Ligue 2

Ligue 2
Countries  France
 Monaco (one team)
Confederation UEFA
Founded 1933
Number of teams 20
Levels on pyramid 2
Promotion to Ligue 1
Relegation to Championnat National
Domestic cup(s) Coupe de France
Coupe de la Ligue
International cup(s) Europa League (via domestic cups)
Current champions Évian
(2010–11)
TV partners Canal+
Orange
Eurosport
Website Official site
2011–12 Ligue 2

Ligue 2 (French pronunciation: [liɡ dø]), formerly known as Division 2, is a French professional football league. The league serves as the second division of French football and is one of two divisions making up the Ligue de Football Professionnel (LFP), the other being Ligue 1, the country's top football division. Contested by 20 clubs, it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with both Ligue 1 and the third division Championnat National. Seasons run from August to May, with teams playing 38 games each totaling 380 games in the season. Most games are played on Fridays and Mondays, with a few games played during weekday and weekend evenings. Play is regularly suspended the last weekend before Christmas for two weeks before returning in the second week of January.

Ligue 2 was founded a year after the creation of the first division in 1933 under the name Division 2 and has served as the second division of French football ever since. The name lasted until 2002 before switching to its current name. Since the league is a part of the LFP, it allows clubs who are on the brink of professionalism to become so. However, if a club suffers relegation to the Championnat National, its professional status can be revoked temporarily until they return to Ligue 2. The current champion is Caen, who won promotion back to Ligue 1 on its first attempt. The second and third-place finishers were Brest and Arles-Avignon, respectively. Brest will be making its return to the first division for the first time since being administratively relegated following the 1990–91 season, while Arles-Avignon will be making its debut in the league.

Ligue 2, alongside its first division counterpart, is generally regarded as competently run, with good planning of fixtures, complete and consistently enforced rules, timely resolution of issues, and adequate escalation procedures of judicial disputes to national or international institutions.

Contents

History

Division 2 champions (Pre-WWII)
Season Winner
1933–34 Red Star Saint-Ouen
1934–35 CS Metz
1935–36 Rouen
1936–37 Lens
1937–38 Le Havre
1938–39 Red Star Saint-Ouen

The second division of French football was established in 1933, one year after the creation of the all-professional first division. The inaugural season of the competition consisted of the six clubs who were relegated following the 1932–33 National season, as well as many of the clubs who opposed the creation of the first division the previous season. Clubs such as Strasbourg, RC Roubaix, and Amiens SC all played in the second division's debut season despite having prior grievances with the subjective criteria needed to become professional and play in the first division. The first year of the second division consisted of twenty-three clubs and were divided into two groups (Nord and Sud). Fourteen of the clubs were inserted into the Nord section, while the remaining nine were placed in Sud. Following the season, the winner of each group faced each other to determined which club would earn promotion. On 20 May 1934, the winner of the Nord group, Red Star Saint-Ouen, faced Olympique Alès, the winner of the Sud group. Red Star were crowned the league's inaugural champions following a 3–2 victory. Despite losing, Alès was also promoted to the first division and they were followed by Strasbourg and Mulhouse, who each won a pool championship, after the first division agreed to expand its teams to 16.

Due to several clubs merging, folding, or losing their professional status, the federation turned the second division into a 16-team league and adopted the single-table method for the 1934–35 season. Due to the unpredictable nature of French football clubs, the following season, the league increased to 19 clubs and, two years later, increased its allotment to 25 teams with the clubs being divided into four groups. Because of World War II, football was suspended by the French government and the Ligue de Football Professionnel. Following the end of the war, the second division developed stability. Due to the increase in amateur clubs, the league intertwined professional and amateur clubs and allowed the latter to become professional if they met certain benchmarks. In 2002, the league changed its name from Division 2 to Ligue 2.

Competition format

There are 20 clubs in Ligue 2. During the course of a season, usually from August to May, each club plays the others twice, once at their home stadium and once at that of their opponents, for a total of 38 games. Teams receive three points for a win and one point for a draw. No points are awarded for a loss. Teams are ranked by total points, then goal difference, and then goals scored. At the end of each season, the club with the most points is crowned champion and promoted to Ligue 1. If points are equal, the goal difference and then goals scored determine the winner. If still equal, teams are deemed to occupy the same position. If there is a tie for the championship or for relegation, a play-off match at a neutral venue decides rank. The second and third-place finisher are also promoted to the first division, while the three lowest placed teams are relegated to the Championnat National and the top three teams from National are promoted in their place.

Clubs

Members for 2011–12

The following 20 clubs will compete in Ligue 2 during the 2011–12 season.

Club
Position
in 2010–11
First season in
second division
Number of seasons
in Ligue 2
First season of
current spell in
second division
Amiens 004National: 2nd 1946–47 32 2011–12
Angers 0046th 1946–47 35 2000–01
Arles-Avignon 004Ligue 1: 20th 1970–71 9 2011–12
Bastia 004National: 1st 1965–66 17 2011–12
Boulogne 0048th 1959–60 24 2010–11
Châteauroux 00414th 1970–71 34 1998–99
Clermont YYY7th 1946–47 11 2007–08
Guingamp 004National: 3rd 1977–78 26 2011–12
Istres 00411th 1985–86 17 2009–10
Laval 00415th 1970–71 26 2009–10
Le Havre 0109th 1947–48 30 2009–10
Le Mans 0104th 1946–47 27 2010–11
Lens 010Ligue 1: 19th 1947–48 11 2011–12
Metz 01017th 1950–51 15 2009–10
Monaco 010Ligue 1: 18th 1948–49 10 2011–12
Nantes 01013th 1946–47 21 2009–10
Reims 01010th 1964–65 25 2010–11
Sedan 0105th 1953–54 21 2007–08
Tours 01012th 1974–75 18 2008–09
Troyes 01016th 1996–97 11 2010–11

Previous winners

Top goalscorers

Year Goals Top scorer(s) Club(s)
1934 54 goals Jean Nicolas FC Rouen
1935 30 goals Jean Nicolas FC Rouen
1936 45 goals Jean Nicolas FC Rouen
1937 30 goals Viktor Spechtl RC Lens
1938 29 goals Hugo Lammana CA Paris
1939 39 goals Harold Newell
Planques
US Boulogne
Toulouse FC (1937)
World War II
1946 27 goals Campiglia SCO Angers
1947 45 goals Jozef "Pépé" Humpal FC Sochaux
1948 28 goals Henri Arnaudeau Girondins de Bordeaux
1949 41 goals Camille Libar Girondins de Bordeaux
1950 27 goals Edmund Haan Nîmes Olympique
1951 23 goals Thadée Cisowski FC Metz
1952 34 goals Egon Jonsson Stade Français football
1953 27 goals Bror Mellberg Toulouse FC (1937)
1954 36 goals Jean Courteaux RC Paris
1955 40 goals Petrus Van Rhijn Valenciennes Football Club
1956 32 goals Petrus Van Rhijn Valenciennes Football Club
1957 27 goals Fernand Devlaeminck Lille OSC
1958 29 goals Egon Jonsson FC Nancy
1959 31 goals Petrus Van Rhijn Stade Français football
1960 29 goals Corbel FC Rouen
1961 28 goals Casimir Kozakiewicz RC Strasbourg
1962 21 goals Serge Masnaghetti Valenciennes Football Club
1963 24 goals Ernesto Gianella AS Béziers (football)
1964 21 goals Abderrahmane Soukhane Le Havre AC
1965 22 goals Anton Groschulski Red Star Saint-Ouen
1966 30 goals Pierre Ferrazzi Grenoble Foot 38
1967 23 goals Etienne Sansonetti SC Bastia
1968 26 goals Jacques Bonnet Avignon Football 84
1969 55 goals Gérard Grizetti AS Angoulême
1970 21 goals Robert Blanc FC Nancy
1971 20 goals
20 goals
20 goals
Nord : Yves Triantafyllos
Centre : Robert Blanc
Sud : Emmanuel Koum
US Boulogne
Limoges Foot 87
AS Monaco
1972 20 goals
28 goals
40 goals
Gr. A : Pierre Pleimelding
Gr. B : Yegba Maya Joseph
Gr. C : Marc Molitor
Troyes AC
Valenciennes Football Club
RC Strasbourg
1973 21 goals
31 goals
Gr. A : Eugeniusz Faber
Gr. B : Gérard Tonnel
RC Lens
Troyes AC
1974 26 goals
24 goals
Gr. A : Erwin Wilczek
Gr. B : Nestor Combin
Valenciennes Football Club
Red Star Saint-Ouen
1975 25 goals
28 goals
Gr. A : Georges Tripp
Gr. B : Jean Martinez
Stade Laval
AS Nancy
1976 22 goals
25 goals
Gr. A : Bozidar Antic
Gr. B : Marc Berdoll
SM Caen
SCO Angers
1977 30 goals
24 goals
Gr. A : Delio Onnis
Gr. B : Albert Gemmrich
AS Monaco
RC Strasbourg
1978 19 goals
23 goals
 
Gr. A : Giudicelli
Gr. B : Jean-Claude Garnier
Gr. B : Pierre-Antoine Dossevi
Olympique Alès
USL Dunkerque
Tours FC
1979 24 goals
26 goals
Gr. A : Antoine Trivino
Gr. B : Patrice Martet
FC Gueugnon
Stade Brestois
1980 16 goals
19 goals
 
Gr. A : Alain Polaniok
Gr. A : Bernard Ferrigno
Gr. B : Jacky Vergnes
Gr. B : Robert Pintenat
Stade de Reims
Tours FC
Montpellier HSC
Toulouse FC
1981 32 goals
22 goals
Gr. A : Robert Pintenat
Gr. B : Marcel Campagnac
Toulouse FC
Sporting Club Abbeville
1982 18 goals
25 goals
 
Gr. A : Marc Pascal
Gr. B : Zarko Olaveric
Gr. B : Isiaka Ouattara
Olympique de Marseille
Le Havre AC
FC Mulhouse
1983 28 goals
18 goals
Gr. A : Wlodzimierz Lubanski
Gr. B : Christian Dalger
Valenciennes Football Club
Sporting Toulon Var
1984 23 goals
23 goals
Gr. A : Mario Relmy
Gr. B : Omar Da Fonseca
Limoges Foot 87
Tours FC
1985 27 goals
28 goals
Gr. A : John Eriksen
Gr. B : Jorge Dominguez
FC Mulhouse
OGC Nice
1986 22 goals
29 goals
Gr. A : Jean-Marc Valadier
Gr. B : Eugene N'Goy Kabongo
Montpellier HSC
RC Paris
1987 22 goals
21 goals
Gr. A : Zvonko Kurbos
Gr. B : Gaspard N'Gouete
FC Mulhouse
SC Bastia
1988 18 goals
 
26 goals
Gr. A : Jean-Pierre Orts
Gr. A : Stéphane Paille
Gr. B : Patrice Martet
Olympique Lyonnais
FC Sochaux
FC Rouen
1989 22 goals
27 goals
Gr. A : Roberto Cabanas
Gr. B : Robby Langers
Stade Brestois
US Orléans
1990 26 goals
21 goals
Gr. A : Didier Monczuk
Gr. B : Jean-Pierre Orts
RC Strasbourg
FC Rouen
1991 23 goals
19 goals
Gr. A : Didier Monczuk
Gr. B : Christophe Lagrange
RC Strasbourg
SCO Angers
1992 22 goals
21 goals
Gr. A : Jean-Pierre Orts
Gr. B : Didier Monczuk
FC Rouen
RC Strasbourg
1993 21 goals
18 goals
Gr. A : Franck Priou
Gr. B : Jean-Pierre Orts
AS Cannes
FC Rouen
1994 27 goals Yannick Le Saux Stade Briochin
1995 31 goals Tony Cascarino Olympique Marseille
1996 30 goals Tony Cascarino Olympique Marseille
1997 23 goals Samuel Michel FC Sochaux
1998 20 goals Reginald Ray Le Mans Union Club 72
1999 20 goals Hamed Diallo Stade Laval
2000 17 goals Amara Traoré FC Gueugnon
2001 21 goals Francileudo Santos FC Sochaux
2002 18 goals Hamed Diallo Amiens SC
2003 20 goals Cédric Fauré Toulouse FC
2004 17 goals David Suarez Amiens SC
2005 24 goals Bakari Koné FC Lorient
2006 16 goals Jean-Michel Lesage Le Havre AC
Steve Savidan Valenciennes Football Club
2007 18 goals Jean-Michel Lesage Le Havre AC
Kandia Traore Le Havre AC
2008 28 goals Guillaume Hoarau Le Havre AC
2009 18 goals Grégory Thil US Boulogne
2010 21 goals Olivier Giroud Tours FC
2011 23 goals Sebastian Ribas Dijon FCO

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References

External links