Stade Français Paris (football)
This article is about the football section of Stade Français. For the rugby section, see Stade Français.
Full name | Stade Français | ||
---|---|---|---|
Founded | 1900 | ||
Ground |
Haras Lupin, Vaucresson France | ||
League | Amateur | ||
Website | Club home page | ||
|
Stade Français Football is a French association football team based in Paris and playing in suburb town of Vaucresson. The team is the football section of omnisport club Stade Français, whose rugby section, Stade Français Paris, is currently the most successful. The football team currently plays at an amateur and regional level but played a total of 15 years in the highest tier, last time during the season 1966/67.
Honours
- Division 2: 1952
- Division 2 runner-up: 1946, 1959
Names of the club
- Omnisports club founded in 1883
- Football section in 1900
- Professional section from 1942 to 1968 and 1981 to 1985
- Stade Français from 1900 to 1942
- Stade-CAP in 1942–43
- Stade Français in 1943–44
- Stade-Capitale in 1944–45
- Stade Français from 1945 to 1948
- Stade Français-Red Star from 1948 to 1950
- Stade Français FC from 1950 to 1966
- Stade de Paris FC from 1966 to 1968
- Stade Français from 1968 to 1981
- Stade Français 92 from 1981 to 1985
- Stade Français since 1985
Stade Français in Europe
Season | Competition | Round | Club | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|
1964–65 | Inter-Cities Fairs Cup | 1st round | Real Betis | 1–1, 2–0 |
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup | 2nd round | Juventus FC | 0–0, 0–1 | |
1965–66 | Inter-Cities Fairs Cup | 1st round | FC Porto | 0–0, 0–1 |
Notable players
French international while playing for the club:
- Henri Arnaudeau
- Larbi Ben Barek
- Georges Carnus
- Raoul Chaisaz
- Robert Dauphin
- Edmond Delfour
- Jacques Dhur
- Marcel Domingo
- Jean Grégoire
- André Grillon
- Louis Hon
- André Lerond
- Maryan Synakowski
- Zbigniew Gut
- Jules Monsallier
- Henri Pavillard
- Robert Péri
- Pierre Ranzoni
- Yvon Ségalen
- Henri Skiba
- Édouard Stachowitz
- Jacques Wild
Managerial history
- G. Davidović[1]
- Accard
- Rose
- Helenio Herrera (1945–48)
- André Riou (1948–50)
- J. Drugeon (1950)
- W. Wolf (1950–51)
- Jean Grégoire (1951)
- Edmond Delfour (1952 – December 1953)
- André Grillon (December 1953 – 1954)
- Joseph Mercier (1954–61)
- Wadoux + Lerond (1961)
- Joseph Mercier (1961)
- Léon Rossi (1961 – November 1963)
- Henri Priami (November 1963–65)
- André Gérard (1965–67)
?
- Alain Avisse (1975–82)
- Claude Dusseau (1982–84)
- Yves Todorov (1984–85)
References
- ↑ Fudbal u Kraljevini Jugoslaviji, Milorad Sijić, pag. 33
- ↑ "Stade Français coaches on RSSSF". Retrieved 24 May 2007.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.