AS Saint-Étienne

Saint-Étienne
Full name Association Sportive
Saint-Étienne Loire
Nickname(s) Les Verts
Founded 1919
Ground Stade Geoffroy-Guichard,
Saint Étienne
(Capacity: 35,616[1])
Chairman Flag of Algeria Bernard Caiazzo
Flag of France Roland Romeyer
Manager Flag of France Alain Perrin
League Ligue 1
2007-08 Ligue 1, 5th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Away colours

Association Sportive de Saint-Étienne Loire, (ASSE or A.S. Saint-Étienne) are a French football team founded in 1920. They play their home games at the Stade Geoffroy-Guichard in the city of Saint Étienne. They are also one of the most successful teams in French Football history, with honours including 10 French First Division championship wins. Their primary rivals are Olympique Lyonnais, from nearby Lyon.

Contents

History

Early days

A.S. Saint-Étienne was created in 1919 by members of the Amicale des employés de la Société des magasins Casino: members of the employees' Union of the Casino grocery chain. Since green was the colour of the chain, green jerseys were also adopted. Due to FFF regulations, the commercial name Casino was dropped from the club's name in 1920. In order to keep the initials A.S.C, however, the club was re-named Amical Sporting Club.

In 1928, Pierre Guichard (the son of the head of Casino Geoffroy Guichard) took over the club and renamed it Association Sportive Stéphanoise. In 1933, the team turned professional and the name was changed again to the form it presently holds: Association Sportive de Saint-Étienne. The club was first promoted to the French First Division for the 1937-1938 season.

Apogée

In 1955 ASSE won their first trophy, the Charles Drago Cup. In 1958, three seasons later, the club claimed the French First Division title for the first time. As French Champions, Saint-Étienne subsequently participated in their first European Cup campaign against Rangers.

Roger Rocher became president of the club in 1961. The following year, the team won the French Cup, but also were relegated to the Second Division. ASSE won the Second Division the following year, and were promoted back to the First Division. The team then continued a surprising ascent, winning the French First Division trophy the following year (1964). Between 1967 and 1970, Saint-Étienne won four championships consecutively, and added two additional French Cups to their trophy cabinet (1967, 1970).

Robert Herbin was named manager in 1972, and lead the team to the double in 1974 and 1976. The team won a ninth championship in 1976. That same year, the club lost in the finals of the European Cup against Bayern Munich. ASSE followed that season by winning the French Cup again in 1977. Their last championship (and major silverware) win came in 1981, with their tenth First Division Championship.

Decline

In 1982, a financial scandal lead to the decline in the club's performance. The president, Roger Rocher, was forced to leave the club , and spent several months in jail. Since then, the club has spent much of its time in the bottom half of the First Division and the Second Division. Although its sporting performances have been inconsistent, the club has still benefited from the unconditional support of its fans.

The club came back to the first division in 1999, finishing 6th. Supporters hoped a return to success with Brazilian strikers Aloisio and Alex celebrating his goals by imitating a panther (Emblem of the club), but in 2001, Alex and the Ukrainian goalkeeper Maksym Levytsky, were suspended for four months for the use of fake Portuguese and Greek passports, respectively. At the end of a judicial inquiry, which linked some of the management staff to the passport forgeries, seven championship points were subtracted from Saint-Étienne's tally, causing them to be relegated to the Second Division.

Renouveau ?

After relegation Saint-Étienne struggled, with mixed results in the Second Division/Ligue 2. They finally won the Ligue 2 championship in 2004, achieving promotion to Ligue 1. The club finished 6th in Ligue 1 the following season, which enabled them to participate in a European tournament, the Intertoto Cup, for the first time in many years. Having finished the 2007-08 Ligue 1 season in 5th place, Saint-Étienne will be playing in the 2008-09 UEFA Cup after 27 years of absence.

Honours

Current squad

As of September 23,2008[2]

No. Position Player
1 Flag of France GK Jody Viviani
2 Flag of France DF Cédric Varrault
4 Flag of Greece DF Stathis Tavlaridis
5 Flag of France FW Sébastien Grax
7 Flag of France FW Dimitri Payet
8 Flag of Brazil FW Ilan
9 Flag of France FW David Gigliotti
10 Flag of Belgium FW Kevin Mirallas
11 Flag of France MF Geoffrey Dernis
12 Flag of France MF Blaise Matuidi
13 Flag of Algeria MF Amine Linganzi
15 Flag of France MF Stephen Vincent
16 Flag of France GK Jérémie Janot
17 Flag of France MF Yohan Hautcoeur
No. Position Player
18 Flag of France FW Bafetimbi Gomis
19 Flag of France MF Christophe Landrin (Vice-Captain)
20 Flag of Senegal MF Boubacar Mansaly
21 Flag of France DF Mouhamadou Dabo
22 Flag of Japan MF Daisuke Matsui
23 Flag of France DF David Sauget
24 Flag of France MF Loïc Perrin (Captain)
25 Flag of Portugal MF Paulo Machado (on loan from FC Porto)
26 Flag of Senegal MF Moustapha Bayal Sall
27 Flag of France FW Helton Dos Reis
28 Flag of France DF Yohan Benalouane
29 Flag of France FW Emmanuel Rivière
32 Flag of France DF Sylvain Monsoreau
40 Flag of Senegal GK Abdoulaye Coulibaly

Out on loan

No. Position Player
10 Flag of Senegal FW Maodomalick Faye (at Tours FC)
25 Flag of Sweden MF Lasse Nilsson (at IF Elfsborg)
No. Position Player
30 Flag of France GK Jessy Moulin (at AC Arles)
31 Flag of France MF Samy Houri (at AC Arles)

Reserves

As of November 11,2008[3]

No. Position Player
Flag of France GK Maxime Cassara
Flag of France GK Benjamin Lardon
Flag of France DF Yoann Andreu
Flag of France DF Clément Jouve
Flag of France DF Lounis Lanseur
Flag of Morocco DF Mehdi Messaoudi
Flag of France DF Hugo Vidal
Flag of France DF Pierrick Cros
Flag of Cameroon MF Olivier Boumal
No. Position Player
Flag of France MF Clément Charbonnier
Flag of France MF Paul Charmasson
Flag of France MF Hamid Draoui
Flag of France MF Josua Guilavogui
Flag of France MF Sébastien Lajara
Flag of France MF Fayçal Lebbihi
Flag of France MF Pape Abdou Paye
Flag of Côte d'Ivoire FW Serge Didi
Flag of France FW Valentin Lavialle
Flag of France FW Quentin Lendresse

Transfers

Out:

No. Position Player
Flag of France DF Anthony Badel (to AS Moulins)
Flag of Senegal MF Serigne Lam Mbaye (to ASC Yeggo)
Flag of Senegal MF Sidy Sagna (to ASC Yeggo)
Flag of Senegal FW Mohamed Gaye (to ASC Yeggo)
Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina FW Armin Causevic (to SV Wehen)
Flag of France MF Julien Cetout (to Tours FC)
Flag of Guinea MF Pascal Feindouno (to Al-Sadd Sports Club)

Notable players

For a complete list of AS Saint-Étienne players, see Category:AS Saint-Étienne players

France Flag of France
  • Claude Abbes
  • Sylvain Armand
  • Dominique Bathenay
  • Patrick Battiston
  • Georges Bereta
  • Laurent Blanc
  • Bernard Bosquier
  • Zoumana Camara
  • Georges Carnus
  • Patrice Carteron
  • Jean Castaneda
  • Michaël Citony
  • Grégory Coupet
  • Antoine Cuissard
  • Jean-Pierre Cyprien
  • Christophe Deguerville
  • Pascal Despeyroux
  • Gérard Farison
  • René Ferrier
  • Flag of Algeria Kader Firoud
  • Laurent Fournier
  • Bernard Genghini
  • Robert Herbin
  • Sylvain Kastendeuch
  • Aimé Jacquet
  • Gérard Janvion
  • Jean-François Larios
  • Jean-Michel Larqué
  • Christian Lopez
  • Laurent Paganelli
  • Gérald Passi
  • Frédéric Piquionne
  • Michel Platini
  • Lionel Potillon
  • Hervé Revelli
  • Patrick Revelli
  • Dominique Rocheteau
  • Laurent Roussey
  • Julien Sablé
  • Willy Sagnol
  • Jacques Santini
  • Christian Sarramagna
  • Jean Snella
  • Christian Synaeghel
  • Philippe Tibeuf
  • Maryan Wisnieski
  • Yoann Folly
Algeria Flag of Algeria
  • Karim Fellahi
  • Flag of France Kader Ferhaoui
  • Rachid Mekloufi
Argentina Flag of Argentina
  • Oswaldo Piazza
  • Flag of Croatia Daniel Bilos
Brazil Flag of Brazil
  • Alex
  • Aloisio
Bulgaria Flag of Bulgaria
  • Georgi Slavkov
Cameroon Flag of Cameroon
  • Joseph-Antoine Bell
  • Idriss Kameni
  • Flag of France Lucien Mettomo
  • Roger Milla
  • Eugène N'Jo Léa
Côte d'Ivoire Flag of Côte d'Ivoire
  • Tchiressoua Guel
  • Didier Zokora
Czech Republic Flag of the Czech Republic
  • Marek Heinz
  • Milan Luhový
Denmark Flag of Denmark
  • Miklos Molnar
  • John Sivebæk
Ghana Flag of Ghana
  • Ibrahim Abdul Razak
Guinea Flag of Guinea
  • Titi Camara
  • Pascal Feindouno
Israel Flag of Israel
  • Giora Spiegel
Mali Flag of Mali
  • Salif Keïta
Morocco Flag of Morocco
  • Mohammed Chaouch
  • Mustapha El Haddaoui
  • Nabil El Zhar([Saint-Étienne B)
The Netherlands Flag of the Netherlands
  • Johnny Rep
  • Kees Rijvers
  • Rob Witschge
Norway Flag of Norway
  • Bjorn Tore Kvarme
Poland Flag of Poland
  • Marcin Kuzba
  • Piotr Świerczewski
Portugal Flag of Portugal
  • Hélder Postiga
Russia Flag of Russia
  • Aleksandr Panov
Slovakia Flag of Slovakia
  • L'ubomír Moravčík
Switzerland Flag of Switzerland
  • Alain Geiger
  • Christophe Ohrel
  • Flag of Argentina Nestor Subiat
Ukraine Flag of Ukraine
  • Maxym Levitsky
Yugoslavia Flag of Yugoslavia
  • Ivan Ćurković
  • Vladimir Durković

Club officials

Board of Directors

Management

Academy Coaching Staff

Medical

Managerial history

  • 1933-33 : Flag of England Albert Locke
  • 1934-34 : Flag of England Harold Rivers
  • 1934-35 : Flag of Scotland William Duckworth
  • 1935-36 : Flag of Hungary Zoltan Vago
  • 1936-40 : Flag of Scotland William Duckworth
  • 1940-43 : Flag of France Émile Cabannes
  • 1943-50 : Flag of Austria Flag of France Ignace Tax
  • 1950-59 : Flag of France Jean Snella
  • 1959-60 : Flag of France René Vernier
  • 1960-61 : Flag of France François Wicart
  • 1961-62 : Flag of France Henri Guérin
  • 1962-63 : Flag of France François Wicart
  • 1963-67 : Flag of France Jean Snella
  • 1967-72 : Flag of France Albert Batteux
  • 1972-83 : Flag of France Robert Herbin
  • 1983 : Flag of France Guy Briet
  • 1983-84 : Flag of France Jean Djorkaeff
  • 1984 : Flag of France Robert Philippe
  • 1984-87 : Flag of Poland Henryk Kasperczak
  • 1987-90 : Flag of France Robert Herbin
  • 1990-92 : Flag of France Christian Sarramagna
  • 1992-94 : Flag of France Jacques Santini
  • 1994-96 : Flag of France Élie Baup
  • 1996 : Flag of France Maxime Bossis
  • 1996 : Flag of France Dominique Bathenay
  • 1996-97 : Flag of France Pierre Mankowski
  • 1997-98 : Flag of France Pierre Repellini
  • 1998-2000 : Flag of France Robert Nouzaret
  • 2000 : Flag of France Gérard Soler
  • 10/2000-01/2001 : Flag of Wales John Toshack
  • 01/2001-2001 : Flag of France Rudi Garcia and Flag of France Jean-Guy Wallemme
  • 2001 : Flag of France Alain Michel
  • 2001-04 : Flag of France Frédéric Antonetti
  • 2004-06 : Flag of France Élie Baup
  • 2006-2007 : Flag of the Czech Republic Ivan Hašek
  • 2007-2008 : Flag of France Laurent Roussey
  • 2008-present: Flag of France Alain Perrin

[4]

References

  1. www.asse.fr
  2. http://www.asse.fr/index.php?menu=pros&page=effectif_pro&teamId=1 Effectif professionnel]
  3. http://www.asse.fr/index.php?menu=pros&page=effectif_pro&teamId=2]
  4. France - Trainers of First and Second Division Clubs

External links