SC Albi

Albi
Full name Sporting Club Albigeois
Founded 1906
Location Albi, France
Ground(s) Stadium Municipal d'Albi (Capacity: 13,058)
President Bernard Archilla
Coach(es) Jean Christophe Bacca
Henri Broncan
Captain(s) Vincent Clément
League(s) Pro D2
2013–14 12th
1st kit
2nd kit
Official website
www.sca-albi.fr

Sporting Club Albigeois is a professional French rugby union club playing the second-level Rugby Pro D2. During the past years it went back and forth between Top 14, the highest level of the French league system and the second-level Rugby Pro D2. Their last time in the Top 14 was for 2009–10 after winning the 2008–09 promotion playoffs. The previous one began in 2006 and came to an end after the 2007–08 season due to financial issues. Founded in 1907, the club plays at the Stadium municipal d'Albi (capacity 12,000). They wear black and yellow. They are based in Albi in Midi-Pyrénées.

History

Sporting Club Albigeois was founded in December 1906 as a sportsclub where, in addition to rugby, tennis and running were practiced. Their first title came in 1926 when they beat Stade Toulousain in the final of the highly competitive championnat des Pyrénées (Pyrénées league).

In 1940, the Vichy regime forced towns with a population below 50,000 to merge their sports clubs in single entities. (UA Gaillac is another rugby union example). Vichy also targeted the professional rugby league and Albi was forced to bring together the two local clubs, S.C. Albi and R.C. Albi XIII under the name Albi Olympique.

In 1945, each club went its way and recovered its previous name. In 1949, SC Albi reached the First Division. In 1955, it qualified for the playoffs, managing to oust the prestigious Racing Club de France in the first round, before going down to Romans in the round of 16.

Until the 1980s, Albi went through regular ups-and-downs between the first and second divisions (Div 1 1961-1970, 1973–75, 1977–79, Div 2, 1957 – 1959, 1970–73, 1975–77, 1979–85). Their only notable performance was another playoff win against Toulouse in 1974. Albi remained in the second or third divisions until 2000.

The millennium was very favourable for Albi. The club reached three consecutive third division finals, all lost, in 2000, 2001 et 2002, to FC Oloron Sainte-Marie, Oyonnax and Tours. However, the professional Pro D2 offered two promotion spots in 2002 and Albi was back in the second division.

It took them four more years to take the last step. After finishing second to US Montauban in the 2006 regular season, they went on to beat AS Béziers and US Dax in the promotion playoffs and secure the final spot in the élite league Top 14. They remained in Top 14 until the 2007-08 season. Although they finished 12th that season, which would normally have kept them in the top flight, they were forcibly relegated to Pro D2 due to financial issues.

The following season, they finished third on the regular-season table, qualifying for the promotion playoffs. Their home playoff semifinal against La Rochelle ended 12–12 in regulation. Each team slotted a penalty in extra time, which ended 15–15. Under French rules, the first tiebreaker in such a situation is fewest red cards. Since neither side had a player sent off, the next tiebreaker is number of tries, followed by number of penalties scored. Albi went through because they had kicked 5 penalties to La Rochelle's 4 (and one drop goal). They defeated Oyonnax 14–12 in the playoff final on 31 May 2009 in Montpellier to secure their place in the Top 14 2009-2010 season.

By April 2010 the club had already been relegated from the Top 14 after recording only 3 wins all season.[1]

Honours

Current standings

2014–15 Rugby Pro D2 Table
Club Played Won Drawn Lost Points For Points Against Points Difference Try Bonus Losing Bonus Points
1 Pau 28 20 1 7 704 472 +232 93
2 Agen 28 17 0 11 688 559 +129 79
3 Mont-de-Marsan 28 17 0 11 628 506 +122 77
4 Perpignan 28 16 1 11 697 570 +127 77
5 Albi 28 16 0 12 595 558 +37 72
6 Biarritz 28 16 0 12 593 534 +59 72
7 Aurillac 28 15 2 11 593 531 +62 72
8 Colomiers 28 15 0 13 584 571 +13 65
9 Béziers 28 13 0 15 591 585 +6 59
10 Montauban 28 12 1 15 551 576 –25 59
11 Carcassonne 28 13 0 15 624 658 –34 58
12 Tarbes 28 12 2 14 573 697 −124 57
13 Bourgoin 28 10 3 15 478 591 –113 47
14 Narbonne 28 10 1 17 527 682 −155 45
15 Dax 28 9 1 18 469 612 −143 43
16 Massy 28 7 0 21 584 777 −193 37
Green background (row 1) Champions automatically promoted to Top 14. Blue background denotes teams that qualify for the promotion play-offs. Red background (row 15 and 16) will be relegated to Fédérale 1. Updated: 27 April 2015

Current squad

2012–13 season
Note: Flags indicate national union as has been defined under WR eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-WR nationality.

Player Position Union
Malik Djebablah Hooker France France
Cyriac Ponneau Hooker France France
Vakhtangi Akhobadze Prop Georgia (country) Georgia
Bastien Dedieu Prop France France
Malik Hamaddache Prop France France
Younes El Jai Prop France France
Nicolas Frize Prop France France
Maxime Gau Prop France France
Kalaber Koberize Prop Georgia (country) Georgia
Nicolas Kwarazfelia Prop France France
Florian Prime Prop France France
Giorgi Tetrashvili Prop Georgia (country) Georgia
Mathieu André Lock France France
Yogane Corréa Lock Senegal Senegal
César Damiani Lock France France
Rami Laadila Lock France France
Vakhtang Maisuradze Lock France France
Jérôme Mondoulet Lock France France
Vincent Calas Back row France France
Nathan Lane Back row France France
Florian Letellier Back row France France
Yohann Misse Back row France France
Florent Fourcade Back row France France
Kvicha Bujiashvili Back row Georgia (country) Georgia
Loïc Mondoulet Back row France France
Julien Raynaud Back row France France
Andrea Siccardi Back row France France
Player Position Union
Yohan Chateauraynaud Scrum-half France France
Samuel Marques Scrum-half Portugal Portugal
Romain Barthélémy Fly-half France France
Sylvain Bouillon Fly-half France France
Stéphane Guenin Fly-half France France
Baptiste Bonnet Centre France France
Pierre D'Andrea Centre France France
Baptiste Hecker Centre France France
Nicolas Kaiser Centre France France
Thibault Visensang Centre France France
Florian Vialelle Centre France France
Nasoni Kunavore Centre Fiji Fiji
Maxime Payen Wing France France
Nicolas Kraska Wing France France
Nicolas Metge Wing France France
Anthony Poujol Wing France France
Timilai Rokoduru Wing Fiji Fiji
Mathieu Péluchon Fullback Spain Spain

Notable former players

French president Georges Pompidou accepted to be honorary chairman of the club in 1969 and paid his fees regularly until he died in 1974. .

See also

References

External links