Olympique Lyonnais

Olympique Lyonnais
Full name Olympique Lyonnais
Nickname(s) Les Gones, Lyon, or OL
Founded 1899/1950[1]
Ground Stade Gerland
Lyon
(Capacity: 41,044[2])
Chairman Flag of France Jean-Michel Aulas
Manager Flag of France Claude Puel
League Ligue 1
2007-08 Ligue 1, 1st (Champions)
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Olympique Lyonnais (popularly known as OL, or simply Lyon) is a French football club based in Lyon. They play in Ligue 1 and are the reigning champions of France. They have won the Ligue 1 title seven years straight, a record that no other club in France has matched. Lyon have won seven Trophées des Champions, four Coupe de France, three Ligue 2 Championships as well as seven participations in the UEFA Champions League, despite not taking part in a final, or a semi-final. Olympique Lyonnais play their home matches at the 41,044 seater Stade de Gerland, Lyon. OL were also a member of the G14 group of leading European football clubs. Lyon was formed as Lyon Olympique Universitaire in 1899, according to many supporters and sport historians but was nationally established as a club on 3 August 1950. The club also has a women's football team with several international players in it.

Contents

History

Early history

OL came into existence after a disagreement between the rugby and football sections of the multisports club Lyon Olympique, which has existed since 1899. The football section split from the rest of the club and chose a new name: Olympique Lyonnais. This is why supporters of OL claim that their club was founded in 1899.

Before 1966, the club enjoyed some success; after being eclipsed by FC Lyon in 1908 and 1909, they won the French Championship in 1910. By 1920, they had moved into the Stade de Gerland, a stadium seven years in the making designed by Tony Garnier, a local architect.

Then called Lyon Olympique Universitaire, the club rejoined the professional ranks in 1942, and won the southern pool of the final wartime championship by two points from Bordeaux. The national final pitted them against Rouen, who triumphed 4-0. These successes propelled them in to Division 1 at the start of the 1945/6 season, but headed by Félix Louot the club plummeted back into to Division 2 by 1946.

The club would have to wait a further ten years until they won Ligue 2; their first established trophy, in 1951. However, Lyon were soon relegated back, after spending a season in the Ligue 1. A fresh new, rebuild team was formed by Julien Darui and in 1954, OL had gained promotion for the second time in four years.

OL enjoyed triumph after triumph in the 60's and the 70's where they won three Coupes de France, and a Trophée des Champions; taking note that five managers had joined and left OL at that specific era. However, the club had suffered a long period of drought and were relegated in 1983. The team underachieved and failed to retain any domestic trophy.

Jean-Michel Aulas - European aspiration

Jean-Michel Aulas took control of the club in 1987. Aulas invested in the club with the objective of turning Lyon into an established Ligue 1 side and also developing the club on a European level, within a time-frame of fifteen years. Under the coaching of Denis Papas and Marcel Le Borgne, the club gained promotion to the top flight on two occasions, but unfortunately was relegated the following season on both occasions.

Raymond Domenech who was born in Lyon, was appointed as their successor and achieved promotion to Ligue 1, after a scoreless draw against Alès. Lyon were crowned champions of Ligue 2 for the third time.

Olympique Lyonnais first top-flight season under Raymond Domenech saw them finish eighth in the league, safe from relegation. Domenech managed a fifth place finish in his second season, which secured Lyon an UEFA Cup spot. European qualification was achieved after a mere two years at the top level, and only four years after Aulas' had taken control.

Domenech decided to leave after the end of the 1992/93 Ligue 1 season, after being selected as the new French U21 coach. Aulas' first choice replacement was former French international, Jean Tigana. He was part of the celebrated 'Magic Diamond', along with Michel Platini, Luis Fernandez and Alain Giresse. Tigana developed the Lyon side into genuine French Ligue 1 title contenders, with the emergence of new players such as Abédi Pelé. However, Tigana left the club in 1995 after serious French media pressure in 1995.

Guy Stéphan took in charge in 1995 following the exit of Tigana and helped Lyon assure a place in European competition, once more through the 'back-door' system of the Intertoto Cup. Stéphan resigned at the start of the new season, and Bernard Lacombe was placed as manager immediately. 'OL' were achieved a place in the UEFA Cup, but failed to make it through to the Third round after losing to Inter Milan, eventual winners of the tournament. The club's league positions continued to rise at the final stages of the 20th century - sixth in 1998 and third in 1999 and 2000.

Success after success

Olympique Lyonnais have dominated the top French level, Ligue 1, in the early years of the 21st century. After their second-place finish in 2001, OL have won seven consecutive Ligue 1 titles (2002-2008), becoming the first club in French history to do so. Lyon's European ambitions have meanwhile never been realised beyond the quarter-finals of the Champions League, however.

The club has attracted many top level coaches, each successful in different competitions and areas of the field.

Jacques Santini was appointed in 2000 after leaving his position at FC Sochaux. Santini quickly restored the team and in 2001, Lyon had won Coupe de la Ligue (League Cup), which surprisingly was the club's first major silverware since the 1973 Coupe de France win. He also steered the side to a top-two finish and Lyon, therefore qualified for the UEFA Champions League in second place. Santini was still not popular with the fans for his defensive approach to the game.

In 2002, Santini went one better and guided Lyon to their first ever Ligue 1 title, after a win against RC Lens. It still didn't convince the majority of the OL supporters that he was the right man, after suffering an early knockout in the Champions League, and a fortnight after the win, Santini announced his resignation with Lyon. He opted for the France national football team.

The man who was responsible for delivering three consecutive league titles with Lyon was former Rennes manager Paul Le Guen. Le Guen was highly noted for grooming players such as El Hadji Diouf at his time at Rennes, but he was feared as another failure, according to much of the press.

He undoubtedly proved them wrong, and Lyon had improved in Ligue 1 and in the Champions League. Despite finishing third in the Champions League group stages, Lyon were only knocked out due to the goal against rule, which had meant that OL were placed in the UEFA Cup. Lyon lost to Turkish side, Denizlispor after drawing at home. Le Guen won the league once more by one point.

Le Guen's second season saw Lyon win their third title and second during his reign. OL were also top of their group in the Champions League, despite the threat of previous winners, Bayern Munich. The team had beaten Real Sociedad in the round of 16, but their luck ran out against FC Porto, who ultimately won the competition.

The club had won the league for a fourth time by a majority margin, but were knocked out of the Quarter-finals in the Champions League, yet again. It had looked like OL were going to cruise through the Semi-finals, after trashing German opponents Werder Bremen, 10-2 on aggregate. They were cruelly knocked out on penalties by PSV Eindhoven and left Lyon fans waiting another year for a Champions League final.

A night after Lyon's league success, Le Guen resigned from his position as manager. The news surprised OL fans, who thought that Le Guen would sign a contract extension, and commit himself to the club. He was offered a three-year extension, but decided to leave and be proud of his achievements.

Gérard Houllier, former Liverpool manager who had guided the side to a Cup Treble success in 2001, was appointed as the current Lyon boss in 2005, after the resignation of Le Guen. He had inherited a worthy championship side, with the likes of Juninho, Sylvain Wiltord, Sidney Govou, Florent Malouda and Grégory Coupet. He placed Juninho as captain and brought Portuguese international Tiago to the club from Chelsea, in a part-exchange deal for Michael Essien.

Olympique Lyonnais team bus, 2007

In his first full season, he had guided the side to a fifth consecutive league title but failed to make an impact in the Champions League, after crashing out to AC Milan at the San Siro. It was their third consecutive Quarter-final appearance in the Champions League. Lyon won the title after Lille's win against Bordeaux.

Houllier was recently successful in signing French U21 international, Jérémy Toulalan from Nantes as well as Swedish play-maker, Kim Källström from Rennes. Gérard however, lost the services of Mali's Mahamadou Diarra who had agreed a five-year contract with Real Madrid, worth up to 25 million. In order to replace Mahamadou Diarra, Gérard signed another French international Alou Diarra from RC Lens.

Yet despite a triumphant season debut, in which Lyon thrashed championship challengers Olympique de Marseille 1-4 and RC Lens 0-4 and scored 50 points in the first part of the season alone, Lyon didn't recover from the winter break and lost or drew nearly all the matches in January, including the Coupe de France knockout against Marseille. They managed to regain confidence by beating rivals St. Etienne 1-3, but were not in their autumn form and were decisively beaten by AS Roma at Gerland, thus being eliminated from the Champions League.

Supporters and rivals

Olympique Lyonnais has a highly-active and loyal fan-base, in Lyon. Lyon's fans, known as the "Bad Gones", have gained a strong reputation in Europe, due to their control of Ligue 1 as well as their appearances in the Champions League. The Stade de Gerland is frequently sold out in the majority of their home European and League matches.

Lyon has a healthy rivalry with fellow side Saint-Étienne, the derby between these two neighbouring Arpitan cities, the "rich and the workers'", "the newly most successful French club and the former biggest French club", is one of the highlights in Ligue 1. AS Monaco, Marseille and Paris Saint-Germain have been OL's secondary rivals, and in recent years Lille and RC Lens have posed threats.

Major honours

Main article: Olympique Lyonnais in football competitions

Retired numbers

16Flag of France in recognition of goalkeeper Luc Borrelli. Borrelli was killed in a road accident in February 1999.

17Flag of Cameroon in recognition of midfielder Marc-Vivien Foé. Foé died while playing for Cameroon in the 2003 FIFA Confederations Cup at Stade de Gerland, Lyon. The number was brought out of retirement in 2008 to allow Cameroonian player Jean Makoun to wear it.

Managers

Name Period
Flag of France Oscar Heisserer 1950-12/1954
Flag of France Julien Darui 12/1954-1955
Flag of France Lucien Troupel 1955-1959
Flag of France Gaby Robert 1959-1961
Flag of France "Manu" Fernandez 1961-1962
Flag of France Lucien Jasseron 1962-1966
Flag of France Louis Hon 1966-1968
Flag of France Aimé Mignot 1968-02/1976
Flag of France Aimé Jacquet 02 / 1976-1980
Flag of France Jean-Pierre Destrumelle 1980-11/1981
Flag of Yugoslavia Vladica Kovačević 11/1981-02/1983
Flag of France Robert Herbin 02 / 1983-1985
Flag of France Robert Nouzaret 1985-10/1987
Flag of France Denis Papas 10/1987-03/1988
Flag of France Marcel Le Borgne 03 / 1988-1988
Flag of France Raymond Domenech 1988-1993
Flag of France Jean Tigana 1993-1995
Flag of France Guy Stéphan 1995-10/1996
Flag of France Bernard Lacombe 10/1996-2000
Flag of France Jacques Santini 2000-2002
Flag of France Paul Le Guen 2002-2005
Flag of France Gérard Houllier 2005-2007
Flag of France Alain Perrin 2007-2008
Flag of France Claude Puel 2008-

[3]

Current squad

As of 18th September 2008.[4]

No. Position Player
1 Flag of France GK Hugo Lloris
2 Flag of France DF François Clerc
3 Flag of Brazil DF Cris (vice-captain)
4 Flag of France DF Jean-Alain Boumsong
5 Flag of France MF Mathieu Bodmer
6 Flag of Sweden MF Kim Källström
7 Flag of Brazil MF Ederson
8 Flag of Brazil MF Juninho (captain)
9 Flag of Brazil FW Fred
10 Flag of France FW Karim Benzema
11 Flag of Italy DF Fabio Grosso
12 Flag of France DF Timothée Kolodziejczak (on loan from RC Lens)
14 Flag of France FW Sidney Govou
15 Flag of Ghana DF John Mensah
17 Flag of Cameroon MF Jean II Makoun
18 Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina MF Miralem Pjanić
No. Position Player
19 Flag of Argentina FW César Delgado
20 Flag of France DF Anthony Réveillère
22 Flag of France MF Clément Grenier
23 Flag of Côte d'Ivoire FW Abdul Kader Keïta
25 Flag of France GK Joan Hartock
26 Flag of Brazil MF Fábio Santos
27 Flag of France FW Anthony Mounier
28 Flag of France MF Jérémy Toulalan
29 Flag of France FW Yannis Tafer
30 Flag of France GK Rémy Vercoutre
31 Flag of France MF Saïd Mehamha
32 Flag of France DF Lamine Gassama
34 Flag of France FW Jeremy Pied
36 Flag of France DF Sébastien Faure
39 Flag of Martinique FW Frédéric Piquionne

Reserves

For the reserve and academy squads, see Olympique Lyonnais Reserves and Academy.

Technical staff

Manager: Flag of France Claude Puel
Assistant Manager: Flag of France Rémi Garde
Assistant Coach Flag of France Patrick Collot
Assistant Coach Flag of France Bruno Genesio
Goalkeeping Coach Flag of France Joël Bats
Team Doctor: Flag of France Jean-Jacques Amprino
Fitness Coach Flag of France Robert Duverne
Kinesiotherapy: Flag of France Patrick Perret/Abdeljelil Redissi
Special advisor: Flag of France Bernard Lacombe

Famous former players

For a complete list of former Olympique Lyonnais players with a Wikipedia article, see here.

  • Flag of France Éric Abidal
  • Flag of France Manuel Amoros
  • Flag of France Marcel Aubour
  • Flag of France Flag of Tunisia Hatem Ben Arfa
  • Flag of France Olivier Bernard
  • Flag of France Daniel Bravo
  • Flag of France Eric Carriere
  • Flag of France Alain Caveglia
  • Flag of France Serge Chiesa
  • Flag of France Flag of Argentina Nestor Combin
  • Flag of France Grégory Coupet
  • Flag of France Flag of India Vikash Dhorasoo
  • Flag of France Fleury Di Nallo
  • Flag of France Flag of Armenia Jean Djorkaeff
  • Flag of France Raymond Domenech
  • Flag of France Jean-François Domergue
  • Flag of France Albert Emon
  • Flag of France Laurent Fournier
  • Flag of France Rémi Garde
  • Flag of France Ludovic Giuly
  • Flag of France Aimé Jacquet
  • Flag of France Bernard Lacombe
  • Flag of France Pierre Laigle
  • Flag of France Jean-François Larios
  • Flag of France André Lerond
  • Flag of France Patrice Loko
  • Flag of France Flag of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Péguy Luyindula
  • Flag of France Flag of Belgium Steed Malbranque
  • Flag of France Florent Malouda
  • Flag of France Steve Marlet
  • Flag of France Florian Maurice
  • Flag of France Flag of Cameroon Bruno N'Gotty
  • Flag of France Pascal Olmeta
  • Flag of France Benoît Pedretti
  • Flag of France Reynald Pedros
  • Flag of France Flag of Argentina Angel Rambert
  • Flag of France Claude-Arnaud Rivenet
  • Flag of France Gilles Rousset
  • Flag of France Jean-Luc Sassus
  • Flag of France Pierre Sinibaldi
  • Flag of France Flag of Mali Jean Tigana
  • Flag of France Tony Vairelles
  • Flag of France Daniel Xuereb

Belgium

  • Flag of Belgium Eric Deflandre

Brazil

  • Flag of Brazil Flag of France Sonny Anderson
  • Flag of Brazil Flag of France Caçapa
  • Flag of Brazil Giovane Élber
  • Flag of Brazil Flag of Italy Edmílson
  • Flag of Brazil Flag of ArmeniaMarcelo Djian
  • Flag of Brazil Nilmar Honorato da Silva

Cameroon

  • Flag of Cameroon Marc-Vivien Foé
  • Flag of Cameroon Eugène N'Jo Léa

Czech Republic

Ghana

Ireland

  • Flag of Ireland Mick McCarthy

Libéria

  • Flag of Liberia James Debbah

Mali

  • Flag of Mali Mahamadou Diarra
  • Flag of Mali Flag of France Frédéric Kanouté

Norway

  • Flag of Norway John Carew

Paraguay

  • Flag of Paraguay Roberto Cabañas

Poland

  • Flag of Poland Jacek Bąk

Portugal

  • Flag of Portugal Flag of Mozambique Mário Coluna
  • Flag of Portugal Tiago Mendes

Switzerland

  • Flag of Switzerland Marco Grassi
  • Flag of Switzerland Patrick Müller

Serbia

  • Flag of Serbia Ljubomir Mihajlović

Democratic Republic of the Congo

  • Flag of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Eugène Kabongo

Israel

  • Flag of Israel Giora Spiegel

Olympique Lyonnais ladies

Main article: Olympique Lyonnais (ladies)

Olympique Lyonnais (ladies) currently play in France's top division, the Championnat de France de football féminin. The ladies team was set up in the 1970s as part of FC Lyon, but was attached to OL in the summer of 2004. They mostly play their home games at Plaine des Jeux de Gerland, 400 metres from Stade Gerland, the main stadium.

Honours

Nickname

The name Les Gones means "The Kids" in Lyon's regional dialect of Arpitan language

See also

Footnotes

External links

Official

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