AS Monaco FC

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Monaco
Logo
Full name Association Sportive de
Monaco Football Club
Nickname(s) Les Rouge et Blanc
(The Red and Whites)
Founded 23 August 1924
Ground Stade Louis II,
Fontvieille
(Capacity: 18,500)
Chairman Dmitry Rybolovlev
Manager Marco Simone
League Ligue 2
2010–11 Ligue 1, 18th (relegated)
Website Club home page
Home colours
Away colours
Third colours
Current season

Association Sportive de Monaco Football Club (French pronunciation: [a.sɔ.sja.sjɔ̃ spɔrtɪv də mɔnaˈkɔ]; commonly referred to as AS Monaco or simply Monaco) are a French football club based in Fontvieille, Monaco. The club was founded in 1924 and currently play in Ligue 2, the second tier of French football. The team plays its home matches at the Stade Louis II located within Fontvieille. Monaco is managed by former Monaco player and Italian international Marco Simone and captained by Ludovic Giuly. Simone works as manager in tandem with club sporting director Jean Petit.

Though based in Monaco, the club is regarded as a French club, as the club plays in the French football league system, and because the principality of Monaco is not a member of UEFA.[1][2] Monaco is one of the most successful clubs in the country having won seven league titles and five Coupe de France trophies. The club has also regularly competed in European football having been runners-up in both the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and UEFA Champions League in 1992 and 2004, respectively.

Monaco enjoyed numerous successes in the 1970s and late 1980s during the managerial tenures of Lucien Leduc and Arsène Wenger, during which the club was amongst the leading lights of European football. Monaco's traditional colours are red and white, and the club is affectionately known as Les Rouge et Blanc (English: The Red and White). Monaco is also a member of the European Club Association. In December 2011, two-thirds of the club was sold to an investment group led by Russian billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev.[3]

Contents

[edit] History

AS Monaco FC was founded on 23 August 1924 as an unification of numerous local clubs based in France and the principality. The club's early years were spent in the amateur regional divisions of the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region, rising rapidly between the leagues in the 1990s. In 1933, Monaco were invited by the French Football Federation to turn professional. The Monégasques' first year of second division football ended in failure however, as they were relegated to the amateur leagues the following year. By 1948, Monaco re-acquired its professional status and returned to the French second division; they subsequently consistently finished in its upper echelons, with this sustained effort resulting in promotion to the French first division for the first time in 1953.

In 1960, Monaco's first iconic coach, Lucien Leduc, led the club to its first professional trophy, the Coupe de France, beating Saint-Étienne 4–2 in extra time. This initial success was bettered in the following year with the club winning the French Championship for the first time in its history, qualifying for the European Cup. Leduc subsequently led the club to its first League and Cup Double in 1963. Upon Leduc's departure in 1963, Monaco endured a barren run, entrenched in the middle half of the league for the best part of the next decade and alternating between the first and second divisions after 1963. In 1975, Jean-Louis Campora, son of former president Charles Campora, became chairman of the club. In his second season, he brought back Leduc, who immediately won the club promotion to the first division and won them the championship the following year in 1978. Leduc subsequently left the club again in 1979, to be succeeded by Lucien Müller and Gérard Banide, both of whom were unable to halt the club's decline.

The early 1980s saw a steady stream of successes in national competitions. Monaco won a title almost every other year; the Coupe de France in 1980 and 1985, the French Championship in 1982, was Coupe de France finalist in 1984. In the 1985–86 season, Monaco hammered Bordeaux 9–0, one of the biggest wins in club history.[4]

Disappointingly for Monaco fans, the club could not translate its domestic leadership into European success. Up to this point, Monaco had never past the first round of any European competition. Monaco lost to Dundee United (1981) CSKA Sofia twice (1982 and 1984) and Universitatea Craiova.[5]

In 1986, famed Ajax manager István Kovács, who succeeded Rinus Michels and honed his total football ideals with the Dutch champions, came out of a three-year "retirement" to manage Monaco, but even he could not bring them success. With the club facing a second barren spell, they signed legendary future Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger, who had hitherto been relatively unknown, managing Nancy without much success. Wenger's reign saw the club enjoy one of its most successful periods, with several inspired signings, including future legends George Weah, Glenn Hoddle, Jürgen Klinsmann, and Youri Djorkaeff. Youth team policies produced future World Cup winners Emmanuel Petit, Lilian Thuram, and Thierry Henry. Under Wenger, they won the league in his first season in charge (1988) and the Coupe de France in 1989 and 1991, with the club consistently competing in the latter stages of the European Cup and regularly challenging for the league title.[6] The club could have had even greater success in this period, as it emerged in 1993 that bitter rivals Marseille had indulged in match fixing and numerous improprieties, a view that Wenger had long held.[6] In 1994, after being blocked by the Monaco board from opening discussions with German powerhouse Bayern Munich for their vacant managerial post after being shortlisted for the role, Wenger was released from the club, several weeks after the post had already been filled.[6][7]

After Wenger's departure, the club endured a relatively poor run, only winning the league twice afterwards (1997 and 2000), amidst rumours that the club was facing numerous financial difficulties. Wenger's successor, Campora, left the club in 2003, with Monaco facing relegation into the second division due to a huge deficit and a dearth of investors. His replacement, Pierre Svara, took charge on a temporary basis in 2003, with the club enjoying a remarkable run towards the final of the UEFA Champions League, led by former French national team captain Didier Deschamps and with the team featuring stalwarts such as Fernando Morientes, Ludovic Giuly, Jérôme Rothen, and Dado Pršo, beating Real Madrid and Chelsea along the way. Even with this successful run, Svara was soon replaced by Michel Pastor. One of Pastor's first tasks was to hold onto the players who had turned the club into one of the best in Europe, but he failed to convince them to stay, and their replacements were unable to replicate previous successes. After four years, six coaches and only mid-table finishes, Pastor left the club amid severe criticism of his management skills.

In 2008, Jérôme de Bontin, a leading shareholder of the club since 2003, took charge of the club, promising a complete shake-up. Under his reign as president, the club brought in players such as Park Chu-Young and Freddy Adu, but they did not find much success on the pitch, going through a torrid season and only managing a mid-table finish. De Bontin resigned at the end of the season, replaced by banker Etienne Franzi and a new board of directors.[8]

In July 2009, Brazilian manager Ricardo Gomes was replaced by former Cannes and Rennes coach Guy Lacombe, inheriting a youthful squad featuring numerous highly lauded youth team prospects, including Cédric Mongongu, Serge Gakpé, Vincent Muratori, Frédéric Nimani, Nicolas N'Koulou, Park Chu-Young, Yohan Mollo, and Yohann Thuram-Ulien.[9] Lacombe led Monaco to 8th place in Ligue 1 in his first season in charge, but he was unable to replicate this performance in his second season, and was sacked in January 2011 with Monaco sitting 17th in Ligue 1. He was replaced by Laurent Banide, who was unable to turn around the club's fortunes; Monaco finished the 2010-11 season in 18th position, thus becoming relegated to Ligue 2.

[edit] Stadium

Stade Louis II's iconic nine arches.

Monaco have played at the original Stade Louis II since its beginnings in 1939. In 1985, the stadium was replaced with the current iteration, built on a nearby site consisting of land reclaimed from the Mediterranean, which has become a recurring feature of the stadium's seaside surroundings. The stadium is named after the former Prince of Monaco Louis II and houses a total of 18,500 supporters. The Stade Louis II is noted for its iconic nine arches and has hosted numerous athletic events and European Cup finals, including each instance of the annual UEFA Super Cup, which is held every August. The stadium has been undergone renovations numerous times and, at the beginning of the 2008–09 season, underwent numerous changes, which included the installation of two large screens. Monaco train in nearby La Turbie, a newly-built training facility featuring state-of-the-art gyms, pools and conference centres.

[edit] Commitment

AS Monaco FC is today one of the Ambassadors for Peace and Sport, a Monaco-based international organization,[10] committed to serving peace in the world through sport.

[edit] Players

[edit] First-team squad

As of 6 February 2012.[11]

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
1 France GK Sébastien Chabbert
2 France DF Dennis Appiah
3 France DF Vincent Muratori
4 Nigeria DF Rabiu Afolabi
5 France MF Gary Coulibaly
6 France MF Stéphane Dumont
7 Republic of the Congo MF Chris Malonga
8 France MF Ludovic Giuly (captain)
9 France FW Marama Vahirua (on loan from Nancy)
10 Mali MF Sambou Yatabaré
11 Senegal FW Ibrahima Touré
12 Brazil DF Adriano
13 Sweden DF Petter Hansson
14 France DF Florian Pinteaux
15 France DF Layvin Kurzawa
16 France GK Martin Sourzac
17 France FW Terence Makengo
18 France FW Valère Germain
19 Côte d'Ivoire DF Isaac Koné
No. Position Player
20 Hungary MF Vladimir Koman
21 Uruguay DF Gary Kagelmacher
22 Norway FW Thorstein Helstad
23 France DF Olivier Ferblantier
24 France MF Nampalys Mendy
25 France MF Valentin Eysseric
26 France DF Eric Marester
27 France MF Aadil Assana
28 Cameroon MF Edgar Salli
29 France DF Tristan Dingomé
30 France GK Johann Carrasso (on loan from Rennes)
31 Germany DF Andreas Wolf
32 Morocco MF Nabil Dirar
36 Greece DF Georgios Tzavelas
38 Greece MF Alexandros Tziolis
39 Netherlands FW Nacer Barazite
40 Croatia GK Danijel Subašić
France DF Yvan Erichot

[edit] Out 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
Romania FW Daniel Niculae (at Nancy)
France MF Thomas Mangani (at Nancy)
France MF Kévin Diaz (at FC Metz)
No. Position Player
France GK Franck L'Hostis (at Martigues)
France FW Frédéric Nimani (at PAOK)
France MF Kévin Malcuit (at Vannes)

[edit] Notable former players

Below are the notable former players who have represented Monaco in league and international competition since the club's foundation in 1924. To appear in the section below, a player must have played in at least 100 official matches for the club.

For a list of former and current AS Monaco players with a Wikipedia article, see here.

[edit] Management and staff

Senior club staff[12]
  • President: Dmitry Rybolovlev
  • Vice-President: Evgeny Smolentsev
  • General Director: Filips Dhondt
  • Accounting Director: Emmanuel Blanchi
Coaching and medical staff[12]

[edit] Managerial history

Dates Name
1948–1950 France Jean Batmale
1950–1952 Romania Elek Schwartz
1952–1953 Italy Angelo Grizzetti
1953–1956 Czechoslovakia Ludwic Dupal
1956–1957 Austria Anton Marek
1957–1958 France Louis Pirroni
1958–1963 France Lucien Leduc
1963–1965 France Roger Courtois
1965–1966 France Louis Pirroni
1966–1969 France Pierre Sinibaldi
1969–1970 France Louis Pirroni
France Robert Domergue
1970–1972 France Jean Luciano
1972–1974 Argentina Ruben Bravo
1974–1975 Argentina Alberto Muro
1976 Monaco Armand Forcherio
1977–1979 France Lucien Leduc
1979–1983 France Gérard Banide
Dates Name
1983–1986 France Lucien Muller
1986–1987 Romania Stefan Kovacs
1987–1994 France Arsène Wenger
1994 France Jean Petit
1994–1995 France Jean-Luc Ettori
1995 France Gérard Banide
1995–1999 France Jean Tigana
1999–2001 France Claude Puel
2001–2005 France Didier Deschamps
2005 France Jean Petit
2005–2006 Italy Francesco Guidolin
2006 Romania László Bölöni
2006–2007 France Laurent Banide
2007–2009 Brazil Ricardo Gomes
2009–2011 France Guy Lacombe
2011 France Laurent Banide
2011–present Italy Marco Simone

[edit] Honours

[edit] Domestic

[edit] Europe

[edit] Records

Name Games
France Jean-Luc Ettori 755 games
France Claude Puel 602
France Jean Petit 428
France Manuel Amoros 349
France Christian Dalger 334
France Marcel Dib 326
France François Ludo 319
France Luc Sonor 315
France Michel Hidalgo 304
Monaco Armand Forcherio 303
Name Goals
Argentina Delio Onnis 223 goals
France Lucien Cossou 115
France Christian Dalger 89
Nigeria Victor Ikpeba 77
France Jean Petit 76
France Yvon Douis 74
France Youri Djorkaeff 68
Democratic Republic of the Congo Shabani Nonda 67
BrazilFrance Sonny Anderson 67
Liberia George Weah 66

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.uefa.com/search/index.html#Monaco
  2. ^ http://www.fifa.com/tournaments/archive/tournament=107/edition=4735/news/newsid=99547.html
  3. ^ "Russian billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev completes takeover of Monaco's soccer club". Washington Post. 23 December 2011. http://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/dcunited/russian-billionaire-dmitry-rybolovlev-completes-takeover-of-monacos-soccer-club/2011/12/23/gIQADCG3DP_story.html. Retrieved 23 December 2011. 
  4. ^ "Ligue1.com – French Football League – Ligue 1, Ligue 2, Coupe de la Ligue, Trophée des Champions". Frenchleague.com. http://www.frenchleague.com/club/historique.asp?no_affil_fff=500211. Retrieved 27 April 2011. 
  5. ^ "AS Monaco – Dates & results 1985/1986". Bundesliga.weltfussball.at. http://bundesliga.weltfussball.at/teams/as-monaco/1986/3/. Retrieved 27 April 2011. 
  6. ^ a b c Jasper Rees (18 August 2003). "Inside the mind of Arsène Wenger (excerpt from Wenger: The Making of a Legend by Jasper Rees)". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2003/aug/18/sport.comment. 
  7. ^ Arsène Wenger The Biography by Xavier Rivoire
  8. ^ "Monaco: Etienne Franzi président". Sport.fr. 21 March 2009. http://www.sport.fr/Football/foo/Ligue-1-Monaco-Etienne-Franzi-president-152330.shtm. Retrieved 9 September 2009. 
  9. ^ "The little princes of Monaco". FIFA.com. http://www.fifa.com/worldfootball/clubfootball/news/newsid=677973.html. 
  10. ^ "Peace and Sport". Peace-sport.org. http://www.peace-sport.org/. Retrieved 27 April 2011. 
  11. ^ "Equipe Pro". Asm-fc.com. http://www.asm-fc.com/equipe.aspx?id=1. Retrieved 27 April 2011. 
  12. ^ a b "Organigramme" (in French). AS Monaco FC. http://www.asm-fc.com/organigramme.aspx. Retrieved 1 January 2011. 

[edit] External links

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