L'Équipe

L'Équipe

The front page of L'Équipe on 4 July 2011
Type Daily newspaper
Format Broadsheet
Owner(s) Éditions Philippe Amaury
Editor François Morinière
Editor-in-chief Fabrice Jouhaud
Founded 1946
Language French
Headquarters Boulogne-Billancourt
Sister newspapers Le Parisien
ISSN 0153-1069
Website www.lequipe.fr

L'Équipe (pronounced [leˈkip], French for "the team") is a French nationwide daily newspaper devoted to sport, owned by Éditions Philippe Amaury. The paper is noted for coverage of football (soccer), rugby, motorsport and cycling. Its ancestor was L'Auto, a general sports paper, whose name reflected not any narrow interest but the excitement of the time in car racing.

L'Auto originated the Tour de France cycling stage race in 1903 as a circulation booster. The race leader's yellow jersey (maillot jaune) was instituted in 1919, probably to reflect the distinctive yellow newsprint on which L'Auto was published. The competition that would eventually become the UEFA Champions League was also the brainchild of a l'Équipe journalist, Gabriel Hanot.

History

L'Auto-Vélo

De Dion on one of his company's early products.

L'Auto and therefore L'Équipe owed its life to a 19th-century French scandal involving soldier Alfred Dreyfus - the Dreyfus affair. With overtones of antisemitism and post-war paranoia, Dreyfus was accused of selling secrets to France's old enemy, the Germans.

As different sides of society insisted he was guilty or innocent – he was eventually cleared but only after rigged trials had banished him to an island prison camp – the split came close to civil war and still have their echoes in modern French society.

France's largest sports paper, Le Vélo, mixed sports coverage with political comment. Its editor, Pierre Giffard, believed Dreyfus innocent and said so, leading to acrid disagreement with his main advertisers. Among them were the automobile-maker the Comte de Dion and the industrialists Adolphe Clément and Édouard Michelin.

Frustrated at Giffard's politics, they planned a rival paper. The editor was a prominent racing cyclist, Henri Desgrange, who had published a book of cycling tactics and training and was working as a publicity writer for Clément. Desgrange was a strong character but lacked confidence, so much doubting the Tour de France founded in his name that he stayed away from the pioneering race in 1903 until it looked like being a success.

L'Auto


Three years after the foundation of L'Auto-Vélo in 1900, a court in Paris decided that the title was too close to its main competitor, Giffard's Le Vélo. Thus reference to 'Vélo' was dropped and the new paper became simply L'Auto. It was printed on yellow paper because Giffard used green.

Circulation was sluggish, however, and only a crisis meeting called "to nail Giffard's beak shut", as Desgrange phrased it, came to its rescue. Then, on the first floor of the paper's offices in the rue du Faubourg-Montmartre in Paris, a 26-year-old cycling and rugby writer called Géo Lefèvre suggested a race round France, bigger than any other paper could rival and akin to six-day races on the track.

The Tour de France proved a success for the newspaper; circulation leapt from 25,000 before the 1903 Tour to 65,000 after it; in 1908 the race boosted circulation past a quarter of a million, and during the 1923 Tour it was selling 500,000 copies a day. The record circulation claimed by Desgrange was 854,000, achieved during the 1933 Tour.

Desgrange died in 1940 and ownership passed to a consortium of Germans.[1] The paper began printing comment not unfavourable to the occupying Nazis and its doors were nailed shut with the return of peace.[2] No paper having printed under the Germans was allowed to continue.

L'Équipe

Maurice Garin, winner of the first Tour de France

In 1940 Jacques Goddet succeeded Desgrange as editor and nominal organiser of the Tour de France (although he refused German requests to run it during the war, see Tour de France during the Second World War). Jacques Goddet was the son of L'Auto's first financial director, Victor Goddet. Goddet defended his paper's role in a court case brought by the French government but was never wholly cleared in the public mind of being close if not to the Germans then to the puppet president, Philippe Pétain.[2]

Goddet could point, however, to clandestine printing of Resistance newspapers and pamphlets in the L'Auto print room[1] and he was allowed to publish a successor paper called L'Équipe. It occupied premises across the road from where L'Auto had been, in a building in fact owned by L'Auto, although the original paper's assets had been sequestrated by the state. One condition of publication imposed by the state was that L'Équipe was to use white paper rather than yellow, which was too closely attached to L'Auto.[1]

The new paper published three times a week from 28 February 1946.[3] Since 1948 it has been published daily. The paper benefitted from the demise of its competitors, L’Élan, and Le Sport. Its coverage of car racing hints at the paper's ancestry by printing the words L'Auto at the head of the page in the gothic print used in the main title of the pre-war paper.

L'Équipe is published in broadsheet format.[4]

Émilien Amaury

In 1968 L'Équipe was bought by Émilien Amaury, founder of the Amaury publishing empire. Among L'Équipe's most respected writers have been Pierre Chany, Antoine Blondin and Gabriel Hanot.

Philippe Amaury - Éditions Philippe Amaury

The death of Émilien Amaury in 1977 led to a six-year legal battle over inheritance between his son and daughter. This was eventually settled amicably with Philippe Amaury owning the dailies while his sister owned magazines such as Marie-France and Point de Vue. Philippe then founded Éditions Philippe Amaury (EPA), which included L'Équipe, Le Parisien and Aujourd'hui. At Philippe's death in 2006, the group passed to his widow, Marie-Odile, and their children.

Evolutionary milestones

Titre 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
L'Équipe 386,189 386,601 455,598 321,153 339,627 369,428365,654 365,411

The biggest-selling issue was 13 July 1998, the day after the French national football team won the World Cup. It sold 1,645,907 copies. The second best was on 3 July 2000 after France won the European football championship and the paper sold 1,255,633 copies.

Directors

Editors

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Goddet, Jacques(1991), L'Équipée Belle, Laffont, Paris
  2. 1 2 Boeuf, Jean-Luc and Léonard, Yves (2003), La République du Tour de France, Seuil, France
  3. John Tebbel (2003). "Print Media. France". Encyclopedia Americana. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
  4. Adam Smith (15 November 2002). "Europe's Top Papers". campaign. Retrieved 7 February 2015.
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