- Catalans Dragons
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Catalans Dragons Club information Full name Ville de Perpignan Dragons Rugby League Football Club Nickname(s) Dragons Short name Catalans Website www.catalansdragons.com Colours Founded 2000 (as Union Treiziste Catalane) Current details Ground(s) Stade Gilbert Brutus (Perpignan, France) (13,000) Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys(Barcelona, Spain) (55,926) CEO(s) Christopher Levy Coach(s) Trent Robinson Manager(s) Bernard Guasch Captain(s) Thomas Bosc Competition Super League Super League XV 14th
Home colours
Away coloursCurrent season The Catalans Dragons are a French professional rugby league club based in Perpignan, Pyrénées-Orientales. They currently play in the Super League, and are the only team in the competition from outside of the United Kingdom. The Dragons play their home games at Stade Gilbert Brutus.
The club was formed in 2000 by a merger of XIII Catalan and AS Saint Estève into Union Treiziste Catalane (UTC). They won the 2005 French Rugby League Championship and the Lord Derby Cup in 2004 and 2005. In 2006, they were granted a Super League license, taking the name Catalans Dragons. UTC continues to compete in the French Championship's Elite One Championship as a feeder club for the Dragons.
Contents
History
The club was founded in 2000 following the merger of two successful teams based in Perpignan, Pyrénées-Orientales, in France's Països Catalans region: XIII Catalan and close neighbours AS Saint Estève. The merged venture took the name Union Treiziste Catalane, often abbreviated to UTC.
XIII Catalan were founded in 1935, and thus were founding members of the French Championship. During their run they won eleven French Championships as well as eleven Lord Derby Cups. AS Saint Estève were founded in 1965. They won six championships and four Lord Derby Cups. There were two other clubs in the twelve-team competition in the Pyrénées-Orientales area, Pia XIII and Saint-Cyprien. In 2002 Saint-Cyprien joined the merged UTC side. UTC proved successful, winning the 2005 French Championship and the 2004 and 2005 Lord Derby Cups.
In 2005 UTC applied to join the UK-based Super League, the highest tier of professional rugby league in Europe. They were selected ahead of Toulouse Olympique and Villeneuve Leopards to enter the league for the 2006 season. The franchise was named Catalans Dragons, with UTC remaining in the French Championship to serve as a reserve club.
The club set its target that 75% of the players will be qualified to play for France. This is not be the first time that a French side has played in the Super League, though the first attempt, Paris Saint-Germain, lasted only two seasons. Part of Paris' problem was that both codes of rugby have their stronghold in the south of France, while the north of France is more soccer friendly. Another problem was that their players were on loan from French league clubs and had to play for their own clubs as well, training in the south before undertaking the long journey to Paris or England for matches.
To ensure that Catalans Dragons had the best French players available to them the French rugby league decided that they could sign players from other French clubs without paying a transfer fee. They were also been promised that they will not be relegated from the Super League for three years even if they finish bottom. Many believe that Catalans Dragons will be joined by other French clubs in the Super League though the whole idea of expanding into France is not without its critics. Catalans Dragons won their first ever Super League match 38-30 against Wigan Warriors on Saturday 11 February 2006 at Stade Aimé Giral. The club encountered a predictable steep learning curve in their first season in Super League with many of the less experienced French players running out of steam towards the end of a gruelling, injury marred campaign. A particular loss was that of key playmaker and Captain Stacey Jones who missed much of the season with a broken arm. They eventually finished bottom of the table, but due to their 3-year exemption from relegation remained in Super League.
2007 saw strong recruitment by new coach Mick Potter with a string of high-profile signings from Australia including Clint Greenshields, Casey McGuire, Jason Croker and Aaron Gorrell, all seasoned NRL campaigners. Gorrell, a goalkicking hooker, in particular impressed in the first month but unfortunately sustained a bad knee injury in February's win over Leeds and missed the rest of the season. On 10 March 2007 it was announced Newcastle Knights hooker Luke Quigley would cover Gorrell's absence for the remainder of the campaign but a number of players sustained injuries throughout the campaign. Young stars Dimitri Pelo and Vincent Duport in the backs impressed, and show real promise for the future and for young talent in France in general. Recent addition to the fold at the Catalan Dragons is former Canberra Raiders, Melbourne Storm and Parramatta Eels Halfback Andrew McFadden who is now their Assistant Coach. Andrew said upon signing with the Dragons that he was doing it for his cousin, former prop Joe McCarthy, who was his "shining light".
On 29 July 2007, the Dragons became the first French side and first non-English side to reach the final of the Challenge Cup after beating Wigan Warriors 37-24 in the semi final. Catalans lost the 2007 Challenge Cup Final with St Helens at Wembley Stadium on 25 August 2007. They also managed to finish the 2007 season off the bottom of the table, ending the season in a respectable 10th place.
In 2008, the Dragons secured their first play-off berth, finishing third on the league ladder largely on the back of a ferocious forward pack. They smashed Warrington 46–8 in their first-ever play-off match on 13 September in Perpignan, but on 20 September saw Wigan blow open what had been a close game in the second half of their elimination semifinal, with Wigan ultimately winning 50–26.
Coach Mick Potter left the Dragons at the end of the 2008 season to replace Daniel Anderson at St Helens. He has been replaced by fellow Australian Kevin Walters. Recruitment for 2009 has been the most exciting to date of the Super League clubs and includes Stephen Bell and Kangaroo Jason Ryles, replacing the retiring John 'Sargeant' Wilson and Alex 'Super' Chan. The Dragon also recruited Greg Bird who was due to sign with the Bradford Bulls after his visa got refused by the UK authorities.
In 2009, the club was involved in two historic milestones for the sport of rugby league in Europe. During their match away to the Welsh club Crusaders on 23 May, the two clubs played the first European Super League match to not feature an English team.[1] History was also created on 20 June when the club played in the first Super League game ever to be played in Spain, at Barcelona's Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys, the venue for the 1992 Summer Olympics, against the Warrington Wolves. The Dragons led 10–6 at half-time, but Warrington finished as the winners 12–24.[2] The purpose of the latter fixture was to promote the sport in Catalonia, with around one thousand tickets being sold in the local area, and the game itself being televised on the Catalan channel El 33.[3] Immediately after the game, Walters commented that the event to Spain could possibly become an annual one,[2] apparently complimenting comments made by the club's general manager about using a new high-speed link between Perpignan and Spain, which was due to commence running some time in the two years after.[3]
2012 Squad
2012 Catalans Dragons Squad First team squad Coaching staff - 1 Clint Greenshields - FB
- 2 Damien Blanch - WG
- 3 Leon Pryce - CE, SO
- 4 Setaimata Sa - CE, SR
- 5 Cyril Stacul - WG
- 6 Thomas Bosc (c) - SO
- 7 Scott Dureau - HB
- 8 David Ferriol - PR
- 9 Ian Henderson - HK
- 10 Rémi Casty - PR
- 11 Steve Menzies - SR, LF
- 12 Sébastien Raguin - SR
- 13 Grégory Mounis - LF, SR
- 14 Tony Gigot - HK
- 15 Jean-Philippe Baile - CE
- 16 William Barthau - SH
- 17 Cyril Gossard - SR
- 18 Daryl Millard - CE
- 19 Frédéric Vaccari - WG
- 20 Michael Simon - PR
- 21 Sebastien Martins - SR
- 22 Jamal Fakir - PR
- 23 Lopini Paea - PR, SR
- 24 Jason Baitieri - LF
- 25 Vincent Duport - CE
- 26 Eloi Pelissier - HK
- 27 Mathias Pala - CE
- 28 Julien Touxagas - SR
- 29 Remy Marginet - LF
- 30 Thibaut Ancely - SR
- 31 Louis Anderson - SR
- 32 Damien Cardace - CE
- 33 Julian Bousquet - PR
Head coach
- Trent Robinson
Assistant coach
- Legend:
- (c) Captain
- (vc) Vice captain
2012 Transfers
Ins
Nat Name Moved From Contract Length Date Louie Anderson Warrington Wolves 3 Years July 2011 Damien Cardace FC Lezignan 1 Year July 2011 Julien Bousquet FC Lezignan 1 Year July 2011 Leon Pryce St Helens 3 Years August 2011 Outs
Nat Name Moved To Contract Length Date Ben Farrar Manly Sea Eagles August 2011 Honours
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- 2005
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- 2004-04, 2004-05
Footnotes
- ^ O'Neill, Matthew. "Super League's First Ever International (with no English)". www.rleague.com (The World of Rugby League). http://www.rleague.com/db/article.php?id=33325. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
- ^ a b "Catalans Dragons 12-24 Warrington". news.bbc.co.uk (BBC Sport). 20 June 2009. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/rugby_league/8104747.stm. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
- ^ a b "Dragons pleased with Barcelona ticket sales". www.superleague.co.uk (The RFL). http://www.superleague.co.uk/article.php?id=14420. Retrieved 2009-06-17.
References
- "Rugby League Tables and Statistics". The World of Rugby League. http://stats.rleague.com/rl/rl_index.html. Retrieved 14 May 2007.
- "Les Catalans Dragons". Super League Statistics. http://www.slstats.org/t44/Les%20Catalan%20Dragons/. Retrieved 14 May 2007.
External links
- Catalans Dragons official site (French) — under construction: (Catalan) (English)
- Catalans Dragons at Superleague.co.uk
- Sang-Et-Or
- The World of Rugby League
- League Unlimited
- Catalans Dragons stats at rugbyleagueproject.com
- Catalans Dragons stats at itsrugby.co.uk
Catalans Dragons Founded in 2001 • Based in Perpignan, FranceThe Club Home grounds League Super LeagueHonours 2005 French Champions • 2-time Lord Derby Cup Champions (2003/04 and 2004/5) • 2007 Challenge Cup Runners-upSeasons 2000-01 · 2001-02 · 2002-03 · 2003-04 · 2004-05 · 2005-06 · 2006 · 2007 · 2008 · 2009 · 2010 · 2011
Culture Second French team in Super League · First and only non-British team to reach Challenge Cup Final · Hosted first-ever Super League game played in SpainAffiliation Rugby Football League (2006)Rugby League in France Federation Fédération Française de Rugby à XIIINational Team France les Chanteclairs (results)Club Competitions Super League Teams Paris Saint-Germain (defunct) · Catalans DragonsCo-operative Championship Teams Elite One Championship Teams
Former TeamsRC Albi · AS Carcassonne · Carpentras XIII · Les Catalans · Lézignan Sangliers · Limoux Grizzlies · Lyon Villeurbanne · Salanque Méditerranée Pia XIII · Saint-Gaudens Bears · Toulouse Olympique · Villeneuve LeopardsSeasons Super League Current Teams Bradford Bulls · Castleford Tigers · Catalans Dragons · Huddersfield Giants · Hull · Hull Kingston Rovers · Leeds Rhinos · London Broncos · Salford City Reds · St. Helens · Wakefield Trinity Wildcats · Warrington Wolves · Widnes Vikings · Wigan WarriorsFormer teams Crusaders · Gateshead Thunder · Halifax Blue Sox · Huddersfield-Sheffield Giants · Leigh Centurions · Oldham Bears · Paris Saint Germain · Sheffield Eagles · Workington TownSeasons: Season results: I · II · III · IV · V · VI · VII · VIII · IX · X · XI · XII · XIII · XIV · XV · XVIGrand Finals: Major events Awards Albert Goldthorpe Medal · League Leader's Shield · Man of Steel Award · Harry Sunderland Trophy · Super League Dream Team · Fairplay Index · Super League Ultimate 13: Grand Final TeamRelated articles Rugby Football League Championship · Super League Records · Super League war · 2009–11 licences · 2012–14 licencesCategories:- Catalans Dragons
- French rugby league teams
- Sports clubs established in 2001
- Super League teams
- Sport in Perpignan
- 2001 establishments in France
- 1 Clint Greenshields - FB
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