| Full name | Football Club des Girondins de Bordeaux |
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| Nickname(s) | FCGB[1] les Girondins[2] Le club au scapulaire[3] Les marine et blanc[4] |
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| Founded | 1881 | |||
| Ground | Stade Chaban Delmas, Bordeaux (Capacity: 34,327) |
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| League | Ligue 1 | |||
| 2008-09 | Ligue 1, 1st | |||
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Football Club des Girondins de Bordeaux (commonly known as just Bordeaux) is a French football team based in the city of Bordeaux.
The club was founded in 1881 as an omnisport club. The Girondins won the French league in 1950, 1984, 1985, 1987, 1999 and are the current champions with a first place finish in 2009. The club plays the home-matches in the Stade Chaban Delmas, named after the former mayor of Bordeaux, Jacques Chaban-Delmas. Parc Lescure was the previous name of the stadium. The club has often qualified for European football.
Their biggest European triumph was reaching the UEFA Cup final in 1996. After qualifying for the Intertoto Cup, the Girondins won that competition to get a place in the UEFA Cup. They reached the final after victories over Vardar Skopje, Rotor Volgograd, Real Betis, a heroic quarter final win over Milan, and a semi-final win over Slavia Prague. In the UEFA Cup final, Bayern Munich prevented the Bordeaux winning their first major European trophy after a 5-1 defeat on aggregate.
The club has been an entire subsidiary company of the French television group M6 since 2001.
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Historical overview
An all-round sports club was created as Girondins de Bordeaux on 1 February 1882 or 1 October 1881, depending on sources. It was not until 1910, when put under pressure by Raymond Brard that football became the over-riding sport. The first official Premier match took place in 1919.
Le Girondins became professional in 1937. This was after clubs Sporting Club de la Bastidenne and Club Deportivo Espagnol de Bordeaux had come and gone, as well as their offspring, FC Hispano-Bastidenne. They decided to rest two seasons before becoming professional.
Bordeaux captured their first Coupe de France in 1941 farther beating SC Fives 2-0. It would be 45 years before they would reclaim the title, after six failed attempts.
In 1949/50 Bordeaux became champions of Ligue 1 just a year after being champions of Ligue 2, with André Gérard one of the main people in their quest for the title. Bordeaux's defence became known as the "impenetrable fortress". Of these, three names were most significant, the names of de Harder, Kargu and Libar.
Time went on and Bordeaux declined in form until 1979-80 when, after thirteen weeks they sacked their manager and within nine months brought in Raymond Goethals, successful with Anderlecht with his own renowned tactics. However he lasted no longer than a single calendar year and later they brought in Aimé Jacquet.
During the eighties, Bordeaux won three Ligues, two Coupes de France, and qualified several consecutive years for European competition. A comparative slide over the next ten years followed, until in the early nineties Bordeaux were relegated to the second division for financial reasons. The rebirth, however, was immediate after some flowing football not only secured immediate promotion back to Ligue 1, but meant that not so many years later, Bordeaux were constantly frequenting Europe. This remains so to this day, with their prowess bringing them titles including a 1996 UEFA Cup final
On 3 November 2009, Bordeaux qualified for the 2009–10 UEFA Champions League knockout phase for the first time when they defeated Bayern Munich away on Matchday 4 of the group stage.
Important dates
- 1881–82 - Les Girondins founded.
- 1910 - Football section created. This lasted one season and was then abandoned.
- 1919 - A football section is recreated and les Girondins absorb the teams from l'Argus Sport and Bordeaux FC.
- 1937 - Les Girondins turn professional.
- 1941 - First final victory - la Coupe de France.
- 1945 - First season in Division 1.
- 1950 - First French champions title.
- 1964 - First European participation (eliminated in the first round after a defeat to Borussia Dortmund).
- 1984 - First European Champion Clubs' Cup participation, eliminated in the semi-finals by Juventus (2–3 over two legs).
- 1987 - First double Champions Cup.
- 1996 - First European final, defeated by Bayern Munich 1-5 over two legs.
- 1999 - Wins French championship (Ligue 1).
- 2009 - Wins French championship (Ligue 1).
Honours
National honours
International honours
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- 1980
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- Runners-up (1): 1995-96
Players
Current squad
As of 9 September 2009
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Out on loan
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Reserve squad
Bordeaux's B team plays in the Championnat de France amateur, Group C.
As of November 2009.
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Notable players
For a complete FC Girondins de Bordeaux players list, see here
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Coaches
Elie Baup was the coach of the Bordeaux during five years, from 1998 to 2003. Former Bordeaux midfielder Michel Pavon became head coach in October 24, 2003. Because of health problems, he stood back and continued his career as scout on June 2005. Brazilian Ricardo became the new coach, until Laurent Blanc took over in 2007.
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References
- ^ http://www.football.fr/footballfr/cmc/scanner/bordeaux/200918/un-nouveau-stade-pour-le-fcgb-_66292.html?popup
- ^ http://www.lefigaro.fr/football/2009/05/23/02003-20090523ARTSPO00579-live-bordeaux-monaco.php
- ^ http://sport.europe1.fr/europe1/infos/football/200921/les-derniers-pas-de-chamakh-_229242.html
- ^ http://www.lequipe.fr/Football/breves2009/20090523_114416_pele-reve-de-bordeaux.html
- ^ http://www.girondins.com/cms/infos/actualites/pret--pierre-ducasse-a-lorient/article.jsp?id=g2_61554&portal=awl_9087
External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: FC Girondins de Bordeaux |
- (French) Official website
- (French) chezlesgirondins.com : Actu et brèves de comptoir sur les Girondins de Bordeaux
- (English) Bordeaux formations at football-lineups.com
- [1]
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