Iuliu Bodola ( húngaro : Bodola Gyula ; 26 de febrero de 1912 - 9 de septiembre de 1992 [2] ) fue un futbolista rumano-húngaro que jugaba como delantero . Representó a las selecciones nacionales de Rumanía y Hungría a nivel internacional. [1] [3] Su apodo era Duduş / Dudus . [4] Es el tercer máximo goleador de todos los tiempos de Rumanía , y también es el máximo goleador de todos los tiempos de la Copa de los Balcanes .
Bodola comenzó su carrera en 1929 (17 años) en el Clubul Atletic Oradea , antes de unirse al Venus București , con quien fue campeón de la Divizia A en 1938–39 y 1939–40 . [5] Cuando el norte de Transilvania pasó a formar parte del Reino de Hungría en agosto de 1940, prefirió jugar en el Nagyváradi AC , y con ellos ganó el Nemzeti Bajnokság I en 1943-1944 . [5] Después del final de la guerra , regresó a Rumania con Ferar Cluj-Napoca , pero en 1946 partió nuevamente hacia Hungría uniéndose al MTK , donde vivió en Budapest hasta el final de su vida. En noviembre de 2008, el Estadio Municipal de Oradea pasó a llamarse Stadionul Iuliu Bodola .
Bodola was a very prolific scorer for the Romania national team, scoring a then-national record of 31 goals in 48 caps. He and Wetzer were the top two goalscorers of the 1929–1931 (first) edition of the Balkan Cup (which Romania won). They scored seven goals each for their country in that tournament alone.[6] He was also part of the Romania team that won the 1933 Balkan Cup and 1936 Balkan Cup, contributing with two goals in each tournament.[7][8] With 15 goals in the Balkan Cup, he is the all-time top goal scorer in the competition's history. Bodola was the hero of the 1936 Friendship Cup, scoring a hat-trick in a 3–2 win over Yugoslavia,[9] and with these three goals, he is also the all-time top goal scorer of the Friendship Cup. This was Bodola's third international hat-trick (the first two having come in 1931, in a friendly against Lithuania and in the 1929-31 Balkan Cup against Greece), which still remains a national record. He played at both the 1934 FIFA World Cup and 1938 FIFA World Cup for Romania, failing to score a single goal at both tournaments.[10]
When Northern Transylvania became part of the Kingdom of Hungary in August 1940, he decided to play for the Hungary national team, scoring on his debut on 1 December 1940 against Italy in a 1–1 draw.
For a long time (50 years) he was the absolute top scorer of the Romania national football team - with 31 goals. Subsequently, he was overtaken by Gheorghe Hagi, and then by Adrian Mutu, both with 35 goals scored. Seven decades after retiring, Bodola still occupies the third place in the all-time top scorers list of the Romania national football team, with 31 goals, the first place being shared by Hagi and Mutu, both having 35 goals in Romania's shirt.
"For me, the greatest Romanian footballer of all time was Iuliu Bodola. Neither Nicolae Dobrin, nor Gheorghe Hagi could be compared with him."
Former Romania coach Angelo Niculescu[11]
Bodola died in Budapest in 1993 (aged 80).
His son György Bodola was a Hungarian illustrator.
Venus Bucarest
Nagyváradi AC
Rumania
Individual