- Source: Viorel Moiceanu
Viorel Moiceanu (born 5 July 1954) is a Romanian former football forward.
Career
Viorel Moiceanu was born on 5 July 1954 Berevoești, Romania, starting to play football in 1977 at Divizia C side, Dacia Pitești.
After one season he went to play for neighboring club, Argeș Pitești where on 13 September 1978 he made his debut when coach Florin Halagian sent him of the field in the 73rd minute in order to replace Nicolae Dobrin in the first leg of the first round from the 1978–79 UEFA Cup against Panathinaikos, scoring the last two goals of the 3–0 win. Four days later he made his Divizia A debut when coach Halagian sent him at half-time to again replace Dobrin in a 2–2 with Universitatea Craiova. After Argeș passed Panathinaikos, they met Valencia in the second round of the UEFA Cup where in the first leg he was sent in the 61st minute of the game and scored the victory goal of the 2–1 win. He exchanged t-shirts with Mario Kempes after the game, a player who just won the World Cup with Argentina, being the top-goalscorer and best player of the tournament. However they did not qualify further as the second leg was lost with 5–2. At the end of his first season, Moiceanu helped the club win the title, contributing with five goals in the 25 appearances given to him by coach Halagian. He spent eight seasons with Argeș, scoring a personal record of nine goals in the 1984–85 season. He played his last Divizia A match on 5 October 1985 in a 3–1 away loss in front of Petrolul Ploiești when early in the game he got injured by Octavian Grigore, having a total of 201 appearances with 38 goals scored in the competition, also a total of 10 matches with three goals scored in the UEFA Cup.
Between 1988 and 1989 he had spells in Divizia B at Metalurgistul Slatina and Dacia Pitești.
Moiceanu was a player known for being decisive after being introduced in the games as a substitute, for this quality he was nicknamed "Arma Secretă" (The Secret Weapon) by journalist Ioan Chirilă.
Honours
Argeș Pitești
Divizia A: 1978–79