Lille OSC

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Lille
Full name Lille Olympique Sporting Club
Nickname(s) Les Dogues (The Great Danes)
Founded 23 September 1944 (1944-09-23)
Ground Stade Pierre-Mauroy
Ground Capacity 50,186
Chairman Michel Seydoux
Manager René Girard
League Ligue 1
2012–13 Ligue 1, 6th
Website Club home page
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours
Current season

LOSC Lille (Lille Olympique Sporting Club, French pronunciation: [lil ɔlɛ̃pik]; commonly referred to as Le LOSC, Lille OSC or simply Lille) is a French association football club based in Lille. The club was founded in 1944 as a result of a merger and currently play in Ligue 1, the first division of French football. Lille previously played its home matches at the Stade Lille-Metropole in nearby Villeneuve-d'Ascq. In 2012, the club moved into its new facility, the Grand Stade Lille Métropole. The team is managed by French football figure René Girard and captained by French international Rio Mavuba.

Lille was founded as a result of a merger between Olympique Lillois and SC Fives. Both clubs were founding members of the French Division 1 and Lillois was the league's inaugural champions. Under the Lille emblem, the club has won three league titles in 1946, 1954, and 2011 and six Coupe de France titles, which is tied for fourth-best among clubs. Lille and Red Star FC are the only French clubs in the competition's history to win the Coupe de France in three consecutive seasons. Lille's most successful period was the decade from 1946 to 1956 when the team was led by managers George Berry and André Cheuva.[1][2]

Lille have a long-standing rivalry with its neighbours RC Lens. The two clubs regularly contest the Derby du Nord. Lille is presided over by Michel Seydoux, a French businessman and movie producer. Seydoux initially purchased shares of the club in January 2002 and, subsequently, gained majority control two years later.

History

1944-1955: The Glorious Decade

The team with Coupe de France in 1946.

Before the Second World War, the city of Lille had two clubs in the First Division: The Olympique Lillois, first professional Champion of France in 1933, and the Sporting Club Fivois. Weakened by the conflict, the two clubs decided to merge after the Liberation and gave birth to the LOSC (Lille Olympique Sporting Club) in the autumn 1944.

The LOSC was a solid team all over the park and featured a strong British style and immediately imposed itself among the elite of French football. In ten years, Lille won two league titles and reached second place in the French Championship for four consecutive seasons. Its domination was even more striking in the Coupe de France: five wins in seven finals (including five successive finals!). We can also add to this list, a final of the Latin Cup, the forerunner of the European Cup. Trained by André Cheuva, President Louis Henno's team comprised many French internationals such as Jean Baratte and René Bihel, two exceptional strikers, and Joseph Jadrejak, François Bourbotte, Jules Bigot, Roger Carré, Bolek Tempowski, Albert Dubreucq, Jean Lechantre, André Strappe, Jean Vincent.

1956-1980: The Lille Loses Its Way

Ironically, the LOSC was relegated for the first time in 1956 as the first ever final of the European Cup took place in Paris. From then on, the big club of the immediate post-war period became a mid-table club, and fighting for titles was replaced by the struggle to survive. In the late 1960s, after a long period of anonymity, and weighed down by a lack of facilities and resources, the glorious LOSC abandoned its professional status. It was feared that the club might disappear. However, some young leaders, such as Max Pommerolle, came and gave new impetus to the club. Nevertheless, the results remained erratic and the only titles that ignited the fans' passions were won in the Second Division.

1980-2000: Laying The Foundations For Future Success

In July 1980, the LOSC was the first French Club to opt for the status of a Mixed Economy Company, of which the City of Lille became the majority shareholder. A by-product of ensuring stability and durability was that this system did not allow an ambitious sports policy. The teams of Presidents Amyot, Deschot and Dewailly all struggled to compete with the top teams in the country. Jacques Amyot’s resignation in 1990 led to three more difficult years for the club which compromised its very existence. It took Bernard Lecomte’s arrival in 1993 to set the club finances on the road to recovery. After a final relegation in 1997, the team trained by Bosnian coach Vahid Halilhodžić was soon promoted back to the elite, in the same year that French Football League was privatised.

2000-Present: A Steady Climb to the Top

Sow and Gervinho celebration the double in 2011.

In just its first season back in the top flight 2000–01 French Division 1, the LOSC qualified for Europe for the first time in the club’s history, booking its place in the 2000–01 Champions League. On the back of the club’s new status, the LOSC entered into a decisive new era under the guidance of chairman and Chief executive officer Michel Seydoux and coach Claude Puel. The club left the historical Stade Grimonprez-Jooris to join the Stadium Lille Métropole and became a regular on the European scene. Amongst its most emphatic results was the 1–0 victory over Manchester United at the Stade de France in 2005, the 2–0 triumph over Milan in San Siro in 2006 and the 1–0 home win over Liverpool in 2010. A steady development off the pitch (inauguration of the Domaine de Luchin training complex in 2007, opening of the Grand Stade in 2012), coupled with the sporting progression under the expert hand of coach Rudi Garcia, took the LOSC back to the summit of the French game with the League and Cup double in 2011 (56 years after the club’s last trophy). In 2012, the LOSC confirmed its place at the top table of the domestic game with another qualification for Europe’s most prestigious club competition, the Champions League in 2012–13. With the club finishing just outside the UCL places that season, Rudi Garcia left for A.S Roma, while former Montpellier coach René Girard was appointed the new LOSC manager.[3]

Stadiums

Stade Pierre-Mauroy is the best stadium in Frances Nord-Pas-de-Calais. It was inaugurated in 2012. Originally named the Centre Olympique de Lille Est, the club's sporting venue is spread over five hectares and features three natural grass football pitches and one synthetic pitch, as well as a number of buildings including a medical centre and gymnasium. These attributes had seen the club house part of the LOSC Youth Academy here, before all the club's operations were moved to the Domaine de Luchin in Camphin-en-Pé.[4]

Club rivalries

The Derby du Nord is a football match contested between French clubs RC Lens and Lille OSC, two of region's most successful clubs. The derby has the name despite Lille being the only club of the two situated in the department of Nord. Lens are situated in the western department of Pas-de-Calais. The name can also refer to matches involving Lille and Valenciennes as both clubs are located within Nord, however, the match historically refers to matches involving Lille and Lens. As a result, the Lille–Valenciennes match is sometimes referred to as Le Petit Derby du Nord. The two clubs first met in 1937 when Lille were playing under the Olympique Lillois emblem. Due to each club's close proximity towards each other being separated by only 40 kilometres (25 mi) and sociological differences between each club's supporters, a fierce rivalry developed. The Derby du Nord is underpinned by social and economic differences, since the city of Lens is known as an old, working-class, industrial city and Lille as a middle-class, modern, internationally-oriented one. Nowadays the matches, which can spark intense feelings on both sides, have gained prominence as they may determine berths in continental competitions.

Players

Current squad

As of 2 September 2013.[5]

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Nigeria GK Vincent Enyeama
2 France DF Sébastien Corchia
4 France MF Florent Balmont
5 Senegal MF Idrissa Gueye
6 France MF Jonathan Delaplace
7 Costa Rica FW John Jairo Ruiz
8 Ivory Coast FW Salomon Kalou
10 France MF Marvin Martin
11 Cape Verde FW Ryan Mendes
12 France MF Souahilo Meïté
13 Ivory Coast DF Adama Soumaoro
14 Denmark DF Simon Kjær
No. Position Player
15 France DF Djibril Sidibé
16 France GK Steeve Elana
18 France DF Franck Béria
20 France FW Ronny Rodelin
21 France DF Julian Jeanvier
22 Czech Republic DF David Rozehnal
23 Senegal DF Pape Souaré
24 France MF Rio Mavuba (captain)
25 Montenegro DF Marko Baša
26 France FW Nolan Roux
27 Belgium FW Divock Origi
30 Republic of the Congo GK Barel Mouko

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
Belgium FW Gianni Bruno (at SC Bastia)

Mouscron

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
France GK Alexandre Oukidja
Algeria DF Jugurtha Domrane
France MF Julian Michel
No. Position Player
France MF Arnaud Souquet
Belgium MF Viktor Klonaridis
France FW Abdoulay Diaby

Reserve squad

As of 29 July 2013.[6][7]

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
2 France MF Emmanuel Debordeaux
3 Morocco DF Abdelkarim El Mourabet
4 France MF Martial Riff
5 Portugal FW Julien de Araújo
6 France MF Sébastien Pennacchio
7 Algeria DF Mehdi Jean
8 France DF Florian Lacolley
10 France DF Formose Mendy
No. Position Player
12 Algeria DF Sophiane Boussebaine
13 Morocco FW Adam Enafati
14 France DF Steeven Willems
16 France GK Guillaume Mollet
19 France DF Adrien Rizzi
20 France MF Raphaël Gherardi
21 Democratic Republic of the Congo MF Omenuke Mfulu
22 Togo FW Kalen Damessi
26 England GK Banochocolat

For a complete list of Lille OSC players, see Category:Lille OSC players

Management and staff

Lille Olympique Sporting Club Lille Métropole (SASP)[8]
  • President: Michel Seydoux
  • President Adviser: Jean-Michel Van Damme
  • Deputy Director: Frédéric Paquet, Didier de Climmer
  • Assistant Deputy Director: Sandrine de Castro, Sophie Kaszkowiak
Senior club staff[8]
  • Administrative Director: Julien Mordacq
  • Sporting Director: Frédéric Paquet
  • Financial Director: Reynald Berghe
  • Communications Director: Aurélien Delespierre
  • Operations Director: Didier de Climmer
  • Marketing Director: Guillaume Gallo
Coaching and medical staff[8]
  • Manager: René Girard
  • Recruitment Director: Jean-Luc Buisine
  • Doctor: Franck Legall
  • Academy Director: Jean-Michel Van Damme

Managerial history

Former coaches include Georges Heylens (1984–1989), a former Belgian international player, Jacques Santini (1989–92), who managed France between 2002 and 2004, Bruno Metsu (1992–93), who managed Senegal in the 2002 World Cup, Pierre Mankowski (1993–1994), who was formerly the assistant coach of the French national team and Vahid Halilhodžić (1998–2002), who can be credited with the club's revival in the late nineties. The current coach, Rudi Garcia, who played for Lille from 1980 to 1988, replaced Claude Puel at the beginning of the 2008 season. Puel had been with Lille since 2002. Thanks to his successes with the club, Puel had been approached by Portuguese club Porto to replace José Mourinho and league rivals Lyon to replace Alain Perrin; he finally decided to join Lyon after six seasons at the club.

Dates[9] Name
1944–46 England Georges Berry
1946–58 France André Cheuva
1958–59 France Jacques Delepaut
1959–61 France Jules Vandooren
1961–62 France Jean Baratte
1962–63 France Guy Poitevin
1963–66 France Jules Bigot
1966 France Jean-Charles Van Gool
1966–69 France Daniel Langrand
1969–70 France Joseph Jedrejak
1970–73 France René Gardien
1973–76 France Georges Peyroche
1976–77 France Charles Samoy
1977–82 France José Arribas
1982–84 France Arnaud Dos Santos
1984–89 Belgium Georges Heylens

Dates Name
July 1, 1989–June 30, 1992 France Jacques Santini
1991 Croatia Milan Đuričić
France Jacques Santini
July 1, 1992–Feb 28, 1993 France Bruno Metsu
1993 Poland Henryk Kasperczak
1993–94 France Pierre Mankowski
July 1, 1994–Aug 1, 1995 France Jean Fernandez
Sept 2, 1995–March 1, 1997 France Jean-Michel Cavalli
March 1, 1997–June 30, 1997 France Hervé Gauthier
France Charles Samoy
July 1, 1997–Sept 15, 1998 France Thierry Froger
Sept 1, 1998–May 30, 2002 Bosnia and Herzegovina Vahid Halilhodžić
July 1, 2002–June 30, 2008 France Claude Puel
July 1, 2008–June 12, 2013 France Rudi Garcia
July 1, 2013–present France René Girard

Honours

Domestic

Europe

References

  1. "Lille seal historic title". ESPN Soccernet. 21 May 2011. Retrieved 24 May 2011. 
  2. http://www1.skysports.com/football/news/11813/8777137/Ligue-1-Lille-confirm-appointment-of-Rene-Girard-as-their-new-coach
  3. "Effectif Pro" (in French). Lille OSC. Retrieved 24 January 2012. 
  4. "Effectif CFA" (in French). Lille OSC. Retrieved 5 February 2013. 
  5. "OSC Lille U19". Transfermarkt.co.uk. Retrieved 5 February 2013. 
  6. 8.0 8.1 8.2 "LOSC Lille Métropole SASP" (in French). Lille OSC. Retrieved 31 December 2010. 
  7. "France – Trainers of First and Second Division Clubs". RSSSF. Retrieved 31 December 2010. 

External links

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