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Revision as of 10:21, 8 December 2008

Toulouse FC
Logo
Logo
Full nameToulouse Football Club
Nickname(s)TFC, le Téfécé, le Tef
Founded1937 (defunct club)
1970 (current club)
GroundStadium Municipal
Toulouse, Haute-Garonne
France
Capacity35,472
ChairmanFrance Olivier Sadran
ManagerFrance Alain Casanova
LeagueLigue 1
2007-08Ligue 1, 17th

Toulouse Football Club is a French football team playing in the city of Toulouse, Haute-Garonne. TFC is also known as le Téfécé (IPA: [tefeˈse]) or le Tef.

History

The predecessor side to the club was founded in 1937 as Toulouse Football Club, but sold its players and its place in French Division 1 professional football to Red Star Paris in 1967. (Main article: Toulouse FC (1937))

The association was re-founded as Union Sportive Toulouse on May 25, 1970 and took on the juniors of Gascogne and ACE Mermoz-Bonnefoy in order to establish a solid player base. They began competition in Division 2 in the 1970-71 season, playing in red and white. In 1977 the club re-claimed the historical name of its predecessor and adopted new colours of purple and white. The team quickly improved and earned promotion to Division 1 in 1982, followed by qualification for participation in the UEFA Cup in 1984. Their best result to date came in the 1986-87 season with a third place finish and another turn in the UEFA Cup competition, including a well-remembered win on penalty kicks over Maradona's mighty Napoli.

Toulouse's supporters celebrating their team's qualification to UEFA Champions League 2007-08

A decline followed that saw the club relegated to play in D2 by 1994. Throughout the 90s they yo-yoed between D1 and D2 with the club in frequent financial difficulty. Their financial problems led to their being sent down in 2001 by the French federation and nearly losing their professional status. Exceeding all hopes Toulouse FC quickly returned to Ligue 1 play in the course of just two seasons. After some disappointing results in their first seasons back in Ligue 1, they managed to scrape a place in the preliminary round of the UEFA Champions League, finishing with a 3rd place.

Toulouse's route to the Champions League seemed to be fraught with obstacles, and at one point they were mathematically out of contention. However, in the stalemate with Nantes, they were awarded a win after the Breton crowd invaded the pitch in despair at les Canaris' poor display, which resulted in their renewed belief in the possibility of European football. In a good final day Téfécé beat Girondins de Bordeaux 3-1 (a hat-trick from Johan Elmander), which, when coupled with the losses of the other contenders and Lille's 93rd-minute equalizer against Rennes, saw Toulouse scrape through.

For the second match of the 2007-2008 season, Toulouse beat the Olympique Lyonnais 1-0 at the Stadium Municipal with a goal from Johan Elmander. After the victory against Olympique Lyonnais Toulouse struggled all season to avoid relegation. Their Ligue 1 was finally secured on the last day of the season with a 2-1 home win against Valenciennes.

Stadium

File:StadiumToulouse1b.JPG
Stadium of Toulouse

Toulouse play their home matches at the Stadium Municipal in Toulouse. Built in 1937, the stadium presently has a capacity of 35,472.[1] The stadium was used in the 1998 World Cup.

Colours

The violet is a reference to one of two Toulouse nicknames: la Cité des violettes (the City of Violets), the second one being la Ville rose (the Pink City), which explains the colour of the away jersey. The team's logo displays the gold and blood-red Occitan cross, the symbol of Occitania, which Toulouse is a historical capital of.

Players

Current squad

As of August 7, 2008.[2] Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK France FRA Sébastien Hamel
2 DF France FRA Mohamed Fofana
3 DF France FRA Daniel Congré
4 DF Argentina ARG Mauro Cetto (Captain)
5 DF France FRA Jérémy Mathieu
7 FW Guinea GUI Fodé Mansaré
8 MF France FRA Étienne Didot
9 FW Denmark DEN Søren Larsen
10 FW France FRA Bryan Bergougnoux
11 FW France FRA André-Pierre Gignac
12 DF France FRA Cheikh M'Bengue
14 MF France FRA Pantxi Sirieix
15 MF Brazil BRA Paulo César
16 GK France FRA Cédric Carrasso
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 MF France FRA Alexandre Bonnet
18 FW France FRA Kévin Dupuis
19 FW France FRA Xavier Pentecôte
20 MF France FRA Mathieu Berson
21 FW Czech Republic CZE Pavel Fořt
22 MF France FRA Moussa Sissoko
23 DF France FRA Albin Ebondo
25 MF Norway NOR Daniel Braaten
27 MF France FRA Franck Tabanou
28 FW France FRA Ahmed Soukouna
29 MF France FRA Étienne Capoue
30 GK France FRA Olivier Blondel
33 MF France FRA Oumar N'Diaye

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
DF Brazil BRA Eduardo Ratinho (at Fluminense Football Club)
DF Democratic Republic of the Congo COD Hérita Ilunga (at West Ham United)


U-21 Squad

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
33 DF Wales WAL Ryan Brown
34 GK France FRA Marin Ferry
35 DF France FRA Assane Karaboualy
37 MF France FRA Rémy Lacroix
38 DF France FRA Ewan Leduby
40 DF Kyrgyzstan KGZ Davron Askarov
No. Pos. Nation Player
39 DF France FRA Issa Makalou
42 FW France FRA Styves Morissette
43 MF France FRA Sebastien Velez
47 FW Guinea-Bissau GNB Gabriel Vaz

Historic players

For a complete list of Toulouse FC players, see here Template:Famous players

France

Foreign players

Africans

Europeans

Latin American

Managerial history

[3]

Honours

References

  1. ^ "Générateur d'émotions depuis 1949". Retrieved 2007-02-13. (in French)
  2. ^ [http://www.tfc.info/fr/Pros/205001/Equipe Effectif groupe Pro Saison 2008/09]
  3. ^ "Toulouse FC coaches on RSSSF". Retrieved 2007-05-13.

See also

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