Jump to content

Royal Charleroi S.C.: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Line 205: Line 205:
{{Fs player | no= 88 | nat= BOL | name= [[Vicente Arze]]|pos=FW }}
{{Fs player | no= 88 | nat= BOL | name= [[Vicente Arze]]|pos=FW }}
{{Fs player | no= 92 | nat= FRA | name= [[Neeskens Kebano]]|pos=MF }}
{{Fs player | no= 92 | nat= FRA | name= [[Neeskens Kebano]]|pos=MF }}
{{Fs player | no= | nat= ALG | name= [[Kamel Ghilas]]|pos=FW }}
{{Fs player | no= 10 | nat= ALG | name= [[Kamel Ghilas]]|pos=FW }}
{{Fs player | no= | nat= FRA | name= [[Cédric Fauré]]|pos=FW }}
{{Fs player | no= | nat= FRA | name= [[Cédric Fauré]]|pos=FW }}
{{Fs player | no= | nat= BEL | name= Dieumerci Ndongala|pos=MF }}
{{Fs player | no= | nat= BEL | name= Dieumerci Ndongala|pos=MF }}

Revision as of 11:45, 3 February 2014

Sporting de Charleroi
Full nameRoyal Charleroi
Sporting Club
Nickname(s)Les Zèbres (The Zebras),
Les Carolos
Founded1904
GroundStade du Pays de Charleroi,
Charleroi
Capacity25,000[1]
ChairmanBelgium Fabien Debecq[2]
ManagerBelgium Felice Mazzu
LeagueBelgian Pro League
2012–13Belgian Pro League, 11th

Sporting du Pays de Charleroi (often simply known as Charleroi or Sporting Charleroi, or by their nickname Les Zèbres (The Zebras)) is a Belgian football club based in the city of Charleroi, in the province of Hainaut. Charleroi plays in the Belgian Pro League and their current spell at the highest level in Belgian football has started in the 1985–86 season. Charleroi was founded in 1904 and they first reached the first division in 1947–48. Their highest finish was runner-up in the 1968–69 season. They also reached twice the Belgian Cup final, losing in 1977-78 to Beveren and in 1992-93 to Standard Liège.

Sporting Charleroi have a long-standing rivalry with city other club ROC de Charleroi-Marchienne, currently playing in the third division. Charleroi play their home matches at the Stade du Pays de Charleroi, which was refurbished for the UEFA Euro 2000. The stadium hosted 3 group stage games in the Euro 2000 among which the 1-0 victory of England against Germany. Charleroi have been recruiting several French players in recent years, including Michaël Ciani, Cyril Théréau and goalkeeper Bertrand Laquait.

History

Charleroi Sporting Club was founded in 1904 and they received the matricule n°22 . Twenty years after their foundation, they qualified to play in the Promotion (then the second level in Belgian football) and in 1929, the club changed its name to Royal Charleroi Sporting Club. Rivals from Olympic Charleroi were playing in the first division in the late 1930s and the 1940s, while Sporting Charleroi was playing one level down, until they promoted in 1947. In 1949, Sporting Charleroi finished 4th (2 points behind Standard Liège) whereas Olympic Charleroi was 14th. But Olympic took the lead again until 1955 and their relegation to the second division. At the end of the 1956–57 season, Olympic Charleroi had promoted to the first division but Sporting Charleroi finished last in the first division and was thus relegated to the second division. A spell of 9 seasons in the second division followed and in 1966–67 Sporting Charleroi was back at the top level. They finished at the second place in 1968-69 5 points behind Standard Liège but within two years they were relegated again.

In 1974 the first division was changing from 16 to 20 teams and Sporting Charleroi was chosen to play at the top level. Olympic Charleroi promoted too as they had won the second division right before but they remained at the top level for just one season. Sporting underwent a new relegation in 1979–80 (17th on 18) but was back five years later. Their best result since then in the first division is a 4th place in 1993–94. In September 2005, the G-14 took FIFA to court over the 8 month injury incurred by Abdelmajid Oulmers whilst on international duty with Morocco.

Colours and badge

Crown on black and white.

The colours of Charleroi are black and white with a shirt generally striped, which lead to the team being nicknamed The Zebras. In the 2005-06 season the team's away kit was pink.

Stadium

Main article: Stade du Pays de Charleroi

The actual ground was baptized in 1939 with a match Sporting-Union du Centre and it was located near the coal mine named Mambourg. In 1985 the stadium was slightly modernized as the club had qualified for the first division. It was then heavily renewed in the late 1990s in view of the 2000 European Football Championship. The name changed on May 24, 1999 from Stade du Mambourg to Stade du Pays de Charleroi. During the tournament, the full capacity of the stadium was up to 30,000 seats. The Stade du Pays de Charleroi hosted notably the match between Germany and England. The highest stand was eventually reduced and the capacity is now 25,000.

Honours

European record

As of December, 2008.
Competition A B C D E F G
UEFA Cup 2 6 4 0 2 10 8
Intertoto Cup 3 10 3 3 4 11 11

A = appearances, B = matches played, C = won, D = drawn, E = lost, F = goals for, G = goals against.

Season Competition Round Club Home Away
1969-70 UEFA Cup 1R Croatia NK Zagreb 2-1 3-1
1969-70 UEFA Cup 2R France FC Rouen 3-1 0-2
1994-95 UEFA Cup 1R Romania Rapid Bucureşti 2-1 0-2
1995 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group 10 Israel Beitar Jerusalem 1-0
1995 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group 10 Turkey Bursaspor 0-2
1995 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group 10 Slovakia FC Košice 2-3
1995 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group 10 England Wimbledon FC 3-0
1996 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group 4 Denmark Silkeborg IF 2-4
1996 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group 4 Wales Conwy United FC 0-0
1996 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group 4 Poland Zaglebie Lubin 0-0
1996 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group 4 Austria SV Ried 3-1
2005 UEFA Intertoto Cup 2R Finland Tampere United 0-0 0-1

Players

Current squad

As of 1 February, 2014

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
3 DF Belgium BEL Mohamed Mrabet
4 DF Belgium BEL Jonathan Vervoort
5 DF France FRA Mourad Satli
6 DF Belgium BEL Sebastien Dewaest
7 MF France FRA Clément Tainmont
8 DF Spain ESP Martos
9 FW Belgium BEL Giuseppe Rossini
14 DF France FRA Steeven Willems
15 GK Belgium BEL Adrien Faidherbe
16 FW Senegal SEN Jamal Thiaré
17 DF Greece GRE Stergos Marinos
19 DF Republic of the Congo CGO Francis N'Ganga
20 MF Belgium BEL Jessy Galvez-Lopez
22 MF Belgium BEL Guillaume François
No. Pos. Nation Player
23 MF Ghana GHA Abraham Kudemor
24 GK Belgium BEL Salvatore Crimi
25 MF France FRA Damien Marcq
27 MF Brazil BRA Ederson
28 MF Belgium BEL Enes Saglik
30 MF Senegal SEN Mohamed Daf
35 GK Democratic Republic of the Congo COD Parfait Mandanda Captain
80 MF Belgium BEL Kenneth Houdret
88 FW Bolivia BOL Vicente Arze
92 MF France FRA Neeskens Kebano
10 FW Algeria ALG Kamel Ghilas
FW France FRA Cédric Fauré
MF Belgium BEL Dieumerci Ndongala

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

For recent transfers, see List of Belgian football transfers winter 2013–14.

Coaches

References

  1. ^ "Stade".
  2. ^ [1]