[10] In 1953, during a match with Dinamo Tbilisi played in Bucharest, Ozon managed a pass between the legs of Georgian star Avtandil Gogoberidze.
After this game he was named an "enemy of the people" by the communist regime, which accused him of mocking the Soviets, being sanctioned with ten percent of his salary and arrested at the garrison for a day.
[11] He retired from football activity in 1964 and became the head coach of several teams in Romania, managing to train once outside the country at the national side of Libya, due to the good relations between presidents Nicolae Ceaușescu and Muammar Gaddafi.
[12] He scored in his debut when coach Emerich Vogl sent him on the field in order to replace Gheorghe Bodo in the 73rd minute of a friendly against Czechoslovakia which ended with a 3–1 victory.
[12] He was also selected by coach Gheorghe Popescu to be part of Romania's 1952 Summer Olympics squad in which he played in the 2–1 loss against eventual champions Hungary.