FC Metz
Metz
 |
Full name |
Football Club de Metz |
Nickname(s) |
Les Grenats, Les Graoullys |
Founded |
1932 |
Ground |
Stade Municipal
Saint-Symphorien,
Metz
(Capacity: 26,700[1]) |
Chairman |
Bernard Serin |
Manager |
Dominique Bijotat |
League |
Ligue 2 |
2009-10 |
Ligue 2, 4th |
|
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Football Club de Metz (French pronunciation: [mɛs]) is a French football team, playing in the town of Metz, in the Lorraine region, which has played in the French Ligue 1 for most of its history.
History of the club
FC Metz was founded in 1932 by the amalgamation of two amateur athletic clubs, and shortly thereafter became a professional team; it is one of the oldest professional football teams in France. Its roots trace back further, to the SpVgg Metz club, formed in 1905 when the city of Metz was part of the German Empire. SpVgg played in the tier-one Westkreis-Liga for a season in 1913-14, before the outbreak of the First World War stopped all play. Some players of this club were part of the Cercle Athlétique Messin in 1919, which went on to become FC Metz in 1932. Messin was a leading club in the Division d'Honneur - Lorraine, taking out league titles in 1920, 1921, 1922, 1924, 1926, 1927, 1929 and 1931.[2]
The club played in the French second division north from 1933, winning the league in 1935 and earning promotion to Ligue 1 for the first time.[3] The team became a mid-table side in the first division until the outbreak of the war interfeared play once more. FCM did not take part in the top-tier regional competitions in 1939-40.[4]
During the 2nd World War, the Moselle département being annexed by Germany, the club had to play under the Germanised name of FV Metz in the Gauliga Westmark. In the three completed seasons of this league from 1941 to 1944, the club finished runners-up each year[5].
Despite the city of Metz being retaken by allied forces in autumn 1944, the club did not take part in French league football in 1944-45 but returned to Ligue 1 in 1945-46, to come 17th out of 18 clubs. An expansion of the league to 20 clubs meant, the team was not relegated and stayed at the highest level until 1950, when a last place finish ended its Ligue 1 membership.
The club rebounded immediately, finishing second in Ligue 2, behind Olympique Lyon and returned to the first division. FC Metz made a strong return to this league, finishing fifth in its first season back. After this, the club once more had to battle against relegation season-by-season, finishing second-last in 1958 and having to return to Ligue 2. It took three seasons in this league before it could manage to return to Ligue 1 in 1961, but lasted for only one year in the top flight. FC Metz spent the next five seasons at second division level.
FC Metz ascended to the top level of French football once more in 1967; the team remained in the highest division until they were relegated in 2001, although they bounced back immediately and returned to the Ligue 1 the following year. In 2006 they were relegated again. In 1998 the team competed in the qualifications to the Uefa Champions League but lost in the third round to Finnish team HJK Helsinki.
FC Metz plays its home matches at the stade Saint-Symphorien, which has a capacity of 26,700. Its official colors are grenat (maroon) and white, from which the team derives its nickname Les Grenats. The team's crest features the Lorraine cross, symbolic of the team's regional affiliation, and the dragon called the Graoully, which in local legend was tamed by Saint Clement of Metz.[6]
FC Metz also gained recognition in France and Europe for its successful youth academy, which produced star players including: Jean-Philippe Rohr, Sylvain Kastendeuch, Michel Ettore, Philippe Gaillot, Philippe Hinschberger, Carmelo Micciche, Cyril Serredzum, David Terrier, Jeff Strasser, Cyrille Pouget, Rigobert Song, Robert Pirès, Louis Saha, Nasredine Kraouche, Grégory Proment, Emmanuel Adebayor, Miralem Pjanić.
Satellite clubs
AS Génération Foot (Dakar)
Honours
FC Metz has never won the French championship; its best result was a second-place finish in 1998, behind RC Lens. Metz won the Coupe de France twice, in 1984 and 1988, the first of these victories enabled it to qualify for the European Cup Winners' Cup where it achieved arguably the team's greatest moment, an upset of FC Barcelona in the first round of the competition in October 1984. It lost 4-2 at home in the first leg but won 4-1 away in the return leg, thus qualifying 6-5 on aggregate. FC Metz also won the Coupe de la Ligue twice, in 1986 and 1996, and has made a total of ten appearances in European tournaments.
Current squad
As of July 30, 2010[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 |
1 |
 |
GK |
Christophe Marichez |
2 |
 |
DF |
Cheikh Gueye |
3 |
 |
DF |
Diagné Fallou |
4 |
 |
DF |
Romain Brégerie |
6 |
 |
MF |
David Fleurival |
7 |
 |
MF |
Amine Aribi |
8 |
 |
MF |
Olivier Cassan |
11 |
 |
FW |
Diafra Sakho |
12 |
 |
MF |
Merlin Tandjigora |
13 |
 |
MF |
Kévin Diaz (on loan from Monaco) |
14 |
 |
FW |
Rudy Gestede |
15 |
 |
DF |
Romain Métanire |
16 |
 |
GK |
Anthony Mfa Mezui |
|
|
No. |
|
Position |
Player |
17 |
 |
FW |
Tenema N'Diaye |
18 |
 |
DF |
Yi Teng |
19 |
 |
DF |
Mario Mutsch |
21 |
 |
DF |
Gaëtan Bussman |
22 |
 |
MF |
Djemel N'Gavala |
23 |
 |
MF |
Yeni Ngbakoto |
24 |
 |
DF |
Adama Tamboura |
25 |
 |
DF |
Kalidou Koulibaly |
26 |
 |
DF |
Nuno Frechaut |
28 |
 |
FW |
Thibault Bourgeois |
29 |
 |
MF |
Ludovic Guerriero |
30 |
 |
GK |
Joris Delle |
— |
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MF |
Gaëtan Englebert |
|
Staff
Head Coach
Assistant Coach
Goalkeeper Coach
Youth Coaches
Championnat de France amateur
U19
U17
Medical
Doctor
Masseur
- Luc Labeeu
- Jacques Muller
Famous players
For a complete list of FC Metz players, see Category:FC Metz players
- Goalkeepers
Jacques Songo'o
Faryd Mondragón
Michel Ettore
Bernard Lama
Lionel Letizi
François Remetter
André Rey
- Defenders
Ángel Bargas
Rigobert Song
Sébastien Bassong
Ali Shah
Patrick Battiston
Albert Cartier
Philippe Gaillot
Sylvain Kastendeuch
Pascal Pierre
Baptiste Schmisser
Luc Sonor
Jeff Strasser
Oguchi Onyewu
David Regis
|
- Midfielders
Danny Boffin
Jonathan Walasiak
Miralem Pjanić
Plamen Markov
Aljosa Asanovic
Jocelyn Blanchard
Alexandre Frutos
Philippe Hinsberger
Frédéric Meyrieu
Robert Pirès
Franck Ribéry
Jean-Philippe Rohr
David Terrier
Philippe Vercruysse
Szabolcs Huszti
Henryk Kasperczak
Ludovic Obraniak
Ibrahima Guéyé
Daniel Gygax
Mikimba
- Strikers
Hugo Curioni
|
Patrick Mboma
David Hodgson
Nestor Combin
Carmelo Micciche
Cyrille Pouget
Bruno Rodriguez
Louis Saha
Didier Six
Yannick Stopyra
Sylvain Wiltord
Bernard Zénier
Nico Braun
Robby Langers
Bep Bakhuys
Wilmer Aguirre
Manuel Corrales
Marcin Żewłakow
Eric Black
Jules Bocandé
Ahn Jung-Hwan
Emmanuel Adebayor
Tony Kurbos
Momar N'Diaye
|
Managerial History
George Kimpton (?-?)
Ted Maghner (1937-38)
- Paul Thomas (1938-39)
Peter Fabian (1940-41)
Charles Fosset (1944-45)
Bep Bakhuys (1945-46)
François Odry (1946)
Ted Maghner (1946-47)
Nicolas Hibst (1947)
Charles Fosset (1947-49)
Oscar Saggiero (1949-50)
Ignace Kowalczyk (1950)
Emile Veinante (1950-51)
Elie Rous (1951-52)
Emile Rummelhardt (1952-55)
André Watrin (1955)
Jacques Favre (1955-58)
Marcel Tomazover (1958)
Désiré Koranyi (1958-59)
Robert Lacoste (1959)
Jules Nagy (1959-63)
Jacques Favre (1963-66)
|
Max Schirschin (1966-67)
Max Schirschin and René Fuchs (1967-68)
Pierre Flamion (1968-70)
René Fuchs (1970-71)
Jacques Favre and Robert Zvunka (1971-72)
René Vernier (1972-75)
Georges Huart (1975-78)
Marc Rastoll (1978-79)
Marc Rastoll and Jean Snella (1979-80)
Henryk Kasperczak (1980-84)
Marcel Husson (1984-89)
Henri Depireux (1989-December 89)
Joël Muller (December 1989-December 00)
Albert Cartier (December 2000-January 02)
Francis De Taddeo (January 2002)
Gilbert Gress (January 2002-02)
Jean Fernandez (2002-05)
Joël Muller (2005-06)
Francis De Taddeo (2006-07)
Yvon Pouliquen (2007-10)
Joël Muller (2010)
Dominique Bijotat (2010-)
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[8]
References
External links
Ligue 2 teams |
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2010–11 teams |
Ajaccio · Angers · Boulogne · Châteauroux · Clermont · Dijon · Évian · Grenoble · Istres · Laval · Le Havre · Le Mans · Nantes · Nîmes · Metz · Reims · Sedan · Tours · Troyes · Vannes
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Former teams |
Abbeville · Aix-en-Provence · Alès · Amiens · Ancenis · Annecy · Antibes · Angoulême · Arles-Avignon · AS Nancy · Auxerre · Avignon · Bastia · Besançon · Beauvais · Béziers · Blois · Bourges · Brest · Bordeaux · Cambrai · Cannes · Calais · Chaumont · Charleville · Châteauroux · Cherbourg · Club Français · Creil · Colmar · Créteil · Dijon FC · Douai · Dunkerque · Entente Fontainebleau · Épinal · Excelsior Roubaix · FC Nancy · Fives · Fontainebleau · Forbach · Gazélec Ajaccio · Grenoble · Gueugnon · Guingamp · Hazebrouck · Hyères · Istres · La Roche-sur-Yon · Laval · Le Havre · Le Puy Foot · Lens · Libourne-Saint-Seurin · Lille · Limoges Foot · Lorient · Louhans-Cuiseaux · Lyon · Lyon OU · Lucé · Marseille · Mantes · Marignane · Martigues · Monaco · Montceau Bourgogne · Montluçon · Montpellier · Mulhouse · Nice · Nœux-les-Mines · Olympique Lillois · Orléans · Paris · Paris-Charenton · Poitevin · Quevilly · Quimper · Racing Paris · Perpignan · Rodez · Racing Roubaix · Red Star Paris · Reims · Roubaix-Tourcoing · Rouen · Sedan · SO Montpellier · Rennes · Stade Français · Paris Saint-Germain · Saint-Brieuc · Saint-Dié · Saint-Étienne · Sète · Strasbourg · Sochaux · Thionville · Thonon-Chablais · Toulon · Toulouse · Toulouse (1937) · Tours · Troyes AF · Troyes ASTS · Valence · Valenciennes · Villefranche · Wasquehal
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Division 2 / Ligue 2 seasons |
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Division 2
(1933–2002)
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1933–34 · 1934–35 · 1935–36 · 1936–37 · 1937–38 · 1938–39 · 1939–40 · 1940–41 · 1941–42 · 1942–43 · 1943–44 · 1944–45 · 1945–46 · 1946–47 · 1947–48 · 1948–49 · 1949–50 · 1950–51 · 1951–52 · 1952–53 · 1953–54 · 1954–55 · 1955–56 · 1956–57 · 1957–58 · 1958–59 · 1959–60 · 1960–61 · 1961–62 · 1962–63 · 1963–64 · 1964–65 · 1965–66 · 1966–67 · 1967–68 · 1968–69 · 1969–70 · 1970–71 · 1971–72 · 1972–73 · 1973–74 · 1974–75 · 1975–76 · 1976–77 · 1977–78 · 1978–79 · 1979–80 · 1980–81 · 1981–82 · 1982–83 · 1983–84 · 1984–85 · 1985–86 · 1986–87 · 1987–88 · 1988–89 · 1989–90 · 1990–91 · 1991–92 · 1992–93 · 1993–94 · 1994–95 · 1995–96 · 1996–97 · 1997–98 · 1998–99 · 1999–2000 · 2000–01 · 2001–02
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Ligue 2
(2002–present)
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2002–03 · 2003–04 · 2004–05 · 2005–06 · 2006–07 · 2007–08 · 2008–09 · 2009–10 · 2010–11
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List of French second division champions |
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Championnat de France amateur 2 — Groupe C • 2010–11 Clubs |
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Auxerre (res.) • Dijon (res.) • Forbach • Illzach-Modenheim • Jarville
Jura Dolois • Saint-Dié • Saint-Dizier • Saint-Louis Neuweg
Sarre-Union • Schiltigheim • Selongey • Strasbourg (res.) • Vauban Strasbourg • Troyes (res.) • Vesoul (res.)
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