R. Charleroi S.C.

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Charleroi
Full name Royale Charleroi
Sporting Club
Nickname(s) Les Zèbres (The Zebras),
Les Carolos
Founded January 1, 1904 (creation)
November 24, 1907
(registration)
Ground Stade du Pays de Charleroi,
Charleroi
Capacity 22,000
Chairman Flag of Iran Abbas Bayat
Manager Flag of Belgium Jacky Matthijssen
League Jupiler League
2005-06 Jupiler League, 11th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

R. Charleroi S.C. is a Belgian football club from the city of Charleroi, Hainaut.

Hailing from a French-speaking area, it has been recruiting several French players in recent years. It has played in the Jupiler League since the 1985-86 season. The second club from the city is R.O.C. de Charleroi-Marchienne, which plays in the third division.

Contents

[edit] History

Charleroi Sporting Club was founded in 1904 and received the matricule n°22. Twenty years later, the club qualified to play in the second division and in 1929, the prefix Royale was added to the name. The R.O.C. was playing in the first division in the late 1930s and in the 1940s while the Sporting was one level down, until the promotion of RCSC in 1947.

In 1949, the Sporting finished 4th (2 points behind Standard Liège) whereas the Olympic was 14th. But the Olympic took the lead again until 1955 and the relegation of the O.C. Charleroi. In 1957, OCC had promoted in the first division but RCSC finished last. A spell of 9 seasons in the second division followed and in 1966, the Sporting was back at the top level. It finished 2nd in 1969 with 5 points less than Standard but it was relegated within two years.

In 1974 the first division was changing from 16 to 20 teams and Sporting Charleroi was chosen to play at that level. Olympic promoted too as it had won the second division right before but it was relegated the year after. Sporting underwent a new relegation in 1980 (17th on 18) but was back five years later. Its best result since then in the Jupiler League is a 4th place in 1994.

In September 2005, the G-14 took FIFA to court over the 8 month injury incurred by Abdelmajid Oulmers whilst on international duty with Morocco.

[edit] Colours and badge

The colours of Charleroi are black and white with a shirt generally striped, which lead to the team being nicknamed The Zebras. In the season 2005-06 the team's away kit was pink.

[edit] Stadium

Main article: Stade du Pays de Charleroi

The actual ground was baptized in 1939 with a match Sporting-Union du Centre and it was located near the coal mine named Mambourg. In 1985 the stadium was slightly modernized as the club had qualified for the first division. It was then heavily renewed in the late 1990s in view of the 2000 European Football Championship. The name changed on May 24, 1999 from Stade du Mambourg to Stade du Pays de Charleroi. During the tournament, the full capacity of the stadium was up to 30,000 seats. The Stade du Pays de Charleroi hosted notably the match Germany-England. The highest stand was eventually reduced and the capacity is now of about 25,000.

[edit] Current squad

As of August 30, 2006:

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Belgium GK Damien Lahaye
2 Flag of Belgium DF Frank Defays (captain)
3 Flag of France DF Oumar Bakari
4 Flag of Guinea DF Ibrahima Diallo
6 Flag of Argentina MF Cristian Leiva (on loan from Anderlecht)
7 Flag of Belgium MF Tim Smolders
8 Flag of France MF Grégory Christ
9 Flag of Nigeria FW Joseph Akpala
12 Flag of Belgium GK Fabian Cremers
13 Flag of Belgium FW Izzet Akgul
14 Flag of France GK Patrice Luzi
15 Flag of France MF Fabien Camus
16 Flag of Burkina Faso DF Badou Kéré
No. Position Player
17 Flag of Belgium MF Steve Verelst
18 Flag of Brazil DF Denis Souza de Guedes
19 Flag of France FW Jérémy Perbet (on loan from Strasbourg)
20 Flag of Belgium MF Thibaut Detal
21 Flag of Morocco MF Abdelmajid Oulmers
22 Flag of Brazil FW Orlando dos Santos Costa
24 Flag of France FW Brice Jovial
26 Flag of Belgium DF Laurent Ciman
27 Flag of Belgium DF Sébastien Van Aerschot

[edit] Honours

[edit] European record

As of March 5, 2006:
Competition A B C D E F G
UEFA Cup 1 2 1 0 1 2 3
Intertoto Cup 3 10 3 3 4 11 11

A = appearances, B = matches played, C = won, D = drawn, E = lost, F = goals for, G = goals against.

[edit] References

Jupiler League, 2006/07

RSC Anderlecht | SK Beveren | FC Brussels | Cercle Brugge | Charleroi SC | Club Brugge | Excelsior Mouscron | RC Genk | AA Gent | Germinal Beerschot | Lierse SK | SC Lokeren | AEC Mons | SV Roeselare | Sint-Truidense VV | Standard Liège | VC Westerlo | SV Zulte-Waregem     edit

Jupiler League seasons

... | 1984-85 | 1985-86 | 1986-87 | 1987-88 | 1988-89 | 1989-90 | 1990-91 | 1991-92
1992-93 | 1993-94 | 1994-95 | 1995-96 | 1996-97 | 1997-98 | 1998-99 | 1999-2000
2000-01 | 2001-02 | 2002-03 | 2003-04 | 2004-05 | 2005-06 | 2006-07 | 2007-08 edit

Football in Belgium, 2006-07
League competitions URBSFA/KBVB Cup competitions and awards
Jupiler League Belgium Cup
Second division Women Supercup
Third division List of clubs Golden Shoe
Promotion Professional football awards