RC Toulonnais

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Toulon
Full name Rugby Club Toulon
Founded 1908
Location Toulon, France
Ground(s) Stade Mayol
Capacity 13,700
President Mourad Boudjellal
Coach Flag of New Zealand Tana Umaga
League Pro D2
2006-07 4th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours
Flag of France

RC Toulonnais (also known as RC Toulon or just Toulon) are a French professional rugby union based in Toulon in Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur. They currently play in the second division of French rugby, the Rugby Pro D2 competition. They have won the national competition on three occasions.

Established in 1908, Toulon currently play their home games at the Stade Mayol. The club colours are red and black. Toulon were Pro D2 champions in 2005, but after finishing 14th in the 2005-06 Top 14 season, they were relegated back down. After signing a number of high profile footballers, the club made a strong run at promotion in the 2006-07 season, and succeeded in their promotion quest in 2007-08 (pending a required financial audit), winning that season's Pro D2 crown with two rounds to spare.

Contents

[edit] History

The Rugby Club Toulonnais was founded on June 3, 1908 as a merger of Étoile Sportive Varoise and members of the Stade Varois, a club based in nearby La Seyne-sur-Mer. It took the club 23 years to reach the top of French rugby, when they won the 1931 championship against Lyon Olympique Universitaire (6-3, 2 tries to 1). 30,000 people joined the players when they returned from Bordeaux, where the final had been played, and the town went crazy for several days.

Toulon remained one of the top French clubs, but they lost four consecutive finals scattered over 35 years (1948, 1968, 1971 et 1985). The 1985 extra-time defeat by Stade Toulousain left them with a lot of regrets, and playing in the most spectacular final ever (36-22) did nothing to alleviate the pain of losing. The Red and Black only waited two more years to finally lay their hands on the Bouclier de Brennus, as they defeated Racing at the Parc des Princes. The third title came in 1992, against Biarritz Olympique, in Serge Blanco’s last match and last chance to win the title.

For eight years, Toulon was not particularly successful and were in heavy financial trouble (a 10 million franc deficit) forced the Ligue Nationale de Rugby to demote them to the Second Division in July 2000. The club missed an immediate return the next year, going down in the final to Montauban, as only one club was promoted that year. It took them five more years to do so as RCT went on to win the Pro D2 title. Unfortunately, despite immense popular support (gates averaged more than 12,000), and a lot of enthusiasm, they only managed to win three games ou of 26 and were relegated after only a season.

A new president, Mourad Boudjellal, a born-and-bred Toulonnais who made his fortune in the comic strip business, promised to build a huge team. He said: "I invented the Top 15, with a team that could be competitive in the Top 14”.[1] He signed a high number of first-class players, some of them well above 30, like Jean-Jacques Crenca, Yann Delaigue, Gonzalo Quesada and Dan Luger. He created a lot of buzz around the team as he managed to sign former All Blacks captain Tana Umaga, who arrived in Toulon right after the end ot the Air New Zealand Cup on October 26, 2006. The contract has been rumoured to be around €300,000 (£200,000), which Boudjellal claims to pay from his own pocket, for only 8 to 10 matches.

Boudjellal has continued to sign high-profile veteran players. On March 22, 2007, the club announced that Australia captain and all-time international caps leader George Gregan had signed to play for Toulon in the 2007-08 season. Gregan, who will arrive at Toulon after the 2007 Rugby World Cup, will reportedly be paid €400,000, again out of Boudjellai's pocket.[2] Two months later, on May 23, the club announced that Andrew Mehrtens, the All Blacks' all-time scoring leader, had signed a contract for 2007-08.[3][4]

[edit] 2006-07 season

Finding themselves back in Pro D2, Toulon started the season off with a bang, thumping Stade Montois 49-12 in a clinical display which saw them score six fantastic tries. In their next match they had a shock loss to Oyonnax and would go on to lose every league away match until Racing Métro 92 Paris, where a Tana Umaga-inspired Toulon ran in four tries. They then went on a streak with Umaga present, winning all eight matches he played in (their only loss in this stretch was when he was out injured). The streak gave Toulon enough momentum to finish fourth on the league table, putting them in the promotion playoffs for a place in the Top 14, but lost in the promotion semifinals 21-17 at La Rochelle.

[edit] 2007-08: promotion

The signings of Gregan and Mehrtens for 2007-08 appeared to indicate Boudjellai's seriousness in securing a return to the Top 14. They also went on to sign Victor Matfield, the current South African lock, and New Zealand hooker Anton Oliver. Tana Umaga returned as coach to head the impressive list of ex-internationals.

Toulon shot to the top of the Pro D2 table almost from the start of the season, never dropping from the top spot on their way to clinching promotion with two rounds to spare. With the success of their promotion quest—despite Matfield, who had only signed a six-month deal, returning to South Africa—Toulon are now in position to sign still more prominent stars. Most notably, numerous media reports have linked All Blacks superstar fly-half Dan Carter to Toulon for at least part of the 2008-09 season.[5]

[edit] Emblem

On the day of his arrival in Paris, on May 1, 1895, just before his first concert, Félix Mayol was met by a female friend at the station, who gave him some lily-of-the-valley, a flower people traditionally exchange on May 1 in France. He pinned it on his lapel, his concert was a success and Mayol, who was pretty superstitious, made the lily-of-the-valley his personal emblem. As a matter of fact, the bunch on the emblem bears 13 bells. It was taken up by the rugby club in 1921.

[edit] Stadium

Main article: Stade Mayol

In 1920, its stadium was inaugurated. It is named after Félix Mayol, a very popular concert hall singer from Toulon who had succeeded in Paris in the early 20th century. It is one of the few French stadiums to be almost completely surrounded by the city and overlooks the Toulon bay and military harbour in the Mediterranean.

[edit] Honours

[edit] Finals results

[edit] French championship

Date Winners Runners-up Score Venue Spectators
10 May 1931 RC Toulon Lyon OU 6-3 Parc Lescure, Bordeaux 10,000
18 April 1948 FC Lourdes RC Toulon 11-3 Stade des Ponts Jumeaux, Toulouse 29,753
16 June 1968 FC Lourdes RC Toulon 9-9 AP Stadium Municipal, Toulouse 28,526
16 May 1971 Béziers RC Toulon 15-9 AP Parc Lescure, Bordeaux 27,737
25 May 1985 Toulouse RC Toulon 36-22 AP Parc des Princes, Paris 37,000
22 May 1987 RC Toulon Racing Club de France 15-12 Parc des Princes, Paris 48,000
27 May 1989 Toulouse RC Toulon 18-12 Parc des Princes, Paris 48,000
6 June 1992 RC Toulon Biarritz 19-14 Parc des Princes, Paris 48,000

[edit] Challenge Yves du Manoir

Year Winner Score Runner-up
1934 Stade Toulousain
RC Toulon
0-0 (tied, joint winners)
1939 Section Paloise 5-0 RC Toulon
1954 FC Lourdes 28-12 RC Toulon
1970 RC Toulon 25-22 SU Agen
1983 SU Agen 29-7 RC Toulon

[edit] Current squad

For the 2007-08 season[6]
Nat. Position Player
Flag of France PR Nicolas Agnesi
Flag of France PR David Banquet
Flag of France PR Benjamin Bastères
Flag of France PR Alessio Galasso
Flag of France PR Mehdi Mérabet
Flag of South Africa PR Wessel Roux
Flag of South Africa PR Lawrence Sephaka
Flag of New Zealand PR Saimone Taumoepeau
Flag of France HK Pier-Nichol Feldis
Flag of Scotland HK Philip Fitzgerald
Flag of New Zealand HK Anton Oliver
Flag of France HK Jean-Baptiste Rué
Flag of France LK Franck Alazet
Flag of Argentina LK Esteban Lozada
Flag of France LK Yoann Maestri
Flag of South Africa LK Victor Matfield
Flag of South Africa LK Francois van Schouwenburg
Flag of France LK Thomas Vervoort
Flag of France FL Cédric Béal
Flag of Georgia (country) FL Grégory Labadze
Flag of France FL Thomas Sourice
Flag of France FL Soane Toevalu
Flag of Samoa N8 Fotunuupule Auelua
Flag of South Africa N8 Nico Breedt
Nat. Position Player
Flag of France SH Anthony Giacobazzi
Flag of Australia SH George Gregan
Flag of South Africa SH Norman Jordaan
Flag of Samoa SH Junior Poluleuligaga
Flag of France FH Julien Chouquet
Flag of New Zealand FH Andrew Mehrtens
Flag of Samoa FH Tusi Pisi
Flag of South Africa FH Chris Rossouw
Flag of France CE David Douy
Flag of Australia CE Mafileo Kefu
Flag of Samoa CE Kiri Mariner
Flag of France CE Benjamin Servien
Flag of New Zealand CE Tana Umaga
Flag of France WG Marc Andreu
Flag of France WG Matthieu Horb
Flag of the Czech Republic WG Martin Jágr
Flag of England WG Dan Luger
Flag of Fiji WG Jeremaiya Tamanisau
Flag of France WG Khaled Zagar
Flag of New Zealand WG Orene Ai'i
Flag of France FB Olivier Grimaud

[7]

Current and former internationals

[edit] Famous players

[edit] References

  1. ^ Umaga, l'incroyable transfert. rugbyhebdo.fr. Retrieved on 4 November 2006.
  2. ^ Gregan puts pen to paper with Toulon. Planet-Rugby.com (2007-03-22).
  3. ^ Mehrtens agrees to Toulon switch. BBC (2007-05-23).
  4. ^ Rugby: Mehrtens signs for Toulon. NZ Herald (2007-05-24).
  5. ^ Gilhooly, Daniel. "All Blacks: Carter keen to make decision on future", The New Zealand Herald, 2008-06-01. Retrieved on 2008-06-02. 
  6. ^ effectif 2007-2008 équipe 1
  7. ^ Nat. shown here indicates sporting nationality as defined by the IRB

[edit] External links