R.U. Saint-Gilloise

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R.U. Saint-Gilloise

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Union
Un saint gilloise.png
Full name Royale Union Saint-Gilloise
Nickname(s) Les Unionistes
Union 60
Founded November 1, 1897
Ground Stade Joseph Marien,
Forest, Brussels
(Capacity: 6000)
Chairman Enrico Bove
Manager Belgium Marc Wuyts
League Belgian Third Division B
2009-10 Belgian Third Division B, 14th
Home colours
Away colours

R. Union Saint-Gilloise is a Belgian football club located in the municipality of Forest, though it is named after the neighbour municipality of Saint-Gilles, Brussels. It had been in the second division in 2004-05, but was subsequently relegated to third division. Its matricule is the n°10. The club has won 11 Belgian championships between 1903 and 1935, making it the most successful Belgian club before World War II.

Contents

History

The club was founded in 1897 and obtained its first of eleven titles as Champion of Belgium in 1904. Until World War II it was a major team in Belgian football, establishing a well-known record in Belgium in the years 1933 to 1935 (they played 60 consecutive games without losing). In the early 1900's the club also had a dominant spell in some of the very first "European" Cup competitions that took place, prior to officially sanctioned UEFA competitions.

After the Second World War, it had a brief spell of European success, playing the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup between 1958 and 1965 (but this cup was not bound with the championship final table), and attaining the semi-finals in the 1958-60 edition after a two legged victory against A.S. Roma. In 1963, the club is relegated to the second division, and even attained the lowest national level in 1980.

Honours

Domestic

European

  • Coupe Ponthoz:
    • Winners (3): 1905, 1906, 1907
    • Runners-up (1): 1904
  • Coupe Dupuich:
    • Winners (1): 1914

Current squad

as of 21 August 2011[1] 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
3 Belgium DF David Triantafillidis
4 Belgium MF Pieter-Jan Van Oudenhove
5 Nigeria DF Jero Shakpoke
6 Belgium DF Keevin Terwagne
9 Greece FW Alexandros Kaklamanos
10 Democratic Republic of the Congo FW Blaise Issankoy
11 Belgium FW Fesquet Penga-Ilenga
12 Belgium GK Anthony Sadin
13 France FW Frédéric Bosak
15 France MF Aristote Mapala
16 Belgium GK Jesse Soubry
No. Position Player
18 Algeria FW Moustapha Jamel Saoudi
19 Ghana FW Isaac Addo
20 Turkey MF Cemal Köse
21 Belgium DF Anthony Cabeke
22 Romania MF Mihai Rogojina
23 Belgium GK Christian Mwaso
26 Belgium FW Jonathan Tardioli
30 Belgium MF Yanis Papassarantis
70 Senegal FW Papé Gueye
Côte d'Ivoire FW Moussa Sanogo

On loan

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
Chile FW Tomás Díaz Navarrete (loan to Hungary Budapest Honvéd FC)

Staff

  • Head Coach: Belgium Marc Wuyts
  • Assistant Coach: Italy Giancarlo Oriolo
  • Goalkeeper Coach: Algeria Mohammed Acimi

Famous past players


Notable Players

Algeria
  • Nawfel Essalhi
  • Houssam-Eddine Filali
  • Karim Mokadem
  • Mohamed Achraf Salime
Belgium
  • Joseph Biersard
  • Yves Buelinckx
  • Kevin De Broyer
  • Fabian Duquesne
  • Gary Kulkens
  • Gertjan Martens
  • Davy Peeters
  • Christophe Préseaux
  • David Rimbold
  • Benoit Sotteau
Brazil
  • Lucas Osório Fuschilo
Chile
  • Tomas Diaz
Côte d'Ivoire
  • Josué Alex Aguie
  • Jules César Oulaï
Republic of the Congo
  • Diowo Wetshi Emongo
  • Benjamin Mokulu Tembe
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Cuba
  • Agustin Enrique Corral Pinero
France
  • Samuel Dog
  • Jean-Philippe Peso
Greece
  • Constant Keskinidis
Guadeloupe
  • Sammy Dehamla
Italy
  • David Arena
  • Christ Bruno
  • Stefano Crimi
  • Thomas Danieli
  • Domenico Di Dio
  • Antonio Marsala
  • Mirko Miceli
  • Rosario Pepe
Morocco
  • Billal El Mesbahi
  • Ismaïl El Omari
  • Mehdi Hadraoui
  • Zachary Zekhnini
Romania
  • Mihai Rogojina
Spain
  • Ivan Perez Avial
  • Tomas Ruiz-Cerqueira
  • Aitor Sanchez Caler

Reserve squad

The team played in the Réserves Amateur Série E.[2]

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
Belgium GK Michael Kaya
Algeria GK Bilal Missri
Guinea DF Sadou Bah
Belgium DF Imad Benabdelkrime
Côte d'Ivoire DF Kafoumba Berete
Algeria DF Yassine Dahraoui
Belgium DF Marcos Del Molino
Belgium DF Massimo Grimaldi
Belgium DF Younes Touzani
Algeria DF Hamza Yousfi
Brazil DF José Zanzalá
Belgium MF Mohamed Aissa
Belgium MF Lucas Bonessa
No. Position Player
Belgium MF Mehdi Chairi
Portugal MF Michaël Coutinho-Cardoso
Belgium MF Brahim Essikal
Greece MF Constant Keskinidis
Belgium MF Imad Mohallem
Belgium MF Jordan Van Cappellen
Belgium FW Chemceddine Aoulad
Belgium FW Emmanuel Claes
Algeria FW Sofiane Dahraoui
Belgium FW Vincent Donnay
Belgium FW Ange Makungu
Brazil FW Kevin Luz Sampaio
Algeria FW Zachary Zekhnini

References

External links


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