- Racing Métro 92
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Racing Métro 92 Full name Racing Métro 92 Nickname(s) 'The Sky and WhiteThe Racingmen ' Founded 1890 (Racing Club)2001 (merger) Ground(s) Stade Olympique Yves-du-Manoir (Capacity: 14,000) President Jacky Lorenzetti Coach(es) Pierre Berbizier Captain(s) Lionel Nallet League(s) Top 14 2010–11 Semifinalists; 2nd on table Team kit2nd kitOfficial website www.racing-metro92.com/ Racing Métro 92 is a French rugby union club based in suburban Paris that was formed in 2001 with the collaboration of the Racing Club de France and US Métro. "92" is the number of Hauts-de-Seine, the département of Île-de-France, bordering Paris to the west, where they play, and whose council gives financial backing to the club. They currently play in the Top 14, having been promoted as 2008–09 champions of Rugby Pro D2. Racing Métro play out of the Stade Yves-du-Manoir stadium at Colombes, where the France national team played for several decades.
Contents
History
Racing Club was established in 1882 (it became Racing Club de France in 1885) as an athletics club, one of the first in France. New sections were regularly added thereafter (17 as of 2006, accounting for some 20,000 members). A rugby section was founded in 1890, which became an immediate protagonist of the early French championship, to which until 1898 only Parisian teams were invited. On 20 March 1892 the USFSA organised the first ever French rugby championship, a one off game between Racing and Stade Français. The game was refereed by Pierre de Coubertin and saw Racing win 4–3."R.C. France 4 – Stade Francais 3". lnr.fr. Archived from the original on 25 November 2006. http://web.archive.org/web/20061125061000/http://www.lnr.fr/Client/Menus.asp?CR=16354&CSR=16382&Cle=51797. Retrieved 2 November 2006. Racing were awarded the Bouclier de Brennus, which is still awarded to the winners of the French championship today.
Both clubs would contest the championship game the following season as well, though in 1893 it would be Stade Français who would win the event, defeating the Racing Club 7–3. Stade went onto dominate the following years and the Racing Club would make their next final appearance in the 1898 season, where they met Stade yet again. However the title was awarded after a round-robin with six clubs. Stade Français won with 10 points, Racing came in second with 6.
Racing contested the 1900 season final against the Stade Bordelais club, as provincial clubs had been allowed to compete in 1899. Racing easily won the match, defeating Stade Bordelais 37–7. The two clubs would meet again in the 1902 championship game, where Racing would again win, 6–0. A decade passed until Racing Club made another championship final, which would be on 31 March 1912, where they would play Toulouse in Toulouse. They lost the match 8–6.
Due to World War I the French championship was replaced with a competition called the Coupe de l'Espérance. The Racing Club won the competition in 1918, defeating FC Grenoble 22 points to 9. Normal competition resumed for the 1920 season. That season the Racing Club made their first final since 1912, though they lost 8 to 3 to Stadoceste Tarbais, a club from the Pyrénées.
After the 1920 season, the Racing Club would not win any championships for a number of years. In 1931 they created the Challenge Yves du Manoir competition. In the 1950s the club had some success, making their first championship final in 30 years, losing to Castres Olympique, 11 points to 8, becoming runners-up in the Challenge Yves du Manoir and winning the Challenge Rutherford in the 1952 season. After losing the 1957 final to FC Lourdes, the club then won the championship in the 1959 season, defeating Mont-de-Marsan 8 points to 3.
The Racing Club would next play in the championship final in the 1987 season, where they met Toulon at Parc des Princes in Paris. Toulon won the match 15 points to 12. Three seasons later the Racing Club defeated Agen 22 to 12 in Paris, capturing their first title since the 1959 season.
But in the wake of the 1990 title, Racing Club had a hard time adapting to the professional era and started to decline, until they were relegated to Division 2 at the end of the 1995–96 season. They jumped back to the top tier in 1998 but went down again in 2000 and played in Division 2 for most of the next decade. In 2001 the rugby section split off from the general sports club to merge with the rugby section of US Métro, the Paris public transport sports club, to form the current professional concern, known as Racing Métro 92. Both Racing Club de France and US Métro retained their other amateur general sports sections.
Racing Métro 92’s president is Jacky Lorenzetti, who heads a giant real estate company called Foncia. When Lorenzetti took over in 2006, the board set goals of bringing Racing into the Top 14 within the next two years and into the Heineken Cup by 2011. They missed their Top 14 goal by one year, not entering the top flight until 2009, but achieved their Heineken Cup goal by qualifying for the 2010–11 edition.
After 2003 the Challenge Yves du Manoir has been taken over by Racing Club as a youth competition for under 15s clubs. Racing Club de France provided 76 players to the national team, including 12 captains. It is second only to Stade Toulousain (almost 100) in that category. Three Racingmen played in France’s first international match against the All Blacks on 1 January 1906. Laurent Cabannes, a France flanker, also played for Harlequins.
Identity
Aristocratic exclusivity
In France, early organised sports was a matter for rich people. Racing Club became the epitome of the exclusive athletics club, located in the heart of the Bois de Boulogne in the affluent western district of Paris. As the club's name, Racing, indicates, it was modelled after the fashionable English sports organisations[citation needed], whose ideal of mens sana in corpore sano (a healthy mind in a healthy body) appealed very much to its members. Many of them were actually aristocrats, and four nobles took part in the first championship final. Although fewer aristocrats belong to the club now, it is still very complicated to join it, and the identity and image is one of exclusivity.
Racing Club has also always defended the amateur spirit of the game and of sports in general. The creation of the Challenge Yves du Manoir responded to this ideal in a period (late 1920s-early 1930s) where French rugby was marred by violence and creeping professionalism. Yves du Manoir symbolized the romantic side of rugby, its carefree dimension, le jeu pour le jeu (playing for the fun of playing).
Modern eccentricity
In a very different vein, much later, in the 1980s, a talented generation of players revived the club’s spirit. They carried it back to the top of French rugby thanks to their performances on the pitch, but they also wanted to bring the fun back into the game, in order to take rugby out of its Parisian anonymity. They did so through a combination of serious football, humour and self-mockery. Their famous antics were invented by the club’s backs (including France flyhalf Franck Mesnel and France wing Jean-Baptiste Lafond) who once played a game in Bayonne with berets on their heads as a tribute to the tradition of attacking play of the Basque club Aviron Bayonnais (11 Jan 1987). As members of a gang which they called le show bizz, they played other matches with black make-up on (10 April 1988 at Stade Toulousain), hair dyed yellow, bald caps (26 Feb 1989 against Béziers), wigs and even dressed up as pelote players (white shirts, black jackets and berets, again) in March 1990 at Biarritz Olympique. In April 1989, they wore long red and white striped shorts to celebrate the sans-culotte who took the Bastille on 14 July 1789. They wore long white trousers to look like players of old in the French championship semi-final on 26 April 1987—and won. Their best prank was in the next game though: they played the 1987 final against Toulon with a pink bow tie (2 May). Just before kick-off, Lafond presented French president François Mitterrand, who always attended the national final, with one of those bow ties. They lost that match but went on to play the 1990 final with the same bow ties. At half-time, they had a drink of champagne on the pitch to recover from the efforts of the first half—and won the club’s most recent top-flight title!
They were also famous for their love of nightlife, which attracted a lot of criticism, especially because so many of them had international duties with France. All this contributed to the image of Racing Club as an eccentric institution, but these players have also been seen as trail blazers for Stade Français’s president Max Guazzini, who a few years later, took up the provocative (such as the use of the pink colour) and imaginative spirit to boost his club’s image and shake off the conservative traditionalism of French rugby.
As the club hit the front pages, five players capitalised on the success and went on to start a now famous sportswear clothing business called Eden Park (after the famous Auckland stadium) in late 1987. It uses a pink bowtie as its logo and has established itself as a leading brand in France thanks to its combination of elegance and eccentricity (pink, of course, and sky-blue are among the favourites), competing with the likes of Tommy Hilfiger, Ralph Lauren, Lacoste and Marlboro Classics. Thus Eden Park’s expensive rugby polo shirts are a must for French rugby fans. Their development was boosted when the French Federation chose them as official suppliers of France’s formal wear in 1998. The company boasts 270 outlets throughout the world. One of them is in Richmond as Eden Park developed a partnership with Harlequins. Others are to be found in Northampton, Leeds, Belfast, Dublin and Cardiff. In 2003, Eden Park became the official supplier of the Welsh Rugby Union’s formal wear for the World Cup in Australia. Eden Park is also directly involved in the Racing Métro club since one of its founders, Eric Blanc—who happens to be Franck Mesnel’s brother-in-law— is the club’s vice-president.
This particular period ended in the early 1990s when those players left the club. Racing then spent several years in the second division, but retained plenty of ambition. In 2007–08, Racing finished second on the ladder to equally ambitious Toulon, but fell short of promotion with an extra-time loss to Mont-de-Marsan in the Pro D2 promotion playoff final. The following year saw Racing's ambitions realized with a romp to the Pro D2 crown, clinching promotion with four rounds to spare.
In their return to the top flight in 2009–10, Racing finished sixth on the regular-season table, two spots ahead of their Parisian rivals, securing the final spot in the newly expanded playoffs—despite actually being outscored by their opponents on the season. This finish also gave Racing a place in the 2010–11 Heineken Cup. Their season ended with a 21–17 first-round loss at eventual champions Clermont. The 2010–11 season saw Racing emphatically reestablish themselves as the top club in Paris, finishing second on the regular-season table to Stade Français' 11th.[1]
Lorenzetti's model for success has been to combine young French talent with big-name imports. More significantly, while he has largely bankrolled the team during the first years of his tenure as president, he is committed to making the club self-supporting. To that end, he is building a new 32,000-seat stadium for the club in the Paris suburb of Nanterre, near La Défense. The new ground, currently known as Arena 92 and set to open in 2014, is being marketed as a future venue for major concerts, which would potentially provide Racing with substantial non-match revenue.
Honours
- French championship
- Champion: 1892, 1900, 1902, 1959, 1990
- Finalist: 1893, 1912, 1920, 1950, 1957, 1987
- Challenge Yves du Manoir
- Finalist: 1952
- Champion under 15: 2005
- Coupe de l'Espérance
- Champion : 1918
- Division One Group A2/Rugby Pro D2
- Champion: 1998, 2009
- Challenge Rutherford
- Finalist: 1952
Finals results
French championship
Date Winner 'Runner up Score Venue Spectators 20 March 1892 Racing Club de France Stade Français 4–3 Bagatelle, Paris 2.000 19 May 1893 Stade Français Racing Club de France 7–3 Bécon-les-Bruyères 1.200 22 April 1900 Racing Club de France Stade Bordelais UC 37–3 Levallois-Perret 1.500 23 March 1902 Racing Club de France Stade Bordelais UC 6–0 Parc des Princes, Paris 1.000 31 March 1912 Stade Toulousain Racing Club de France 8–6 Stade des Ponts Jumeaux, Toulouse 15.000 25 April 1920 Stadoceste Tarbais Racing Club de France 8–3 Route du Médoc, Le Bouscat 20.000 16 April 1950 Castres Olympique Racing Club de France 11–8 Stade des Ponts Jumeaux, Toulouse 25.000 26 May 1957 FC Lourdes Racing Club de France 16–13 Stade de Gerland, Lyon 30.000 24 May 1959 Racing Club de France Stade Montois 8–3 Parc Lescure, Bordeaux 31.098 22 May 1987 RC Toulon Racing Club de France 15–12 Parc des Princes, Paris 48.000 26 May 1990 Racing Club de France SU Agen 22–12 (aet) Parc des Princes, Paris 45.069 Challenge Yves du Manoir
Year Winner Score Runner-up 1952 Section Paloise round robin Racing Club de France Coupe de l'Espérance
Date Winner Score Runner-up 1918 Racing Club de France 22–9 FC Grenoble Pro D2 promotion playoffs
Date Winner Runner up Score Venue Spectators 21 June 2008 Stade Montois Racing Métro 92 32–23 (aet) Stade Municipal de Beaublanc, Limoges 6,000"Pro D2 Finale : Mont-de-Marsan – Racing Metro 92" (in French). L'Équipe (France). 21 June 2008. http://www.lequipe.fr/Rugby/RugbyFicheMatch7233.html. Retrieved 9 May 2009. Famous players
- Agustín Pichot
- Nic Berry
- Olivier Diomandé
- Dan Scarbrough
- Simon Raiwalui
- Geoffrey Abadie
- Wladimir Aïtoff
- André Alvarez
- Géo André
- Claude Atcher
- Alexandre Audebert
- David Auradou
- Guy Basquet
- Pierre Bassagaïtz
- Louis Béguet
- Henri Béhotéguy
- Jean Pierre Beigbeder
- Laurent Bénézech
- Francis Biescas
- Éric Blanc
- Xavier Blond
- Stéfan Boize
- René Bonnefond
- Éric Bonneval
- Michel Bordagaray
- François Borde
- Jean-Claude Bourrier
- Marcel Burgun
- Laurent Cabannes
- Fernand Cazenave
- Denis Charvet
- Marc Chevalier
- André Chilo
- Patrice Collazo
- Jean Conquet
- René Crabos
- Michel Crauste
- Jean Dachary
- Murray Dawson
- Michel Debet
- John Decrae
- Francis Desclaux
- Jean-François Desclaux
- Christophe Deslandes
- Philippe Destribatz
- Pierre Dizabo
- Carlos Dorval Martos
- Yves du Manoir
- Gérard Dufau
- Robert Duthen
- Roger Fédencieu
- Jérôme Fillol
- Antoine Galibert
- Pierre Gaudermen
- Jean-Pierre Genet
- Henri Giraud
- Jean-François Gourdon
- Bernard Guerrin
- Philippe Guillard
- Adolphe Jauréguy
- Pierre Jeanjean
- Raphaël Jéchoux
- Jeannot Labeyrie
- Claude Laborde
- Jean-Pierre Labro
- Pierre Lacaze
- Pierre Lacroix
- Jean-Baptiste Lafond
- Jean-Marc Lafond
- Gaston Lane
- Bernard Lartigue
- Jacques Lartigue
- Henri Lasserre
- Vincent Lélano
- Jean-Patrick Lesobre
- Roger Lerou
- Jean Lhospital
- Thomas Lombard
- Arnaud Marquesuzaa
- Gérald Martinez
- Jean-Pierre Massebœuf
- Franck Mesnel
- François Moncla
- Francis Moulian
- Allan Henry Muhr
- Claude Obadia
- Gérald Orsoni
- Marc Paillassa
- Robert Paparemborde
- Laurent Pardo
- Patrice Perron
- Alexandre Pharamond
- Lucien Picau
- Alain Plantefol
- Alain Porthault
- Didier Pouyau
- Hubert Proux de la Rivière
- Robert Raynal
- Raymond Rebujen
- Frantz Reichel
- Jean-Pierre Rives
- Yvon Rousset
- Michel Rouyres
- Cyril Rutherford
- Jean-Philippe Saffore
- André Sahuc
- Frédéric Saint-Sardos
- Patrick Serrière
- Michel Tachdjian
- Michel Taffary
- Jérôme Thion
- Franck Tournaire
- Antton Urtizverea
- Michel Urtizverea
- Ludovic Valbon
- Michel Vannier
- Popoff Varennes
- Georges Verdier
- Bernard Viviès
- Jacky Violle
- William Zeemuler
- Carlo Festuccia
- Andrea Masi
- Andrew Mehrtens
- Brent Ward
- Craig Smith
- Epi Taione
Squad 2011/12
Note: Flags indicate national union as has been defined under IRB eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-IRB nationality.
Player Position Union Grégory Arganese Hooker Italy Thomas Bianchin Hooker France Benjamin Noirot Hooker France Julien Brugnaut Prop France Andrea Lo Cicero Prop Italy Juan Pablo Orlandi Prop Argentina Benjamin Sa Prop New Zealand Mikaele Tuugahala Prop France Scott Zimmerman Prop France Santiago Dellapè Lock Italy Karim Ghezal Lock France Lionel Nallet (c) Lock France François van der Merwe Lock South Africa Antoine Battut Flanker France Álvaro Galindo Flanker Argentina Nathan Lane Flanker France Bernard Le Roux Flanker South Africa Johnny Leo'o Flanker New Zealand Rémy Vaquin Flanker France Sébastien Chabal Number 8 France Jacques Cronjé Number 8 South Africa Jone Qovu Number 8 Fiji Player Position Union Sébastien Descons Scrum-half France Nicolas Durand Scrum-half France Mathieu Lorée Scrum-half France Juan Martín Hernández Fly-half Argentina Jonathan Wisniewski Fly-half France Guillaume Boussès Centre France Henry Chavancy Centre France Ryan Cross Centre Australia Alexandre Dumoulin Centre France Fabrice Estebanez Centre France François Steyn Centre South Africa Albert Vulivuli Centre Fiji Mirco Bergamasco Wing Italy Sireli Bobo Wing Fiji Juan José Imhoff Wing Argentina Julien Saubade Wing France Benjamin Fall Fullback France Gaëtan Germain Fullback France In for 2011–12
- Guillaume Boussès (from Stade Français)
- Sébastien Descons (from Pau)
- Alexandre Dumoulin (from Bourgoin)
- Fabrice Estebanez (from Brive)
- Gaëtan Germain (from Bourgoin)
- Juan Imhoff (from Duendes)
Out for 2011–12
- Dan Scarbrough
- Simon Raiwalui
- Fabrice Culine
- Jérôme Fillol (to Stade Français)
- Carlo Festuccia (to Aironi)
- Andrea Masi (to Aironi)
Staff 2011/12
- President: Jacky Lorenzetti
- Vice-Presidents:
- General Manager: Pierre Berbizier
- Forwards Coach: Philippe Berbizier
- Backs Coach: Simon Mannix
Chairmen
Years Name Club Section 2004 – ...... Jean-Patrick Lesobre Racing Club de France Amateurs 2006 – ...... Jacky Lorenzetti Racing M92 Professional References
- ^ Moriarty, Ian (2011-05-17). "Times are changing in Paris". ESPN Scrum. http://www.espnscrum.com/francetop14-2010-11/rugby/story/139943.html. Retrieved 2011-05-17.
External links
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- Rugby union clubs in Paris
- Rugby clubs established in 1890
- Racing Métro 92
- French championship
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