France national football team

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France
Shirt badge/Association crest
Nickname(s) Les Bleus (The Blues)
Association French Football Federation
(Fédération Française
de Football
)
Confederation UEFA (Europe)
Head coach Flag of France Raymond Domenech
Captain Patrick Vieira
Most caps Lilian Thuram (140)
Top scorer Thierry Henry (44)
Home stadium Stade de France
FIFA code FRA
FIFA ranking 7
Highest FIFA ranking 1 (May 2001-May 2002)
Lowest FIFA ranking 25 (April 1998)
Elo ranking 4
Highest Elo ranking 1 (December 1984-April 1985
August 1985
February-June 1986
July 1998-March 1999
June 2000-May 2002
September 2003-August 2004
August 2006-October 2006
February 2007
June 2007-July 2007)
Lowest Elo ranking 44 (May 1928
February 1930)
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
First kit
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Second kit
First international
Flag of Belgium Belgium 3 - 3 France Flag of France
(Brussels, Belgium; 1 May 1904)
Biggest win
Flag of France France 10 - 0 Azerbaijan Flag of Azerbaijan
(Auxerre, France; 6 September 1995)
Biggest defeat
Flag of Denmark Denmark 17 - 1 France Flag of France
(London, England; 22 October 1908)
World Cup
Appearances 12 (First in 1930)
Best result Winners, 1998
European Championship
Appearances 7 (First in 1960)
Best result Winners, 1984 and 2000
Confederations Cup
Appearances 2 (First in 2001)
Best result Winners, 2001 and 2003
Olympic medal record
Men's Football
Silver 1900 Paris Team
Gold 1984 Los Angeles Team

The French national football team represents the nation of France in international football. It is fielded by the French Football Federation and competes as a member of UEFA.

France was one of the four European teams that participated at the inaugural World Cup in 1930. France is one of the most successful football nations in the world. In the 1980s, led by midfielder and captain Michel Platini, the team reached semi-finals at both the 1982 and 1986 World Cups, and won the 1984 European Championship.

France then reached an even higher status in international football by being especially successful at the end of the 1990s and in the 2000s; they won the World Cup as the host nation in 1998, and the European Football Championship two years later, while also placing second at the 2006 World Cup tournament. Midfielder Zinedine Zidane was particularly instrumental in achieving those honours.

France and Argentina are the only national teams in the world which have won the four most important titles organized by FIFA: World Cup, Gold medal in football in the Olympic Games, Confederations Cup, and the Continental Cup (Copa America for Argentina, and UEFA European Football Championship for France).

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Early years

France's first ever game was a 3-3 draw against Belgium in 1904.

They played in all three of the pre-World War II World Cups. Lucien Laurent scored the first ever World cup goal in 1930, in a 4-1 win over Mexico. They reached the quarterfinals in 1938 when they hosted the World Cup.

France came third in the 1958 FIFA World Cup, defeating Germany 6-3 for the bronze. France was beaten by Brazil in semi-finals, after central defender Robert Jonquet's injury and Pelé hat-trick. Striker Just Fontaine scored a record 13 goals in the tournament, doing so in just six matches. The team used mainly players and former players from Stade de Reims, such as Raymond Kopa, Robert Jonquet, Edo Kumwembe,[Roger Marche]] or Just Fontaine, who was at the time one of the best teams in European football.

[edit] Platini era

During the captaincy of Michel Platini France's World Cup performance markedly improved, finishing fourth in Spain '82, and third in Mexico '86. In both tournaments, they lost in the semi-finals to West Germany. The 1982 semi-final is infamously remembered by many for West German keeper Harald Schumacher's elbowing of France's Patrick Battiston in the face as the latter made a shot on goal. Despite severely injuring Battiston, Schumacher was not penalized. France were also knocked out in the semi-final 1986 and with Platini, now recognized as one of football's all time greats they could have won. However, with Platini as skipper, France, as host nation, won Euro '84, as well as capturing Olympic gold in Los Angeles the same year.

[edit] Zidane era

France's most successful years were the late 1990s, the generation of Zinédine Zidane . This team started off well by reaching the semi-finals of Euro 96. After Euro 96, Jacquet adopted a very defensive strategy and made fans anxious because his team never seemed to develop a definitive offensive tactic. The press began to attack the team manager, calling his methods "Paleolithic" and claiming that the team had no hope for the upcoming World Cup which would be hosted in their home country. In June 1997 at the Tournament of France, cries of "Resign!" could be heard from the stadium as the French team came in under Brazil, England and Italy. The media's distrust of Jacquet reached fever pitch in May 1998 when, instead of a list of 22 players meant to play in the World Cup, Jacquet gave a list of 28 players, causing the sports daily L'Équipe to write an editoral arguing that Jacquet was not the right man to lead the French team to victory.

[edit] Euro 2000

Jacquet stepped down after France's World Cup triumph and was succeeded by assistant Roger Lemerre who guided them through Euro 2000. Zidane cemented his FIFA World Player of the Year form, scoring a direct free kick in the quarter-final against Spain and a golden goal penalty in the semi-final against Portugal.

In the finals, France defeated Italy 2-1 in a come from behind victory. David Trezeguet scored the golden goal in extra time after a controversial equalizing goal from Wiltord in the 5th minute of stoppage time. This gave them the distinction of being the first national team to hold both the World Cup and Euro titles since West Germany did so in 1974, and it was also the first time that a reigning World Cup winner went on to capture the Euro[1]. France held the top position in the FIFA World Rankings system from 2001-2002.

[edit] 2002 World Cup and Euro 2004

France failed to maintain that pace in subsequent tournaments. They suffered a stunning goaless first round elimination in the 2002 FIFA World Cup, possibly due in part to an injury to key playmaker Zidane. One of the greatest shocks in World Cup history condemned France to a 0-1 defeat to debutante Senegal in the opening game of the tournament. After France had finished bottom of the group with only securing one point, conceding three goals and without scoring any, Lemerre was dismissed.

A full strength team started out strongly in Euro 2004, with Zidane scoring a free kick and a penalty to overcome a 0-1 deficit and defeat England in the group stage, but they were upset in the quarter-finals by the eventual winners, Greece. Jacques Santini resigned as coach and Raymond Domenech was picked as his replacement.

[edit] 2006 World Cup

France struggled in the qualifiers for the 2006 FIFA World Cup, even though the team was seeded in a group that included the relatively unheralded teams of Israel, Switzerland and the Faroe Islands. This prompted Domenech to persuade "golden generation" members Claude Makélélé, Lilian Thuram and Zinédine Zidane out of international retirement to help the national team qualify. This was France's first successful World Cup qualification since 1986 (France received automatic berths in 1998 and 2002, as hosts and defending champions, respectively).

The team was greeted with modest expectations as it entered the World Cup tournament, with many arguing that despite the return of the three stars, its squad was too old to be competitive. They had a slow start in the group stage and were in danger of being eliminated after managing only 0-0 and 1-1 draws against Switzerland and South Korea, respectively. Though Zidane was forced to sit out because of accumulated bookings, France found their form and won their final group match, beating Togo 2-0 to advance to the knockout round. There, Zidane would score or assist in every game of the playoffs and his team upset heavily favoured Spain 3-1 in a come-from-behind victory to advance to the quarter-finals.

France eliminated Ludovic Giuly's team-mate [Ronaldinho], defending champions Brazil 1-0 to advance into the cup semi-finals. Despite the score, France had thoroughly outplayed Brazil in the match, only facing one shot on goal, while Zidane created numerous scoring chances with his dribbles past Brazilian defenders and his free-kick to Thierry Henry resulting in the winning goal. The game made France the first team to have shut out the five-time champions in consecutive matches; Fabien Barthez was the keeper in both matches. Les Bleus now have a 2-1-1 all-time record against Brazil in World Cup finals play, having shut the Seleção out in the last three meetings (the 1986 match was decided 4-3 on penalties after a 1-1 draw).

France emerged from the semi-finals winning 1-0 over Portugal. Henry was tripped inside the box and a penalty was awarded, which Zidane scored and it stood as the winning goal, as defender Lilian Thuram neutralized offensive threats from Portuguese stars Pauleta and Cristiano Ronaldo. At home, when news came of France's victory, there were mass celebrations at the Eiffel Tower and Arc de Triomphe.

France took on Italy in the final, but the teams were level at 1-1 at the end of normal time. With extra-time failing to produce a victor, penalty kicks were required to settle the match. Italy won the shoot-out 5-3 to be crowned 2006 World Champions. The tournaments Golden Ball Winner Zinédine Zidane (playing his last professional match) scored the opening goal of the final (becoming only the fourth player to score in two World Cup final games), but his accomplishments in the finals were marred by his sending off (becoming only the fourth player to be sent off in a world cup final) for violent conduct when he headbutted Marco Materazzi with only ten minutes until extra-time.

[edit] Euro 2008 Qualifiers

France started its qualifying round for Euro 2008 on September 2, 2006 by beating Georgia in Tbilisi 3-0.The goal scorers for this match were Malouda, Louis Saha and Malkhaz Asatiani (own goal). They then took on world champions Italy 3-1 in Paris on September 6, 2006 with Sidney Govou striking twice along with Henry, but suffered a huge upset when beaten 1-0 by Scotland on October 7, 2006, their first European Championship qualifying defeat since they lost 3-2 to Russia on June 5, 1999. On October 11, 2006, France defeated Faroe Islands by 5-0. All the French strikers that played in the match scored. Goals came from Louis Saha, Thierry Henry, Nicolas Anelka and 2 goals from the Juventus striker David Trezeguet. France beat Lithuania 1-0 on March 24, 2007 with Chelsea striker Nicolas Anelka rescuing an injury hit French side by shooting a wonderful long range effort.The injuries suffered by France were Louis Saha, Thierry Henry, Frank Ribéry, Patrick Vieira,and David Trezeguet. France took on Ukraine on June 2, 2007 in Paris. Both team were hit by injuries with France missing Patrick Vieira and Thierry Henry while Ukraine missed their world class striker Andriy Shevchenko.The game ended in a 2-0 victory with second half strikes from Franck Ribéry and Nicolas Anelka who scored his third goal in three matches. Then on June 6, 2007 France defeated Georgia in Auxerre by 1-0, with Samir Nasri scoring his first senior international goal. On September 8, 2007, in a much-anticipated rematch, France and Italy played to a 0-0 draw at the San Siro in Milan. Once again though, on September 12, 2007, France fell to Scotland and were defeated 1-0 after Landreau was caught off guard with a strike from Scotland's James McFadden adding another loss, but this time on their home (Parc des Princes) turf. On the October 12, 2007, their match with the Faroe Islands, was threatened to be postponed after bad weather kept their plane from landing in the Faroe Islands, they had to spend the night in Norway. The next day however on 13 October 2007, the match went ahead as planned, albeit around 30 minutes after scheduled kick-off time with France taking just 8 minutes to open up a 2-0 lead, the match eventually finished 6-0 with strikes from Nicolas Anelka, Thierry Henry, and 2 goals from Karim Benzema just before half time. In the second half Jerome Rothen and Hatem Ben Arfa completed the rout. With Italy's victory over Scotland on November 17, 2007, France only just, by 2 points over Scotland, qualified for Euro 2008.

[edit] 2010 FIFA World Cup Qualification

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Flag of France France 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Flag of Romania Romania 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Flag of Serbia Serbia 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Flag of Lithuania Lithuania 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Flag of Austria Austria 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Flag of the Faroe Islands Faroe Islands 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
  Flag of Austria Flag of the Faroe Islands Flag of France Flag of Lithuania Flag of Romania Flag of Serbia
Flag of Austria 5 Sep '09 6 Sep '08 10 Oct '09 1 Apr '09 15 Oct '08
Flag of the Faroe Islands 11 Oct '08 19 Aug '09 9 Sep '09 10 Sep '08 10 Jun '09
Flag of France 14 Oct '09 10 Oct '09 1 Apr '09 5 Sep '09 10 Sep '08
Flag of Lithuania 10 Sep '08 15 Oct '08 28 Mar '09 6 Jun '09 14 Oct '09
Flag of Romania 9 Sep '09 14 Oct '09 11 Oct '08 6 Sep '08 28 Mar '09
Flag of Serbia 6 Jun '09 6 Sep '08 9 Sep '09 11 Oct '08 10 Oct '09

[edit] Representing multicultural France

On the 2006 French national team, 17 of the 23 players were members of racial minorities, including many of the most prominent players. The team featured players from the overseas departments and players who are themselves immigrants or the children of immigrants from former French colonial territories. Zinédine Zidane is the child of an immigrant couple from Algeria,now Karim Benzema and Samir Nasri are from the French Algerian people. Vikash Dhorasoo — the first French player of Indian origin - played in the 2006 World Cup. Meanwhile, several players are of African or West Indian origin. Patrick Vieira immigrated as a child from Senegal, Bafétimbi Gomis has double French-Senegalese nationality, and Claude Makélélé did likewise from the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Lilian Thuram is from France's overseas department of Guadeloupe. Thierry Henry is the son of parents born in Guadeloupe and Martinique, while Louis Saha, Sylvain Wiltord, and Pascal Chimbonda all have parents who hail from Guadeloupe. Finally, Florent Malouda was born in French Guiana.

The French national football team has long reflected the ethnic diversity of the country. The first black player playing in the national team was Raoul Diagne in 1931, the son of the first black African elected to the French National Assembly, Blaise Diagne. In the 1950s, the first French national team reaching international success with a semi-final at the World Cup 1958 already included many sons of immigrants such as Raymond Kopa, Roger Piantoni, Maryan Wisnieski or Bernard Chiarelli. This tradition continued through the 1980s, when such successful players as Michel Platini, Jean Tigana, Luis Fernandez, Gérard Janvion, Manuel Amoros or Eric Cantona were all of either foreign-born or overseas-born ancestries. Since the 1990s, the team has been widely celebrated as an example of the modern multicultural French ideal.[1]

In recent years, critics on the far right of the French political spectrum have taken issue with the proportional underrepresentation of white Frenchmen on the team. National Front politician Jean-Marie Le Pen protested in 1998 that the Black, Blanc, Beur team that won the World Cup did not look sufficiently "French." In 2002, led by Ghanaian-born Marcel Desailly, the French team unanimously publicly appealled to the French voting public to reject the presidential candidacy of Le Pen and instead return President Jacques Chirac to office in a landslide. In 2006, Le Pen also resumed his criticism, charging that coach Raymond Domenech had selected too many black players.[2]

In 2005, French philosopher Alain Finkielkraut caused a controversy by remarking to the Israeli newspaper Haaretz that despite its earlier slogan, "the French national team is in fact black-black-black," adding "France is made fun of all around Europe because of that." He later excused himself for this comment, which he declared was not meant to be offensive.[3]

In 2004, a television crew recorded Spanish coach Luis Aragonés motivating Thierry Henry's Arsenal teammate José Antonio Reyes by saying Demuestra que eres mejor que ese negro de mierda ("Show that you're better than that shitty black"). After an investigation, UEFA fined the RFEF and warned that future incidents would be punished more severely. Henry and Nike began a Stand Up Speak Up campaign against football racism as a result of the incident. Before the start of France's 2006 World Cup second round match against Spain, which France would win 3-1, coach Raymond Domenech claimed that Spanish fans were making racial taunts[2], this however was not proved.

The Zidane-Materazzi headbutt incident in the 2006 World Cup final and its aftermath served as a symbol for the larger issue of Europe's struggle to integrate its non-white immigrant population: Even though both players denied it,[4] international media speculated for days about the presence of a racist element in the exchange,[5] observing that the Italian team contained no ethnic minorities.[6]

The national team's overall impact on France's efforts to integrate its minorities and come to terms with its colonial past has been mixed, however. In 2001, France played a friendly match in the Stade de France, site of its 1998 World Cup triumph, against Algeria. It was France's first meeting with its former colony, with whom it had fought a war from 1954-62, and it proved controversial. France's national anthem, La Marseillaise, was booed by Algerian supporters before the game, and following a French goal that made the score 4-1 in the second half, spectators ran onto the field of play and caused the game to be suspended. It was never resumed.

[edit] Competitive record

[edit] World Cup record

Year Result Position GP W D* L GS GA
Flag of Uruguay 1930 Round 1 7 3 1 0 2 4 3
Flag of Italy 1934 Round of 16 9 1 0 0 1 2 3
Flag of France 1938 Quarterfinals 6 2 1 0 1 4 4
Flag of Brazil 1950 Did not qualify - - - - - - -
Flag of Switzerland 1954 Round 1 11 2 1 0 1 3 3
Flag of Sweden 1958 Third Place 3 6 4 0 2 23 15
Flag of Chile 1962 Did not qualify - - - - - - -
Flag of England 1966 Round 1 13 3 0 1 2 2 5
Flag of Mexico 1970 Did not qualify - - - - - - -
Flag of West Germany 1974 Did not qualify - - - - - - -
Flag of Argentina 1978 Round 1 12 3 1 0 2 5 5
Flag of Spain 1982 Fourth Place 4 7 3 2 2 16 12
Flag of Mexico 1986 Third Place 3 7 4 2 1 12 6
Flag of Italy 1990 Did not qualify - - - - - - -
Flag of the United States 1994 Did not qualify - - - - - - -
Flag of France 1998 Champions 1 7 6 1 0 15 2
Flag of South KoreaFlag of Japan 2002 Round 1 28 3 0 1 2 0 3
Flag of Germany 2006 Final 2 7 4 3 0 9 3
Total 12/18 1 Title 51 25 10 16 95 64

[edit] European Championship record

Year Result GP W D* L GS GA
Flag of France 1960 Semifinals 2 0 0 2 4 7
Flag of Spain 1964 Did not qualify - - - - - -
Flag of Italy 1968 Did not qualify - - - - - -
Flag of Belgium 1972 Did not qualify - - - - - -
Flag of Yugoslavia 1976 Did not qualify - - - - - -
Flag of Italy 1980 Did not qualify - - - - - -
Flag of France 1984 Champions 5 5 0 0 14 4
Flag of West Germany 1988 Did not qualify - - - - - -
Flag of Sweden 1992 Round 1 3 0 2 1 2 3
Flag of England 1996 Semifinals 5 2 3 0 5 2
Flag of BelgiumFlag of the Netherlands 2000 Champions 6 5 0 1 13 7
Flag of Portugal 2004 Quarterfinals 4 2 1 1 7 5
Flag of AustriaFlag of Switzerland 2008 Qualified
Total 7/13 25 14 6 5 45 28

[edit] Confederations Cup record

Year Result GP W D* L GS GA
Flag of Saudi Arabia 1992 Did not qualify - - - - - -
Flag of Saudi Arabia 1995 Did not qualify - - - - - -
Flag of Saudi Arabia 1997 Did not qualify - - - - - -
Flag of Mexico 1999 Withdrew - - - - - -
Flag of South KoreaFlag of Japan 2001 Champions 5 4 0 1 12 2
Flag of France 2003 Champions 5 5 0 0 12 3
Flag of Germany 2005 Did not qualify - - - - - -
Flag of South Africa 2009
Total 2/7 10 9 0 1 24 5
*Denotes draws include knockout matches decided on penalty kicks.
**Gold background color indicates that the tournament was won. Red border color indicates tournament was held on home soil.

[edit] Current squad

23-man squad for the UEFA EURO 2008.

Caps and goals as of June 3, 2008.

Number Name DOB Club Caps (goals) Debut
Goalkeepers
1 Steve Mandanda March 28, 1985 (age 23) Flag of France Marseille 1 (0) v Ecuador, 27 May 2008
16 Sébastien Frey March 18, 1980 (age 28) Flag of Italy Fiorentina 2 (0) v Ukraine, 21 November 2007
23 Grégory Coupet December 31, 1972 (age 35) Flag of France Lyon 31 (0) v Australia, 1 June 2001
Defenders
2 Jean-Alain Boumsong December 28, 1979 (age 28) Flag of France Lyon 23 (1) v Japan, 20 June 2003
3 Éric Abidal July 11, 1979 (age 28) Flag of Spain Barcelona 35 (0) v Bosnia-Herzegovina, 18 August 2004
5 William Gallas August 17, 1977 (age 30) Flag of England Arsenal 62 (2) v Slovenia, 12 October 2002
13 Patrice Evra May 15, 1981 (age 27) Flag of England Manchester United 11 (0) v Bosnia-Herzegovina, 18 August 2004
14 François Clerc April 18, 1983 (age 25) Flag of France Lyon 11 (0) v Faroe Islands, 11 October 2006
15 Lilian Thuram January 1, 1972 (age 36) Flag of Spain Barcelona 140 (2) v Czech Republic, 17 August 1994
17 Sébastien Squillaci August 11, 1980 (age 27) Flag of France Lyon 13 (0) v Bosnia-Herzegovina, 18 August 2004
19 Willy Sagnol March 18, 1977 (age 31) Flag of Germany Bayern Munich 56 (0) v Turkey, 15 November 2000
Midfielders
4 Patrick Vieira June 23, 1976 (age 31) Flag of Italy Inter Milan 105 (6) v Netherlands, 26 February 1997
6 Claude Makélélé February 18, 1973 (age 35) Flag of England Chelsea 68 (0) v Norway, 22 July 1995
7 Florent Malouda June 13, 1980 (age 27) Flag of England Chelsea 39 (3) v Poland, 17 November 2004
10 Sidney Govou July 27, 1979 (age 28) Flag of France Lyon 32 (7) v Tunisia, 21 August 2002
11 Samir Nasri June 20, 1987 (age 20) Flag of France Marseille 10 (2) v Lithuania, 24 March 2007
20 Jérémy Toulalan September 10, 1983 (age 24) Flag of France Lyon 13 (0) v Faroe Islands, 11 October 2006
21 Lassana Diarra March 10, 1985 (age 23) Flag of England Portsmouth 13 (0) v Lithuania, 24 March 2007
22 Franck Ribéry April 1, 1983 (age 25) Flag of Germany Bayern Munich 27 (4) v Mexico, 27 May 2006
Strikers
8 Nicolas Anelka March 14, 1979 (age 29) Flag of England Chelsea 48 (11) v Sweden, 22 April 1998
9 Karim Benzema December 19, 1987 (age 20) Flag of France Lyon 11 (3) v Austria, 28 March 2007
12 Thierry Henry August 17, 1977 (age 30) Flag of Spain Barcelona 100 (44) v South Africa, 11 October 1997
18 Bafetimbi Gomis June 8, 1985 (age 22) Flag of France Saint-Étienne 2 (2) v Ecuador, 27 May 2008

[edit] Recent call-ups

Name DOB Club Caps (goals) Debut Most recent callup
Goalkeepers
Teddy Richert September 21, 1974 (age 34) Flag of France Sochaux 0 (0) N/A v Slovakia, 22 August 2007
Mickaël Landreau May 14, 1979 (age 29) Flag of France PSG 11 (0) v Mexico,
3 June 2001
v Ecuador,
27 May 2008
Hugo Lloris December 26, 1986 (age 21) Flag of France Lyon 0 (0) N/A v England,
26 March 2008
Defenders
Julien Rodriguez June 11, 1978 (age 29) Flag of France Marseille 0 (0) N/A v Argentina,
7 February 2007
Jonathan Zebina July 19, 1978 (age 29) Flag of Italy Juventus 1 (0) v Sweden, 9 February 2005 v Slovakia,
22 August 2007
Mikaël Silvestre August 9, 1977 (age 30) Flag of England Manchester United 39 (0) v Germany,
27 February 2001
v Slovakia,
22 August 2007
Anthony Réveillère November 10, 1979 (age 28) Flag of France Lyon 5 (0) v Israel,
11 October 2003
v Slovakia,
22 August 2007
Gaël Givet October 9, 1981 (age 26) Flag of France Marseille 12 (0) v Bosnia-Herzegovina,
18 August 2004
v England,
26 March 2008
Philippe Mexès March 30, 1982 (age 26) Flag of Italy Roma 8 (0) v Malta,
16 October 2002
v Ecuador,
27 May 2008
Julien Escudé August 17, 1979 (age 28) Flag of Spain Sevilla 6 (0) v Faroe Islands,
11 October 2006
v Ecuador,
27 May 2008
Bacary Sagna February 14, 1983 (age 25) Flag of England Arsenal 2 (0) v Slovakia,
22 August 2007
v England,
26 March 2008
Gaël Clichy July 26, 1985 (age 22) Flag of England Arsenal 0 (0) N/A v England,
26 March 2008
Midfielders
Mathieu Flamini March 7, 1984 (age 24) Flag of Italy Milan 2 (0) v Morocco,
November 16, 2007
v Ecuador,
27 May 2008
Alou Diarra July 15, 1981 (age 26) Flag of France Bordeaux 12 (0) v Republic of Ireland,
4 October 2004
v Ecuador,
27 May 2008
Hatem Ben Arfa March 7, 1987 (age 21) Flag of France Lyon 5 (1) v Faroe Islands,
13 October 2007
v Ecuador,
27 May 2008
Abou Diaby May 11, 1986 (age 22) Flag of England Arsenal 3 (0) v Lithuania,
24 March 2007
v Spain,
6 February 2008
Jérôme Rothen March 31, 1978 (age 30) Flag of France PSG 13 (2) v Malta,
29 March 2003
v Spain,
6 February 2008
Rio Mavuba March 8, 1984 (age 23) Flag of France Lille 6 (0) v Bosnia-Herzegovina,
18 August 2004
v Slovakia,
22 August 2007
Strikers
Djibril Cissé August 12, 1981 (age 27) Flag of France Marseille 37 (9) v Belgium,
18 May 2002
v Ecuador,
27 May 2008
David Trezeguet October 15, 1977 (age 30) Flag of Italy Juventus 71 (34) v Spain,
28 January 1998
v England,
26 March 2008
Jimmy Briand August 2, 1985 (age 22) Flag of France Rennes 0 (0) N/A v Spain,
6 February 2008
Jérémy Menez May 7, 1987 (age 21) Flag of France AS Monaco 0 (0) N/A v Spain,
6 February 2008
Frédéric Piquionne December 8, 1978 (age 29) Flag of France AS Monaco 1 (0) v Austria,
28 March 2007
v Slovakia,
22 August 2007

[edit] Coaching staff

Head Coach Flag of France Raymond Domenech
Assistant Coach Flag of France Pierre Mankowski
Goalkeeping Coach Flag of France Bruno Martini

[edit] Previous squads

[edit] Players

[edit] Famous past players

See also:Category:France international footballers

   

[edit] Most capped French players

As of June 3, 2008, the ten players with the most caps for France are:

# Name Career Caps Goals
1 Lilian Thuram* 1994 - Present 140 2
2 Marcel Desailly 1993 - 2004 116 3
3 Zinedine Zidane 1994 - 2006 108 31
4 Patrick Vieira* 1997 - Present 105 6
5 Didier Deschamps 1989 - 2000 103 4
6 Thierry Henry* 1997 - Present 100 44
7 Bixente Lizarazu 1992 - 2004 97 2
7 Laurent Blanc 1989 - 2000 97 16
9 Sylvain Wiltord* 1999 - 2006 92 26
10 Fabien Barthez 1994 - 2006 87 0

Members of the 1998 FIFA World Cup winning team are in bold.
* denotes a player still playing or available for selection.

[edit] Top France goalscorers

As of June 3, 2008 the highest ten goalscorers for France are:

# Player Career Goals (Caps)
1 Thierry Henry* 1997 - Present 44 (100)
2 Michel Platini 1976 - 1987 41 (72)
3 David Trézéguet* 1998 - 2008 34 (71)
4 Zinedine Zidane 1994 - 2006 31 (108)
5 Just Fontaine 1953 - 1960 30 (21)
5 Jean-Pierre Papin 1986 - 1995 30 (54)
7 Youri Djorkaeff 1993 - 2002 28 (82)
8 Sylvain Wiltord* 1999 - 2006 26 (92)
9 Jean Vincent 1953 - 1961 22 (46)
10 Jean Nicolas 1933 - 1938 21 (25)

Members of the 1998 FIFA World Cup winning team are in bold.
* denotes a player still playing or available for selection.

[edit] Coaches

Before 1955, players were selected by committee.

Category:France national football team managers

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ "A Multi-Hued National Team Thrills Racially Uneasy France", Washington Post, 7 July 2006. Retrieved on 2006-08-17. 
  2. ^ "The Sword is Mightier than Le Pen", ESPN, 7 July 2006. Retrieved on 2006-08-17. 
  3. ^ "Finkielkraut sur Europe 1", Le Nouvel Observateur, 25 November 2005. Retrieved on 2005-11-25. 
  4. ^ "Zidane and Materazzi fined and banned by FIFA", Reuters, 20 July 2006. Retrieved on 2006-07-20. 
  5. ^ Hughes, Matt. "Read my lips: the taunt that made Zidane snap", The Times, 2006-07-10. Retrieved on 2006-07-11. 
  6. ^ "Race card trumps head-butt", Toronto Sun, 2006-07-15. Retrieved on 2006-08-12.  "The Head Butt Furor: A Window on Europe's Identity Crisis", TIME Magazine, 2006-07-13. Retrieved on 2006-07-13.  It should be noted that Italy, historically an emigrant nation, has a small non-white population, whereas France has become a multiracial country due to substantial non-Europeant immigration, chiefly from its former colonial empire.

[edit] External links

[edit] Titles

Preceded by
1994 Brazil Flag of Brazil
World Champions
1998 (First title)
Succeeded by
2002 Brazil Flag of Brazil
Preceded by
1999 Mexico Flag of Mexico
Confederations Cup Winners
2001 (First title)
2003 (Second title)
Succeeded by
2005 Brazil Flag of Brazil
Preceded by
1980 West Germany Flag of West Germany
European Champions
1984 (First title)
Succeeded by
1988 Netherlands Flag of the Netherlands
Preceded by
1996 Germany Flag of Germany
European Champions
2000 (Second title)
Succeeded by
2004 Greece Flag of Greece
Preceded by
Inaugral Event
Artemio Franchi Trophy
1985 (First title)
Succeeded by
1993 Argentina Flag of Argentina
Preceded by
1993 Hungary Flag of Hungary
Kirin Cup Champions
1994 (First title)
Succeeded by
1995 Japan Flag of Japan
Preceded by
1996 Croatia Flag of Croatia
King Hassan II Cup Winners
1998 (First title)
2000 (Second title)
Succeeded by
Incumbent