Boris Keca
Personal information
Full name Boris Keca
Date of birth (1978-04-05) 5 April 1978
Place of birth Bihać, Yugoslavia
Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Position(s) Defensive midfielder / Full back
Youth career
1991–1998 Borac Banja Luka
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1998–1999 Omladinac Banja Luka
1999–2003 Naţional București 48 (3)
2003–2004 Braşov 14 (0)
2005 Steaua București 1 (0)
2005–2006 Pandurii Târgu Jiu 19 (1)
2006–2007 Argeş Piteşti 3 (0)
2007–2008 Concordia Chiajna 4 (1)
2008–2009 Voinţa Domneşti
Total 89 (5)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Boris Keca (born 5 April 1978) is a Bosnian-Herzegovinian former footballer who spent several seasons at Romanian football clubs, playing as a midfielder.

Club career

Keca was born in Bihać, Yugoslavia. He started playing in Romania with Naţional Bucharest, a club at the time popular for foreign players from Eastern-Europe (the likes of his fellow Bosnian Slaviša Mitrović or Albanian Albert Duro) or Australians (Michael Thwaite, Ryan Griffiths or Jonathan McKain). With Naţional he could compete in the 2002–03 UEFA Cup, where they would edge out teams like Tirana and Heerenveen before eventually being eliminated by Paris Saint-Germain in the Second Round.[1]

He made his debut in Liga I on 19 November 1999 against Universitatea Craiova.[2]

He then transferred in 2003 to Braşov, from where he was brought to Steaua Bucharest in January 2005, by his former Naţional coach Walter Zenga,[3] ahead of their 2004–05 UEFA Cup matches, where they managed to reach the Round of 16 after surpassing Valencia. He was being dropped out of the team after the defeat in the 2005 Romanian Supercup match.[4]

Subsequently, he spent the 2004–2005 season at Pandurii Târgu Jiu, where they succeeded finishing in the last non-relegating spot in a season after which the first league would change from 16 to 18 teams. The following season, he was brought to Argeş Piteşti by another Italian manager Giuseppe Giannini.[5] The club would get relegated at the end of the season finishing 17th, with Giannini being sacked after nine consecutive defeats.

Towards the end of his playing career he signed with the second league side Concordia Chiajna and the following season with the fourth division team of outer Bucharest, Voinţa Domneşti.[6]

Honours

Runner-Up:

References

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