualify for the 2002 FIFA World Cup. He then took over as coach of Turkish first division side Bursaspor but left that club after a disappointing start to the season.
After a 18 month hiatus spent running a coastal Black Sea hotel and appearing in television commercials, he has now returned to club management at the helm of the club at which he won his first European trophy, Galatasaray.
In March 2004, Hagi was named among the top 125 living footballers by Pelé.