Fortuneanu, 42, is a product of Romanian handball, but he left his country in 2004, spending the next nine years in the French league, at Saint-Raphaël Var Handball. After retiring he became an assistant coach for Saint-Raphaël, taking the lead in 2019 replacing his former head coach, Joël da Silva.
“As a coach, I am a product of French handball and my hope is that I can implement a sort of change in the Romanian national team,” he said.
“If you asked me after the first two games in the group, I would have said I am on the correct path. But these games against Kosovo followed, so I am not so sure now,” added Fortuneanu with an analytical mind.
Indeed, the 2022 qualifiers sum up Romania in a nutshell: A commanding win against Montenegro (36:27) and a narrow loss against Sweden (33:30) looked to breathe new life into the Romanian side.
Then came the downfall: A 23:23 draw against Kosovo in Pristina was swiftly followed by a devastating 30:25 home defeat, when Romania missed several key players due to Covid-19 positive tests.
“We will not talk about the Kosovo games, because this is a wound that is still open and I will like to focus on the future and what we need to do to proceed to the final tournament in Hungary and Slovakia,” Fortuneanu said.
“From my point of view, we are the underdogs in both games, a position I very much like to be in, I think it suits us and plays in our advantage.”