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CA Brive
French rugby union club, based in Brive-la-Gaillarde
French rugby union club, based in Brive-la-Gaillarde
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| teamname | CA Brive |
| image | CABriveRugbyLogo.svg |
| image_size | 156px |
| fullname | Club Athlétique Brive Corrèze Limousin |
| nickname | Les Coujous |
| Les Gaillards (The Strapping Lads) | |
| Les Noir et Blanc (The Black and Whites) | |
| Les Zèbres (The Zebras) | |
| location | Brive-la-Gaillarde, France |
| countryflag | France |
| founded | |
| ground | Stade Amédée-Domenech |
| capacity | 14,759 |
| president | Simon Gillham |
| coach | Pierre Henry-Broncan |
| captain | Saïd Hireche |
| appearances | France Jean-Claude Roques (373) |
| top scorer | France Jean-François Thiot (1796) |
| most tries | France Jean-Pierre Puidebois (115) |
| league | |
| season | |
| position | |
| url | www.cabrive-rugby.com/ |
| pattern_la1 | _CABrive2122h |
| pattern_b1 | _CABrive2122h |
| pattern_ra1 | _CABrive2122h |
| pattern_so1 | _adidasrugbyblacklogo&stripes |
| leftarm1 | 000000 |
| rightarm1 | 000000 |
| shorts1 | 000000 |
| socks1 | FFFFFF |
| pattern_la2 | _CABrive2122a |
| pattern_b2 | _CABrive2122a |
| pattern_ra2 | _CABrive2122a |
| pattern_so2 | _adidasrugbywhitelogo&stripes |
| leftarm2 | 000000 |
| rightarm2 | 000000 |
| shorts2 | 000000 |
| socks2 | 000000 |
Les Gaillards (The Strapping Lads) Les Noir et Blanc (The Black and Whites) Les Zèbres (The Zebras)
Club Athlétique Brive Corrèze Limousin, also referred to as CA Brive, Brive () or CAB, is a French professional rugby union club based in Brive-la-Gaillarde, in the Corrèze department.
Brive is a historical member of French rugby union, being one of the clubs that spent the most seasons in the top French domestic competition. "Les Coujous" also won the Heineken Cup in 1997, defeating Leicester Tigers in the final in a 28–9 win.
Many great players, both French and foreign, played for the club currently headed by Simon Gillham, and the youth academy has a good reputation. Brive players who also on to play for France include: Amédée Domenech, nicknamed "Le Duc" ("The Duke") who played there in the 1950s and 60s, and gave his name to the stadium after his death in 2003; prolific flanker Olivier Magne, fly-halves Christophe Lamaison and Alain Penaud, number-eight Jean-Luc Joinel and hooker Michel Yachvili, the father of Dimitri Yachvili, also wore the black and white jersey.
Their home ground is the 14,759-capacity Stade Amédée-Domenech and the club colours are black and white.
History
The club was created on 15 March 1910. Before the Second World War, Brive changed from rugby union to rugby league but returned to union after the war.
It played regularly in the First Division, and established itself as the stronghold of rugby in Limousin but for many years its only title was a Second Division trophy won in 1957. Brive did not make it to the final of the First Division championship until 1965. On 23 May that year they met SU Agen at Stade de Gerland in Lyon only to lose 15–8. Brive next made it to the final in the 1972 season, where they faced AS Béziers on 21 May in Lyon again, and again the Black and White came out the losers, as Béziers won their second consecutive title (9–0). Brive met AS Béziers in the final again three season later, in 1975. By then, Béziers had become the unbeatable team of the decade, and they won their fifth title, this time by just one point (13–12), at Parc des Princes in Paris.
Brive experienced a resurgence in the middle of the 1990s, first in 1996, when they made their first finals appearance since the mid-1970s in Paris. Brive however went down 20–13 to Stade Toulousain. It was their fourth losing final. Only one club have lost more finals without winning one than them (US Dax, on five). That year however, they won the Challenge Yves du Manoir, defeating Pau 12–6. The following season, they made it to the final of the Heineken Cup where they faced the Leicester Tigers from England at Cardiff Arms Park. Brive finally won a final, defeating the Tigers 28–9. They are the only club to win the European Cup without ever winning their domestic championship.
On 22 February 1997, Brive, as European champions, were pitted against Auckland Blues who had recently won the Super 12. The French team were no competition to an extra powerful Kiwi side which won easily 47–11. In 1998 Brive again reached the final of the Heineken Cup, this time against Bath. They came close to capturing back-to-back titles, losing by just one point, 19–18 at Parc Lescure in Bordeaux.
Since then, however, the club has been in dire straits, as it was subjected to a punitive relegation to the second division in 2000 due to bad financial management. They bounced back two years later but have struggled ever since in the lower echelons of the league table, except in 2004 when they managed to qualify for the playoffs. In 2005, Brive went to the semi-finals of European Challenge Cup, but they lost to Pau. In 2009, after taking the sixth place of the Championship, the Black and White could participate in the Heineken Cup, but the competition was difficult for them, against the Europeans champions Leinster, Llanelli Scarlets and London Irish.
After difficulties and a relegation to the second division in 2012, Brive returned to the Top 14 the following year, after defeating Pau.
Honours
- Heineken Cup / European Rugby Champions Cup
- French championship Top 14
- Pro D2
- Promotion play-offs Final/Top 14 Access Match
- Challenge Yves du Manoir
- Champions (1): 1996
- Runners-up (2): 1963, 1974
- French Cup
- Runners-up (1): 2000
Finals results
Heineken Cup / European Rugby Champions Cup
| Date | Winners | Score | Runners-up | Venue | Spectators |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25 January 1997 | FRA CA Brive | 28–9 | ENG Leicester Tigers | Cardiff Arms Park, Cardiff | 41,664 |
| 31 January 1998 | ENG Bath | 19–18 | FRA CA Brive | Parc Lescure, Bordeaux | 36,500 |
French championship
| Date | Winners | Score | Runners-up | Venue | Spectators | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 23 May 1965 | SU Agen | 15–8 | CA Brive | Stade de Gerland, Lyon | 28,758 | |
| 21 May 1972 | AS Béziers | 9–0 | CA Brive | Stade de Gerland, Lyon | 31,161 | |
| 18 May 1975 | AS Béziers | 13–12 | CA Brive | Parc des Princes, Paris | 39,991 | |
| 1 June 1996 | Stade Toulousain | 20–13 | CA Brive | Parc des Princes, Paris | 48,162 |
Challenge Yves du Manoir
| Date | Winners | Score | Runners-up | Spectators |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 June 1963 | SU Agen | 11–0 | CA Brive | N/A |
| 18 May 1974 | RC Narbonne | 19–10 | CA Brive | 15,000 |
| 27 January 1996 | CA Brive | 12–6 | Section Paloise | 13,000 |
French Cup
| Date | Winners | Score | Runners-up | Venue | Spectators |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 June 2000 | Biarritz Olympique | 24–13 | CA Brive | Parc Lescure, Bordeaux | 17,500 |
Current standings
Current squad
The Brive squad for the 2025–26 season is:
Espoirs squad
Notable former players
The following are players who have represented their country, players who have won a title with the club, players who have played a sufficient number of games to go down in the club history or players who came from the academy and have made a significant career in another team:
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- ARG Horacio Agulla
- ARG Lisandro Arbizu
- ARG Christian Martin
- ARG Agustin Figuerola
- ARG Pablo Henn
- ARG Alex Moreno
- ARG Eduardo Simone
- AUS Tim Donnelly
- AUS Peter FitzSimons
- AUS Mark Giacheri
- AUS Poutasi Luafutu
- AUS Alfie Mafi
- AUS Chris Tuatara-Morrison
- AUS John Welborn
- CAN Scott Franklin
- CAN John Tait
- ENG Phil Christophers
- ENG Ben Cohen
- ENG Riki Flutey
- ENG Shane Geraghty
- ENG Andy Goode
- ENG Ben Johnston
- ENG Jamie Noon
- ENG Shaun Perry
- ENG Steve Thompson
- ENG Christian Short
- FIJ Filimone Bolavucu
- FIJ Kitione Kamikamica
- FIJ Sisa Koyamaibole
- FIJ Norman Ligairi
- FIJ Tabai Matson
- FIJ Benito Masilevu
- FIJ Peniami Narisia
- FIJ Dominiko Waqaniburotu
- FRA Demba Bamba
- FRA Roger Bastié
- FRA Mathieu Bélie
- FRA Nicolas Bézy
- FRA Alexandre Bias
- FRA Pascal Bomati
- FRA Sébastien Bonetti
- FRA Terry Bouhraoua
- FRA Russlan Boukerou
- FRA Jacques Boussuge
- FRA Hugues Briatte
- FRA Julien Brugnaut
- FRA Romain Cabannes
- FRA Benoît Cabello
- FRA Julien Caminati
- FRA Pierre Capdevielle
- FRA Georges Carabignac
- FRA Philippe Carbonneau
- FRA Alain Carminati
- FRA Sébastien Carrat
- FRA Florian Cazenave
- FRA Pierre Chadebech
- FRA Damien Chouly
- FRA Antonie Claassen
- FRA Valentin Courrent
- FRA Benjamin Dambielle
- FRA Thierry Devergie
- FRA Amédée Domenech
- FRA Yves Donguy
- FRA Thibault Dubarry
- FRA Fabrice Estebanez
- FRA Roger Fite
- FRA Mickaël Forest
- FRA Gaëtan Germain
- FRA Jérôme Guisset
- FRA Dominique Harize
- FRA Cédric Heymans
- FRA Teddy Iribaren
- FRA Nicolas Jeanjean
- FRA Jean-Luc Joinel
- FRA Virgile Lacombe
- FRA Damien Lagrange
- FRA Julien Laharrague
- FRA Christophe Lamaison
- FRA Benjamin Lapeyre
- FRA Julien Le Devedec
- FRA Olivier Magne
- FRA Arnaud Mela
- FRA Arnaud Mignardi
- FRA Rodolphe Modin
- FRA Vincent Moscato
- FRA Alexis Palisson
- FRA Élie Pebeyre
- FRA Michel Pebeyre
- FRA Alexandre Péclier
- FRA Alain Penaud
- FRA Maxime Petitjean
- FRA Lucas Pointud
- FRA Jefferson Poirot
- FRA Fabien Sanconnie
- FRA Thomas Sanchou
- FRA Patrick Sébastien
- FRA Atila Septar
- FRA Farid Sid
- FRA Scott Spedding
- FRA Laurent Travers
- FRA Sébastien Vahaamahina
- FRA Ludovic Valbon
- FRA Loïc Van Der Linden
- FRA David Venditti
- FRA Elvis Vermeulen
- FRA Sébastien Viars
- FRA Pierre Villepreux
- FRA Dimitri Yachvili
- FRA Michel Yachvili
- GEO Tedo Abzhandadze
- GEO Karlen Asieshvili
- GEO Soso Bekoshvili
- GEO Otar Giorgadze
- GEO Giorgi Jgenti
- GEO Vasil Kakovin
- GEO David Khinchagishvili
- GEO Mamuka Magrakvelidze
- GEO Irakli Natriashvili
- GEO Anton Peikrishvili
- GEO Goderdzi Shvelidze
- ITA Valerio Bernabò
- ITA Luciano Orquera
- IRE Damian Browne
- NAM Tjiuee Uanivi
- NZL Brad Mika
- NZL Tamato Leupolu
- NZL Viliame Waqaseduadua
- POL Grzegorz Kacala
- ROU Petru Bălan
- ROU Alexandru Manta
- ROU Sorin Socol
- ROU Petrișor Toderașc
- RSA Pat Barnard
- RSA Kevin Buys
- SAM So'otala Fa'aso'o
- SAM Terry Fanolua
- SAM Na'ama Leleimalefaga
- SAM Simon Lemalu
- SCO Mike Blair
- SCO Tom Smith
- SCO Gregor Townsend
- SCO Alex Dunbar
- TGA Suka Hufanga
- USA Kevin Dalzell
- WAL Barry Davies
- WAL Liam Davies
- WAL Kieran Murphy
- WAL Alix Popham
References
References
- (1997). "Rothmans Rugby Union Yearbook 1997–98". Headline Book Publishing.
- Pope, Bruce. (23 February 1997). "Brive out with the washing". [[Independent News & Media.
- Imakhoukhene, Hamid. (19 May 2013). "Brive ne l'a pas volée". [[L'Équipe]].
- "Effectif".
- (7 May 2024). "Brive squad for season 2024/2025". All Rugby.
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