FC Sète 34

FC Sète 34 is the current name of a French football club based in Sète and founded in 1901 as Olympique de Cette. The club has won the French league title twice (in 1934 and 1939) and the French cup also twice (1930 and 1934). In 1934 they became the first club to win the French league and cup double. At the time, they were using the Georges-Bayrou Stadium.[1] Until 1960, the club played a major role in the French football championship, but due to financial issues, it was forced to give up professional status. From the 1970s until 2005, the club played in secondary levels, before accessing Ligue 2 for one season after finishing at the 3rd rank of Championnat National.

Sète 34
Full nameFootball Club de Sète 34
Nickname(s)Les dauphins or Verts et blancs
Founded1914 (1914)
GroundStade Louis Michel, Sète
Capacity8,500
ChairmanJean-François Gambetti
ManagerNicolas Guibal
LeagueChampionnat National
2019–20National 2 Group C, 1st (promoted)
WebsiteClub website

The club currently plays in the Championnat National, the third tier of French football, and plays its games at Stade Louis Michel in the town.

History

The club was founded in 1901 as Olympique de Cette. It ceased activities due to the war in 1914, restarting as FC de Cette. The club was champion of the Ligue du Sud-Est for seven consecutive years from the inception of the competition in 1920 until 1926. In 1928 the name of the town changed from Cette to Sète, and the football club was renamed FC Sète. The club reached consecutive Coupe de France finals in 1929 and 1930, losing 2–0 to SO Montpellier in the first before winning the trophy against Racing Club de France 3–1 after extra time.[2]

In 1932 the club were founder members of the professional Division 1. They finished 4th in the group. The following season they won the Division 1 and Coupe de France double, becoming the first club to do so. They won their second Division 1 title in 1939, the last time the competition was played before World War II.[2]

After the war, the club did not regain its previous heights, finishing no higher than 10th in Division 1, before relegation came in 1954. After six years in Division 2 the club relinquished its professional status and reformed as an amateur team at level two of the regional league (tier seven of the French league structure).[2]

The club spent six years in the same regional division before securing three promotions in four years to return to national Division 2 for the 1970–71 season. A further six seasons followed before relegation to Division 3 in 1977. The club returned to Division 2 as champions of the south group of Division 3 in 1983 and spent six seasons at that level.[2]

At the end of the 1988–89 season, FC Sète were administratively relegated for financial reasons after finishing 15th in group B. The club was officially renamed FC de Sète 34, restarted in Division 3, and moved to their current stadium Stade Louis Michel. They remained at the third level of French football until 1997 when a second administrative relegation dropped them to the fourth level, now named Championnat de France Amateur. After four seasons at this level, they won promotion back to Championnat National in 2001, as champions of group B. In 2005 a 3rd place finish was enough for promotion to Ligue 2, but the club played just one season at this level before returning to the Championnat National at the end of the 2005–06 season.[2]

A third administrative relegation, again for financial reasons, followed in 2009, and the club reformed for the 2009–10 season in the Division d'Honneur of the Languedoc-Roussillon regional league (tier 6).[3] In 2012 they were promoted to Championnat de France Amateur 2 as champions of the Division d'Honneur and in 2014 they won promotion to Championnat de France Amateur, now called Championnat National 2.[2] The club gained promotion to the Championnat National in the 2019-20 season, after being placed at the top of 2019–20 Championnat National 2 Group C when the season was terminated early due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[4]

Current squad

As of 29 July 2020[5]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK  FRA Brice Niclos
GK  FRA Vincent Pappalardo
GK  FRA Anthony Cianni
GK  FRA Benjamin Ligali
GK  FRA Théo Sanchez
DF  FRA Amadou Seydi
DF  FRA Melvin Cannac
DF  FRA Thibault Balp
DF  FRA Djibril Diarra
DF  CMR Oumar Diop
DF  FRA Arnold Temanfo
DF  FRA Mahamadou Drame
DF  FRA Abderrahmane Tabbackh
DF  FRA Hamidou Ba
DF  FRA André-Patrick Keyoubi
MF  FRA Alexis Mané
MF  FRA Marvin Gueheo Djetou
MF  FRA Jimmy Cannac
MF  FRA Benjamin Mas
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF  FRA Kléri Serber
MF  FRA Ryan Ferhaoui
MF  FRA Oualid Orinel
MF  FRA Francis Kembolo
MF  MAR Mohamed Hamzaoui
MF  FRA Steve Solvet
MF  FRA Kylian Kaïboué (on loan from Montpellier)
FW  FRA Warren Caddy
FW  ALG Rafik Bouderbal
FW  FRA Tony Patrao
FW  FRA Julien Farnabe
FW  FRA Thomas Lévêque
FW  FRA Wilfried Baana Jaba
FW  FRA Kevin Gomez
FW  FRA Hakim Moussi

Notable players

Former coaches

  • Sydney Regan 1929–1933
  • René Dedieu 1933–1936
  • Joseph Azema 1936–1937
  • Jean Marmiès 1937–1939
  • Louis-Pierre Cazal 1939–1940
  • Elie Rous 1940–1943
  • Ljubiša Stefanović 1943–1946
  • Gabriel Féron 1946–1947
  • Pierre Danzelle 1947–1948
  • Emile Féjean 1948–1949
  • Elie Rous 1949–1950
  • Marcel Tomazover 1950–1954
  • István Závodi 1954–1955
  • Désiré Koranyi 1955–1956
  • Gaston Plovie 1956–1958
  • Domènec Balmanya, 1958–60
  • Marcel Tomazover 1960–1965
  • René Mandaron and Gaston Plovie 1965–1969
  • Jacky Bernard 1969–1970
  • Dominique Marc and Gaston Plovie 1970–1972
  • Xercès Louis 1972–1974
  • Slobodan Milosavljević 1974–1976
  • Jules Miramond 1976–1977
  • Gyula Nagy and Marcel Tomazover 1977–1978
  • Camille Passi 1978–1980
  • Claude Calabuig 1980–1983
  • Yves Herbet 1983–1985
  • Slobodan Milosavljević 1985–1986
  • Dominique Bathenay 1986–1988
  • Claude Calabuig and Slobodan Milosavljević 1988–1989
  • Claude Calabuig 1989–1990
  • Otmar Pellegrini 1990–1991
  • Claude Calabuig 1991–1996
  • Marc Bourrier 1996–1997
  • Claude Calabuig 1997–2000
  • Patrick Lebeau et Laurent Scala 2000–2001
  • Laurent Scala 2001–2002
  • Albert Rust 2002–2003
  • Gilles Beaumian et Claude Calabuig 2003–2005
  • Ludovic Batelli January 2006 – March 2006
  • Robert Buigues March 2006 – June 2006
  • Christian Sarramagna 2006–2007
  • Thierry Laurey 2007–2008
  • Frédéric Rémola 2008–2009
  • Gilles Beaumian 2009–2010
  • Mathieu Chabbert et Christophe Rouve 2010–2011
  • Laurent Scala 2011–2015
  • Jean-Luc Muzet 2016–2018
  • Nicolas Guibal 2018– [6]

[2]

Honours

  • Champion of France (highest level) : 1934, 1939
  • Winner of the French Cup : 1930, 1934
  • Finalist of Coupe de France : 1923, 1924, 1929, 1942
  • Champion of Division d'Honneur Sud-Est : 1920, 1921, 1922, 1923, 1924, 1925, 1926, 1968.
  • Champion of USFSA Languedoc : 1907, 1909, 1910, 1911, 1912, 1913, 1914.
  • Champion of Division d'Honneur Languedoc-Roussillon : 2012
  • Champion CFA2 Group G: 2014
  • Champion CFA Group B: 2001
  • Champion Division 3 South Group: 1983

References

  1. "Enceintes mythiques : le stade Georges Bayrou de Sète " la mecque du football "" (in French). Docteur ès sport. 27 September 2013. Retrieved 18 December 2015.
  2. "Historique" (in French). FC Sète 34 Official site. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
  3. Sete Ca sera en DH
  4. "Arrêt du football amateur, le FC Sète est promu en National" (in French). Midi Libre. 16 April 2020.
  5. "Effectif" (in French). FC Sète 34. Retrieved 23 November 2018.
  6. "Nicolas Guibal (FC Sète): On a Captialisé de la Confiance" (in French). actufoot.com. 8 August 2018.
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