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RC Strasbourg

For the Championnat de France Amateurs 2 club, see Vauban Strasbourg.
Strasbourg
RC Strasbourg:logo
Full nameRacing Club de Strasbourg
Nickname(s)Racing
Founded1906
GroundStade de la Meinau
12, rue de l'Extenwoerth
67100 Strasbourg 4
Capacity29,230
ChairmanPhilippe Ginestet
ManagerJean-Pierre Papin
LeagueLigue 2
2005-2006Ligue 1, 19th (relegated)
RC Strasbourg:Team coloursRC Strasbourg:Team coloursRC Strasbourg:Team colours
RC Strasbourg:Team colours
RC Strasbourg:Team colours
 
Home colours
RC Strasbourg:Team coloursRC Strasbourg:Team coloursRC Strasbourg:Team colours
RC Strasbourg:Team colours
RC Strasbourg:Team colours
 
Away colours

Racing Club de Strasbourg is a French football team, playing in the city of Strasbourg.


Contents

History

In 1906, a group of youngsters in the Neudorf neighborhood of Strasbourg bought their first leather football. With the help of their primary-school teacher, they formed a team called Fußball Club Neudorf.

The meetings took place at the Polygone in German Alsace. In 1914, FC Neudorf rented the Haemmerle garden for 300 deutschmarks a year, an area that would later become the Stade de la Meinau.

Birth of “Racing”

After the First World War, when Alsace came under French control, “FC Neudorf” was renamed “RC Strasbourg Neudorf”, then eventually “Racing Club de Strasbourg”. The first stands, made out of wood, were built in 1921. Within five years, Racing had won their first title: Champions of Alsace.

On June 10, 1933, at the “restaurant de la Bourse”, Racing made the big jump to the professional ranks after a General Assembly that confirmed the addition of Racing. Several months later, they reached Division 1 for the first time, after two two-legged matches, firstly against Mulhouse (0-0 and 3-1), and then against Saint-Etienne (2-0 and 4-4).

Racing immediately climbed to the top of the table, finishing 2nd in '34/'35, 3rd in '35/'36, 6th in '36/'37, and 5th in '37/'38. After World War II, the Alsatian club remained in the first division until the end of the '48/'49 season, when it was condemned to relegation; however, a massive stroke of luck occurred for Racing. Neighbours SR Colmar liquidated their professional team, and Racing was allowed to stay in the first division after all.

The First Trophy

The grace period was only temporary, however. After the '51/'52 season, the Meinau club was relegated to Division 2 after the worst season in club history. Nevertheless, Racing defeated US Valenciennes 3-0 in the French Cup final to claim their first major trophy.

The next few years passed without glory. Other than another French Cup victory in 1971, the seasons were spent alternating between the first and second divisions. Mediocrity reigned.

The Prettiest Page

At the end of the 1976/77 season, Racing was promoted to Ligue 1 once again. The promoted team ended the year in 3rd place and only got stronger. In '78/'79, the Alsatians finished first in the Division 1 and thus were Champions of France for the first and so far only time in their history.

That year they amassed 56 points, scored 63 goals, and conceded 28. They had the best defence in the league and boasted an undefeated record at home. Racing was at the summit of French football, and qualified for the quarter-finals of the European Champions Cup the next season, only to be eliminated by Ajax Amsterdam.

The success did not last, and Racing plunged into crisis. The 1980s was a difficult time, and the “Blues” found themselves back in Division 2 in 1986.

After defeating Rennes in 1991 by a score of 4-1, Strasbourg returned to the top flight in 1992. In 1995, a place in the final of the French Cup (where they lost 1-0) allowed Racing to have a taste of big matches and for the European Cup. They reached the last sixteen, where they were eliminated by Italian giants AC Milan.

Two years later, they spent the season in and around the top of the table, before finishing in 9th place. That same year, the IMG group was chosen by the municipality to change the fate of the club and the players trained by the captain of the French champions in 1979, Jacky Duguépéroux, would write a new page in the history of Racing by taking the League Cup against Bordeaux.

A good run in the UEFA Cup would follow. After qualifications against Glasgow Rangers and Liverpool, in the first round of the knockout stage, Racing beat Inter Milan 2-0 at Meinau, but fell 3-0 in the second leg.

Since all the members of the club are rebuilding a future that all of Alsace hopes for, gorged with emotions to engrave again and again images of celebration in the heart of its supporters, like they saw on May 25, 2001, after the victory in the final of the French Cup against Amiens.

After a season in “purgatory” in 2001/2002, Racing re-took its place among the football elite in the Hexagon by finishing runners-up in Ligue 2.

The 2002/2003 season, in which Racing would come to finish in an encouraging 13th place, would be marked by the withdrawal of the IMG group and the arrival of a new and ambitious group led by Egon Gindorf, who succeeded Patrick Proisy as president, and by Marc Keller, named General Director.

Placed under the title “recapture”, the 2003/2004 season needed to allow Racing to stabilize the club amongst the national elite and to win the favor of the Alsatian public once again.

In 2005, Racing won their second domestic trophy in four years when they beat Caen 2-1 in the final of the League Cup, a feat which provided them with a passport to the 2005/6 UEFA Cup.

Following the 2005-2006 season, Racing were relegated into the Second Division. Jean-Pierre Papin took over from Jacky Duguépéroux, signing a two-year deal to coach the club as they look to return to the top flight. [1]

Current squad

No.PositionPlayer
1RC Strasbourg:FranceGKNicolas Puydebois
2RC Strasbourg:FranceDFYves Deroff
3RC Strasbourg:FranceDFJean-Christophe Devaux
4RC Strasbourg:CameroonMFEugène Ekobo
5RC Strasbourg:FranceDFHabib Bellaid
6RC Strasbourg:MoroccoDFAhmed Kantari
7RC Strasbourg:FranceFWNicolas De Gea
8RC Strasbourg:FranceMFRenaud Cohade
9RC Strasbourg:CameroonFWHervé Tum
10RC Strasbourg:MoroccoMFYacine Abdessadki (captain)
11RC Strasbourg:FranceFWJérémy Perbet
12RC Strasbourg:Côte d'IvoireDFEdgar Loué
13RC Strasbourg:FranceDFSteve Celestini
14RC Strasbourg:FranceMFRomain Gasmi
15RC Strasbourg:FranceFWAli Mathlouthi
No.PositionPlayer
16RC Strasbourg:FranceGKStéphane Cassard
17RC Strasbourg:BulgariaFWDimitar Rangelov
18RC Strasbourg:FranceMFPascal Johansen
19RC Strasbourg:FranceMFGuillaume Lacour
20RC Strasbourg:EgyptDFAhmed Abou Moslem
21RC Strasbourg:LuxembourgDFJeff Strasser
22RC Strasbourg:FranceMFMorgan Schneiderlin
23RC Strasbourg:FranceFWKevin Gameiro
24RC Strasbourg:GabonFWEric Mouloungui
25RC Strasbourg:SenegalMFLeyti N'Diaye
26RC Strasbourg:FranceDFJean-Christophe Vergerolle
27RC Strasbourg:FranceDFLionel Locatelli
28RC Strasbourg:BulgariaMFEmil Gargorov
30RC Strasbourg:FranceGKRegis Gurtner

Out on loan

No.PositionPlayer
––RC Strasbourg:EgyptMFAbd Rabo Hosni (on loan to Ismaïlya)

Current starting eleven

Opposition: FC Gueugnon (a) (Ligue 2, October 27, 2006)
Formation: 4-4-2

GK: Cassard
RB: Lacour
CB: Bellaid
CB: Strasser
LB: Deroff
RM: Abdessadki (c)
CM: Johansen
CM: Cohade
LM: Mouloungui
ST: Tum
ST: Gameiro

Honours

Records

Managers since 1970

Former greats

External references

RC Strasbourg:Flag of France
Ligue 2 • 2006-07 Clubs

v    e</div>

RC Strasbourg:Flag of France

AjaccioAmiensBastiaBrestCaenChâteaurouxCréteil
DijonGrenobleGueugnonGuingampIstresLe HavreLibourne-Saint-Seurin
MetzMontpellierNiortReimsStrasbourgTours

Categories


RC Strasbourg | French football clubs | Strasbourg

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