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US Boulogne

US Boulogne

FieldValue
clubnameBoulogne
imageUS Boulogne crest.svg
upright0.7
fullnameUnion Sportive Boulogne Côte d'Opale
founded
groundStade de la Libération,
Boulogne-sur-Mer
capacity9,534
chrtitlePresident
chairmanVincent Boutillier
managerFabien Dagneaux
league
season
position
website
pattern_la1_USBoulogne2526h
pattern_b1_USBoulogne2526h
pattern_ra1_USBoulogne2526h
pattern_sh1_Jako_white
pattern_so1_Jako_white
shorts1000000socks1 = FF3232

Boulogne-sur-Mer

Union Sportive Boulogne Côte d'Opale (; commonly referred to as US Boulogne, USBCO () or frequently, simply Boulogne) is a French association football club based in the commune of Boulogne-sur-Mer. The club was founded in 1898 and currently plays in Ligue 2, the second level of French football, having been promoted from the Championnat National at the end of 2024–25 season due to AC Ajaccio being relegated for financial reasons.

The club was formed in 1898 and its achievements are comparatively minor, with their biggest feat to date consisting of reaching the semi-finals during the 1936–37 edition of the Coupe de France, and one Ligue 1 season in 2009–10. Boulogne play their home matches at the Stade de la Libération, which seats 15,004, having previously seated only 7,000 prior to its renovation in 2007.

History

Early years

US Boulogne were originally founded in December 1898 by a group of young local athletes. While they mainly focused originally on athletic events, they created a football team to provide themselves with sporting competition in the winter months, and made a decent job in their first few years as a football club. Boulogne won the Maritime Championship three years running between 1904 and 1906. They next won the Championship in 1909 and their final victory of this division was in 1922. In 1924, Boulogne moved to the Northern Championship and fared well. The team also did well in the Coupe de France – reaching the quarterfinals in 1929 and the last 16 three times.

In 1926, Boulogne won the Northern League and only six years later, they decided to become a professional club. In 1935, under chairman Marcel Lacroix, the team joined the professional leagues. However, they played averagely in Division Two but there were a few bright sparks in the team. The Coupe de France 1937 competition saw Boulogne reach the semi-finals, but they were convincingly beaten by FC Sochaux 6–0. After the war, Boulogne, reverted to amateur status – and only decided to become a professional team again in 1957, when they were re-elected into Division Two. They stayed comfortably in Division Two for 22 years but then plummeted through the divisions – suffering consecutive relegations. The Coupe de France competition only provided little respite, as the team made the last 16 three times.

Robert Senechal arrived in 1983 and stabilised the club in Division Four. They missed out on promotion by a narrow margin in 1984 – but were finally promoted in 1991. However, it was short-lived and they were relegated the following season. In June 1994, it was announced that Boulogne were in serious debt – owing ₣3 million.

Muselet takeover and rise to Ligue 1

Manager [[Philippe Montanier]] was appointed in 2004, and took Boulogne from the fourth tier to [[Ligue 1]] before leaving in 2009.

Mayor of Boulougne and billionaire Jean Muselet intervened to save the club and appointed Jacques Wattez as chairman. Under the leadership of Wattez, the club adopted a new official name – Union Sportive Boulogne Côte d'Opale – in July 1994. as a new company, the debts of the club were wiped and Boulogne – although still struggling in Division Four – reached the last sixteen of the Coupe de France again in 1997–98. They earned a home tie against Ligue 1 side Olympique de Marseille, losing 1–0. In the following edition of the cup, they reached the last 32 before losing 2–1 at home to Ligue 1 neighbours Lille OSC. On 17 March 1999, the club marked their centenary by hosting Liverpool – managed by Gérard Houllier of nearby Thérouanne – in a friendly and winning 2–1.

In 2004, Boulogne hired Philippe Montanier in his first job in senior management. He won promotion to the Championnat National in his first season, and to Ligue 2 with a 2–1 victory over SC Toulon on 11 May 2007. Boulogne stayed up on the last day of the 2007–08 Ligue 2 season with a last-second win over Chamois Niortais F.C., who needed a draw to avoid the drop themselves.

The 2008–09 season saw Boulogne win promotion on the final day of the season after beating SC Amiens 4–0, replacing RC Strasbourg in the final promotion place by a single point; striker Grégory Thil finished top scorer with 18 goals. Montanier left for Valenciennes FC and was replaced by Laurent Guyot, former academy director at FC Nantes. They stayed just one season, being relegated in 19th place with 31 points; the first of their seven wins was in the second game on 16 August 2009, 2–1 at home to Grenoble Foot 38. In the same season, the team reached the quarter-finals of the 2009–10 Coupe de France, losing 3–1 away to fourth-tier US Quevilly.

Decline and rise

Boulogne were relegated at the end of the 2011–12 Ligue 2 season, ending their five-year spell in the professional leagues. The team reached the quarter-finals of the 2014–15 Coupe de France, losing on penalties to AS Saint-Étienne after a 1–1 home draw.

In March 2020, Boulogne were third in Championnat National when the season was prematurely ended due to the COVID-19 pandemic. They were denied an opportunity for promotion when the FFF executive committee announced that the usual playoff between 18th in Ligue 2 and 3rd in Championnat National would not go ahead. The team finished bottom of the 2021–22 Championnat National table, and were relegated to Championnat National 2 after 17 years in the top three divisions. The team nearly suffered a second consecutive relegation in the 2022–23 Championnat National 2, surviving in 9th place after an improved second half of the season.

On 27 April 2024, Boulogne secure promotion to Championnat National from next season, champions of Championnat National 2 in 2023–24 season after defeat Racing CFF with score 3-1 and the club return to third tier after two years.

For the 2025–26 season, Boulogne gets promoted to Ligue 2 due to AC Ajaccio getting relegated for financial reasons.

Players

Current squad

Out on loan

Staff

  • Manager: France Fabien Dagneaux
  • Assistant manager: France Anthony Lecointe
  • Goalkeeping coach: France Hugo Stevenart
  • Fitness trainer: France Antoine Decaix

Notable players

Main article: US Boulogne players

  • FRA N'Golo Kanté
  • FRA Franck Ribéry

Managers

  • Blaud (1936–37)
  • Ernest Payne (1937–38)
  • François Bourbotte (1950–56)
  • Jean Prouff (1956–58)
  • Roger Meerseman (1959–61)
  • Jean-Marie Prévost (1961–62)
  • André Cheuva (1962–66)
  • Angelo Grizzetti (1966–67)
  • Ernest Schultz (1967)
  • Jean Laune (1967–69)
  • Ramon Muller and Jean Aubert (1969)
  • Daniel Langrand (1969–73)
  • André Pruvost (1973)
  • Léon Deladerrière (1973)
  • Jacques Favre (1973–74)
  • Célestin Oliver (1974–75)
  • Henri-Gérard Augustine (1975)
  • Daniel Langrand (1975–76)
  • Daniel Langrand and "Doudou" Douglas (1976–79)
  • "Doudou" Douglas (1979–82)
  • Bernard Soulliez (1982–86)
  • Gilbert Zoonekynd (1986–88)
  • André Bodji (1988–89)
  • Edmond Baraffe (1989–90)
  • Bernard Soulliez (1990–92)
  • Richard Ellena (1992–94)
  • Pascal Langlois (1994–96)
  • Bruno Dupuis (1996–97)
  • Alex Dupont (1997–98)
  • Robert Dewilder (1998–99)
  • Bruno Dupuis (1999–01)
  • Jacky Colinet (2001–03)
  • Pascal Langlois (2003)
  • Bobby Brown (2003–04)
  • Bruno Dupuis (2004)
  • Philippe Montanier (2004–09)
  • Laurent Guyot (2009–10)
  • Michel Estevan (2010–11)
  • Pascal Plancque (2011–12)
  • Georges Tournay (2012–13)
  • Stéphane Le Mignan (2013–16)
  • Alain Pochat (2016–17)
  • Olivier Frapolli (2017–19)
  • Laurent Guyot (2019–21)
  • Éric Chelle (2021)
  • Stéphane Jobard (2021–22)
  • (2022–23)
  • Fabien Dagneaux (2023–)

References

References

  1. (14 December 2020). "Quand Gérard Houllier amenait Liverpool à la Libé... et que Boulogne gagnait!". [[La Voix du Nord (daily).
  2. (23 June 2021). "Football : découvrez qui est Philippe Montanier, le nouvel entraîneur du TFC". [[La Dépêche du Midi]].
  3. (3 June 2009). "L1: l'entraîneur de Boulogne Philippe Montanier passe à Valenciennes". RTL Info.
  4. (1 May 2020). "Football (rétro) : Boulogne-Niort de mai 2008 et la dernière seconde fatale". [[La Nouvelle République du Centre-Ouest]].
  5. (22 July 2009). "Boulogne veut exister". [[Le Figaro]].
  6. (17 August 2009). "Boulogne-sur-Mer, petit poucet du championnat de France, remporte sa première victoire parmi l'élite". [[Le Monde]].
  7. (23 March 2010). "Coupe de France : Quevilly bat Boulogne et va en demi-finale". [[Le Monde]].
  8. (12 May 2012). "Boulogne relégué en National". [[France 3]].
  9. (4 March 2015). "Saint-Etienne, premier qualifié pour le dernier carré". [[Europe 1]].
  10. (11 May 2020). "Le COMEX valide les montées de Pau et Dunkerque". foot-national.com.
  11. (6 May 2022). "Boulogne officiellement relégué". delta FM.
  12. (2 June 2023). "Le maintien, du rêve à la réalité pour l'USBCO". La Semaine.
  13. "US Boulogne-sur-Mer Côte d'Opale Squad". Soccerway.
  14. (8 February 2023). "Fabien Dagneaux et Anthony Lecointe à la tête de l'USBCO". Delta FM.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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