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Olympique de Marseille

Olympique de Marseille (French pronunciation: ​[ɔlɛ̃pik də maʁsɛj], locally [ɔlɛ̃ˈpikə də maχˈsɛjə]; Occitan: Olimpic de Marselha, pronounced [ulimˈpi de maʀˈsejɔ]), also known simply as Marseille or by the abbreviation OM (IPA: [o.ɛm], locally [oˈɛmə]), is a French professional men's football club based in Marseille, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur. Founded in 1899, the club plays in Ligue 1 and have spent most of their history in the top tier of French football. The club has won nine Ligue 1 titles, ten Coupes de France and three Coupes de la Ligue. In 1993, coach Raymond Goethals led the team to become the first and only French club to win the UEFA Champions League, defeating Milan 1–0 in the final, the first under the UEFA Champions League branding of the tournament. In 2010, Marseille won its first Ligue 1 title in 18 years under the management of former club captain Didier Deschamps.[5]

Marseille
Full nameOlympique de Marseille
Nickname(s)Les Phocéens (The Phocaeans)[1]
Les Olympiens (The Olympians)
Les Minots (The youngs from Marseille)[2]
Short nameOM, Marseille
Founded31 August 1899; 123 years ago (1899-08-31)
GroundStade Vélodrome
Capacity67,394[3]
OwnerFrank McCourt (95%)
Margarita Louis-Dreyfus (5%)[4]
PresidentPablo Longoria
Head coachIgor Tudor
LeagueLigue 1
2021–22Ligue 1, 2nd of 20
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Marseille's home ground is the 67,394-capacity Stade Vélodrome in the southern part of the city, where they have played since 1937.[6] The club has a large fan-base, having regularly averaged the highest attendance in French football. Marseille's average home gate for the 2018–19 season was 50,361, the highest in Ligue 1.[7] The stadium underwent renovation from 2011 to 2014, increasing its capacity to 67,000 ahead of France's hosting of UEFA Euro 2016. In 2015, the club was ranked 23rd globally in terms of annual revenue, generating €130.5 million.[8]

Marseille traditionally play in an all-white kit with sky blue detailing.

In 1997, Marseille was purchased by Franco-Swiss businessman Robert Louis-Dreyfus. Following his death in 2009, his widow Margarita became the club's majority shareholder in 2010. In 2016, American businessman Frank McCourt bought the club from her, and appointed businessman Jacques-Henri Eyraud as the club president, although he was replaced by Pablo Longoria in 2021.[9]

History

 
OM founder, René Dufaure de Montmirail.

Olympique de Marseille was founded as an omnisport club in 1892 by René Dufaure de Montmirail, a French sports official. Known as Sporting Club, US Phocéenne and Football Club de Marseille in the first five years after its foundation, the club adopted the name Olympique de Marseille in 1899 in honour of the anniversary of Marseille's founding by Greeks from Phocaea some 25 centuries earlier, with the name Olympique, coming from ancient Olympic Games.[10]

At first, rugby union was the most important team sport of the club, the motto Droit au but coming from rugby. Affiliated with the Union des Sociétés Françaises de Sports Athlétiques (USFSA) since 1898, it was only in 1902, thanks to English and German people (according to André Gascard), that football began to be played by Olympique de Marseille. Richer and better organised than other football teams of Marseille (Sporting, Stade, Phocéenne), Olympique de Marseille, then playing at the Stade de l'Huveaune, took the leadership in the city. In 1904, Olympique de Marseille won the first Championnat du Littoral, involving opposing teams from Marseille and its suburbs, and took part in the final rounds of the 11th French championship. At that time, the word "football" applied to rugby, and people used the word "Association" (which would be soccer in North America) for football.

 
The team of 1911.

During the 1920s, Olympique de Marseille became an important team in France, winning the Coupe de France in 1924, 1926 and 1927. The team won the French championship in 1929, defeating Club français. The Coupe de France in 1924 was the club's first major title, won against FC Sète, a side that dominated French football at the time. In the '20s, numerous French internationals, such as Jules Dewaquez, Jean Boyer or Joseph Alcazar, played for Marseille.[11] In 1930, Marseille lost against Sète, which would be the winner, in the semi-final round. In 1931, the team became champion of the South-East, with victories against rivals such as Sète. In the Coupe de France, l'OM lost in five matches to Club français, winning the second match that was cancelled due to the disqualification of Marseille striker Vernicke. Even though the 1931–32 season was less successful, Marseille easily entered the professional ranks, becoming a member of the union of professional clubs in 1932. On 13 January 1932 at 9:15 pm, at the Brasserie des Sports, Mr. Dard, Mr. Bison, Dr. Rollenstein, Mr. Etchepare, Mr. Leblanc, Mr. Mille, Mr. Anfosso, Mr. Sabatier, Mr. Seze, Mr. Bazat, Mr. Molteroj and Mr. Pollack elected the following committee: Honorary presidents: Paul Le Cesne et Fernand Bouisson President: M. Dard Vice-Presidents: Mr. Leblanc, Mr. Bison, Mr. Etchepare, Dr. Rollenstein et Mr. Anfosso general secretary: Mr. Possel-Daydier Treasurer: Mr Bison (assisted by Mr Ribel).

For the first championship, Division 1 was divided into two pools. Marseille finished second in the first, behind Lille. For its first match of the championship, Marseille defeated the future champion, Lille. In 1937, Marseille won its first professional French championship thanks to goal difference (+30 for Marseille, +17 for Sochaux). The arrival of Vasconcellos made the defence stronger, whereas former goalkeeper Laurent Di Lorto shone with Sochaux and France. In the meantime, Marseille won the Coupe de France in 1935 and 1938 but failed a double success in 1934, due to FC Sète. In 1938, Larbi Benbarek signed with Marseille and became "the black pearl" for the team. World War II would cut his career short. The 1942–43 season was full of records: 100 goals in 30 matches, including 20 in one match (20–2 against Avignon), in which Aznar scored nine goals, including the first eight (Marseille was leading 8–0), playing only 70 minutes. Aznar scored 45 goals in 30 matches, plus 11 in cup games, for a record of 56 goals in 38 matches. With the minots (young players) of the moment (Scotti, Robin, Dard, Pironti), Marseille won the cup in two matches against Bordeaux (4–0). In 1948, thanks to a draw against Sochaux, Marseille became the champions of France. The two last victories at the Stade Vélodrome against Roubaix (6–0) and Metz (6–3) were important, as Aznar and Robin's returned in spring.

In 1952, Marseille were about to be relegated, but Gunnar Andersson saved his team, finishing as top scorer with 31 goals. The team won (5–3) on aggregate against Valenciennes. The same year, Marseille lost at the Stade Vélodrome against Saint-Étienne 10–3, but Liberati was injured. In 1953, Gunnar Andersson would take the record of goals scored in one season with 35. Marseille was runner-up in the Coupe de France (Nice won 2–1) in 1954 and the Coupe Drago in 1957 to (Lens which won 3–1). Marseille were struggling at the time and were relegated for the first time in 1959. From 1959 to 1965, the team played in the second division, except during the 1962–63 season, finishing 20th out of 20 in the first division. In 1965, Marcel Leclerc became president.

1965–1986: Leclerc era and crisis

 
Brazilian 1970 World Cup winner Jairzinho joined OM in 1974.

The first period of Olympique de Marseille's domination of the French League started in the early 1970s under Marcel Leclerc's presidency (1965–1972). His ambition allowed Marseille to return to the First division in 1965–66. They went on to win the Coupe de France in 1969 as well as the First division in 1971 with a record of 44 goals by Josip Skoblar, helped by Roger Magnusson. The arrival of Georges Carnus and Bernard Bosquier from Saint-Étienne helped them to win the Ligue 1 and the Coupe de France in 1972. Marseille played in the European Cup in 1971–72 and 1972–73, but were knocked-out by Ajax of Johan Cruyff and Juventus, respectively. However, success was not to last. Marcel Leclerc was forced to leave the club on 19 July 1972. The President was a stubborn man, and he threatened the league to withdraw his professional team from Ligue 1 because the federation refused to accept three foreign players per team (Leclerc wanted to acquire the Hungarian star Zoltán Varga but he had already the maximum number of two foreigners in his team). Marseille decided, instead of following Leclerc against the league, to fire him.[12] Then followed an era of crisis, with Marseille only winning a Coupe de France in 1976 and being relegated to the second division, where they played with a bunch of young local players: the Minots who allowed the team to return to First division in 1984. Éric Di Meco was one of them.

1986–1996: Tapie era, bribery scandal, and decline

On 12 April 1986, Bernard Tapie became president, thanks to Marseille mayor Gaston Defferre, and promptly built the greatest team seen in France up to that point. His first signings were Karl-Heinz Forster and Alain Giresse, who were bought after the 1986 FIFA World Cup. Tapie signed a large number of highly regarded players over the next few years in his pursuit of the European Cup, such as Jean-Pierre Papin, Chris Waddle, Klaus Allofs, Enzo Francescoli, Abedi Pele, Didier Deschamps, Basile Boli, Marcel Desailly, Rudi Völler, Tony Cascarino and Eric Cantona as well as appointing high-profile coaches like Franz Beckenbauer, Gérard Gili and Raymond Goethals. Between 1989 and 1992, Olympique de Marseille won four league titles in a row and the French Cup. The team also reached the Champions Cup final for the first time in 1991, losing on penalties to Red Star Belgrade. The highlight of the club's history is winning the new format Champions League in 1993. Basile Boli scored the only goal against Italy's Milan in the final held in Munich's Olympic Stadium. That triumph was the first time ever for a French club and it made Didier Deschamps and Fabien Barthez the youngest captain and goalkeeper, respectively, to capture the title.

This triumph, however, was followed by a decade of decline. In 1994, due to financial irregularities and a match-fixing scandal involving then-president Bernard Tapie, they suffered enforced relegation to the second division, where Marseille stayed for two years before returning to the First division. Moreover, they lost their 1992–93 Division 1 title and the right to play in the 1993–94 UEFA Champions League, the 1993 European Super Cup and the 1993 Intercontinental Cup. This scandal, called l'affaire VA-OM (VA for Union Sportive Valenciennes-Anzin and OM for Olympique de Marseille), was exposed by Valenciennes, whose players Jacques Glassmann,[13] Jorge Burruchaga[14] and Christophe Robert[14] were contacted by Marseille player Jean-Jacques Eydelie[15] to let OM win and, more importantly, not to injure any OM player ahead of the UEFA Champions League final.

1996–2009: Return to success

 
OM won six titles with Didier Deschamps as manager between 2009 and 2011.

Marseille returned to the top flight in 1996 with backing from Adidas's CEO Robert Louis-Dreyfus. He chose Rolland Courbis as coach, signed Fabrizio Ravanelli, Laurent Blanc, and Andreas Köpke, and Marseille finished 11th for his return. For the 1998–99 season, the team celebrated their centenary and built a team of stars: Robert Pires, Florian Maurice, and Christophe Dugarry, culminating in a second-place finish in the French championship, behind Bordeaux and an appearance in the UEFA Cup Final in 1999, losing to Parma. Courbis left the team in November 1999 after a poor start to the season.

The closest Marseille got to another trophy was when they reached the UEFA Cup Final in 2004, impressively beating Dnipro, Internazionale, Liverpool, and Newcastle United along the way. But they were beaten in the final by newly crowned Spanish champions Valencia and once again fans were forced to continue waiting for the next trophy to come along. In 2005, Marseille succeeded in winning the Intertoto Cup, beating the likes of Lazio and Deportivo de La Coruña in doing so, and earning another shot at the UEFA Cup.

 
Didier Drogba played for OM in the 2003–2004 season.

In January 2007, there was negotiation between Louis-Dreyfus and Jack Kachkar, a Canadian doctor and businessman (CEO of pharmaceutical company Inyx), about selling the club. As Jack Kachkar took too much time to buy the team, Louis-Dreyfus decided on 22 March 2007 not to sell to the Canadian businessman.[16] Another close call to glory was in the Coupe de France final against Sochaux in May 2007. However, they lost on penalties after a 2–2 draw after extra time, to the disappointment of everyone linked with the club, but they soon wiped all that disappointment away by qualifying for the 2007–08 UEFA Champions League group stage after securing second place with one game to spare.

In the Champions League, Marseille became the first French team to win at Anfield when they beat 2007 runners-up Liverpool 1–0, and the team took six out of six points from their opening two games. They only drew one more match, and in a winner-takes-all final group game they lost 4–0 to Liverpool, who became the first English team to win at the Stade Vélodrome. Marseille, coming third in the Champions League Group A, then joined the UEFA Cup.[17] Marseille finished the 2008–09 season with a second-place finish in Ligue 1, following a tight race with Bordeaux for the title. This earned them direct entry into the group stages of the UEFA Champions League, their third consecutive season in the competition. Marseille won the 2010 Coupe de la Ligue Final beating Bordeaux 3–1 at the Stade de France in March 2010. This was their first major title since their Champions League triumph 17 years earlier. Two months later, Marseille won their first league championship for 18 years with two games to spare after beating Rennes 3–1.[18][19] Marseille defeated rivals Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) on penalties to win the 2010 Trophée des Champions at Stade 7 Novembre in Rades, Tunisia, before the season began. Marseille then became the first team to win back-to-back Coupe de la Ligue successes when they won the 2011 edition by beating Montpellier 1–0 on 23 April. Before that, they qualified for the last 16 of the UEFA Champions League for the first time since their historic success, but lost 2–1 at Old Trafford to Manchester United and also set a Champions League record by thrashing Žilina 7–0 in what was the biggest away win in the competition's history. In 2011, Marseille lost the Ligue 1 championship title but qualified for the UEFA Champions League for the fifth time in a row, a club record. On 27 July 2011, Marseille won the 2011 Trophée des Champions title by beating Lille 5–4 at Stade de Tanger in Morocco. The result was significant as OM were 3–1 down with five minutes to go, only to embark on a remarkable comeback which saw 5 goals scored in the last five minutes with André Ayew scoring a hat-trick.

2009–2014: Deschamps, Baup, Anigo

The club struggled in the 2011–12 season, going to the bottom of the Ligue 1 table after six matches. Nevertheless, Marseille rebounded, winning 3–0 against Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League, as well as a 3–0 success over rivals PSG in November of that year. Marseille ended 2011 with a good sequence, also qualifying for the knockout stages of the Champions League for the second season running.

In February 2012, Marseille embarked on 13 games without victory,[20] but rallied to qualify for the quarter-finals of the Champions League for the first time since winning the competition in 1993. Despite an indifferent club form, OM lost to eventual finalists Bayern Munich, and slumped to an overall tenth-place finish in Ligue 1. However, the club retained the Coupe de la Ligue for the third year running, beating Lyon 1–0 in the Final.

In the summer of 2012, Deschamps resigned, and later took on the France job. Elie Baup took over, leading the club to a surprising second-place finish in the 2012–13 season despite selling multiple key players, including Loïc Rémy, César Azpilicueta and Stéphane Mbia. Marseille returned to the Champions League, spending close to €40 million on the likes of Dimitri Payet, Florian Thauvin and Giannelli Imbula. The club were top of the table at the end of August 2013, but OM proceeded to lose all six games in Europe, suffering the ignominy of becoming the first French team, and the biggest European team to date, to have picked up zero points in a Champions League group stage.

Baup was sacked on 7 December 2013, following the 1–0 defeat to Nantes at Stade Velodrome. He was replaced on an interim basis by José Anigo. In Anigo's brief tenure, OM went out of the two cups, and struggled, leading to continued protests and jeers by fans. The club finished sixth in the 2014 season, missing out on an important European competition place for the first time in ten years. Anigo left the club soon after, taking on an ambassadorial/scouting role in North Africa, his first post outside of the city for more than four decades.

2014–2015: Bielsa era and stagnation

 
Dimitri Payet is the leader of the OM Champions project of Frank McCourt.

Marseille announced on 2 May 2014 an agreement with Marcelo Bielsa, who took the managerial hotseat. Bielsa was the club's first Argentine coach and the first coach to lead the team into the renovated Velodrome, which opened in August with a fixture against Montpellier. In Bielsa's first season in charge, the club led the league table for seven months but finished fourth and thus qualified for the UEFA Europa League. June 2015 saw three key players leave the club—André-Pierre Gignac and André Ayew left the club for Tigres UANL and Swansea City, respectively, after their contracts expired, while Dimitri Payet left to join West Ham United for a €15 million transfer fee.

After a solid pre-season, which included a 2–0 win over Juventus in the Robert Louis-Dreyfus Trophy and the signature of nine players, Bielsa resigned from his post, just minutes after the first Ligue 1 game of the 2015–16 season against Caen. Marseille lost the game 1–0, and Bielsa shocked the footballing world with his unexpected decision, citing a lack of trust with the club's management, who he said had reneged on a previously agreed contract extension. Bielsa's departure reportedly left his players in a state of shock, many of whom learnt the news via social media in the dressing room.

On 19 August 2015, Míchel was announced as Marseille's new coach.[21] He endured a frustrating season, with OM failing to win a home game in Ligue 1 for more than six months. Following a number of poor performances, Míchel was sacked in April by club owner Margarita Louis Dreyfus, citing poor conduct as the team's coach. The sacking came on the eve of the club's Coupe de France semi-final fixture. As in 2015, Passi was installed as the caretaker coach. Under his direction, Marseille reached the Coupe de France final for the first time in nine years, losing out 4–2 to rivals Paris Saint-Germain. OM would finish the league season in 13th, the club's worst league finish in 15 years.

In the summer of 2016, Marseille once more sold off a number of key players to meet financial obligations and to clear its wage bill ahead of an impending takeover. Steve Mandanda, the club's long-serving captain ended eight years at the club and moved to Crystal Palace, Nicolas N'Koulou moved to Lyon, while striker Michy Batshuayi was sold to Chelsea for a club record €40 million.

2016–present: New ownership and revival

Marseille began the 2016–17 Ligue 1 season with interim manager Franck Passi at the helm. On 29 August 2016, it was announced that American businessman Frank McCourt had agreed to buy the club from Margarita Louis-Dreyfus.[9] The purchase deal was completed for a reported price tag of €45 million on 17 October 2016.[22] Within the next few days, McCourt appointed Jacques-Henri Eyraud as the club's president, Rudi Garcia as the manager of the club's first team and Andoni Zubizarreta as director of sport.[23]

On 3 May 2018, Marseille reached the final of the 2017–18 UEFA Europa League after eliminating Red Bull Salzburg in the semi-finals 3–2 on aggregate, 14 years after its last final in a European competition in 2004 against Valencia. However, they lost the final to Atlético Madrid.[24]

In the 2019–20 Ligue 1 season, Andre Villas-Boas became head coach. Marseille finished second after the season was ended early due to the coronavirus pandemic, thus qualifying for the 2020–21 UEFA Champions League for the first time since 2013–14.[25]

In February 2021, after this string of losses, conflict with players, and lack of support from sporting director Pablo Longoria and President Jacques-Henri Eyraud, head coach Andre Villas-Boas offered to resign, three days after a violent riot by protesting Marseille fans at the team training grounds had forced postponement of a league match with Rennes. Marseille sacked Villas-Boas, and replaced the coach with Argentine Jorge Sampaoli. The club also appointed Pablo Longoria to be the team's new president, replacing Jacques-Henri Eyraud, as Eyraud had also been a target of the ire of Marseille fans.[26]

In January 2022, Marseille player Pape Gueye was banned from playing for 4 months by FIFA, while Marseille were given a ban on making transfers in both the summer 2022 and January 2023 transfer windows, and forced to pay €2.5 million to Watford. This came after the English club brought litigation against Marseille over the transfer of Gueye, who had originally signed a contract with Watford, but after finding out his agent had lied to him about the salary on offer, broke the contract and signed with Marseille. Marseille appealed FIFA's decision.[27] In the 2021–22 Ligue 1 season, Marseille finished in second place, securing Champions League football for the first time since 2020. In the final matchday, they were helped by Lens's equalizing goal in the final moments of a 2–2 draw with Monaco.[28]

Le Classique

 
PSG-OM in 2007.

Le Classique is a football match that is contested between Paris Saint-Germain and Olympique de Marseille. The term Classique is modelled on El Clásico, contested between Barcelona and Real Madrid. Like all the game's major rivalries, the antipathy between PSG and Marseille extends outside the pitch. The French clásico has a historical, cultural and social importance that makes it more than just a football game, pitching capital against province, and the traditional wealth and high culture of Paris against the industrial and cosmopolitan traditions of Marseille. However, this rivalry appears only in the 1990s, where it is promoted by the respective owners of PSG - Canal+, the TV channel which broadcast the Ligue 1 football matches - and Olympique de Marseile - Bernard Tapie, also owner of the sports company Adidas -, for obvious marketing reasons. It is sometimes seen as 'the favourite son' of French football against its enfants terribles.[29][30] With PSG being located in the north in the French capital and Marseille located along the Mediterranean coast, the rivalry is often referred to as "the North versus the South." PSG and Marseille are two of just three French clubs to have won major European trophies, PSG having won the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1996 and Marseille won the UEFA Champions League in 1993, and they were the two dominant forces before the emergence of Lyon at the beginning of the 21st century. However, despite their recent ups and downs, PSG and Marseille remain fierce rivals, giving this match a special atmosphere.[29][31] "Le Classique" is also known as "Le Classico".[32]

Stadium

 
Stade Vélodrome in 2015 against PSG, the tifo was deployed during the players entrance.

From 1904 to 1937, Marseille played at the Stade de l'Huveaune, a stadium owned by the club, in contrast to its current stadium. L'Huveaune, once named Stade Fernand Buisson in honour of a former rugby player of the club who became a member of the French National Assembly, was renovated at the beginning of the twenties, thanks to supporter's financial help. It had a capacity of 15,000. In 1937, l'OM moved into the much larger Stade Vélodrome after compelling the city of Marseille to lower its rent. The club made use of the Stade de l'Huveaune again during the renovation of the Vélodrome for Euro 1984, during the 1982/83 season. The Vélodrome again underwent redevelopment in time for the 1998 World Cup and was transformed into an immense ground composed of two Curva ends (Virage Nord and Virage Sud – North Curve and South Curve) which house the supporters groups as well as the main stand, Jean Bouin, and the imposing Ganay stand. In a third renovation, in preparation for Euro 2016, the municipality covered the stands with a roof, and increased its capacity to 67,000 to host the Euro 2016 games.

Before the start of each home game the song "Jump" by Van Halen is heard. When a goal is scored by Marseille in their home matches the song "Come with Me" by Puff Daddy is played.

Kits and crest

Marseille's traditional kit colours were white shirts and shorts with blue socks until 1986. Since 1986, Marseille have played with white shirts, white shorts and white socks, and the blue color became lighter due to Adidas marketing but in 2012–2013, the club returned to its original kit, wearing blue socks.

Club founder René Dufaure de Montmirail drew inspiration from his personal seal, which featured interlaced letters "D" and "M", to create the club's first badge. The club's motto, "Droit au but", dates from the days when the club's main sport was rugby, under the name "Football Club de Marseille". The original badge featured an ornate letter "M" superimposed over an "O", with the club motto draped across the glyph. The logo persisted for three decades, until 1935, when an art deco shield was adopted, with a simple "M" encased within the "O". In 1972, OM redesigned its logo, this time preferring a complex "M" letterform. In 1986, the club re-adopted its first badge; the logo evolved slightly over the next few decades, gaining a star in 1993 to commemorate the club's UEFA Champions League trophy. To commemorate the club's 100th anniversary in 1999, a variant featuring a golden "O" and a turquoise "M" was used; a similar 110th anniversary logo was used during the 2009–10 season. The most recent form was revealed on 17 February 2004; the "O" and "M" are rendered as a single unit in turquoise without shading or borders, and the logo is capped by the golden star representing the victory in the Champions League and sits above. The club's motto Droit Au But (French for "Straight to the Goal") also rendered in gold appears under the badge.

Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors

Years Supplier Sponsor
1969–1971 Le Coq Sportif none
1971–1972 BUT !
1972–1973 Le Toro
1973–1974 Michel Axel
1974–1976 Adidas
1976–1977 Centre Barneoud
1977–1980 Mas d'Auge
1980–1981 Zoo de Marseille
1981–1982 Faure
1982–1983 Euromarché
1983–1986 RMC
1986–1988 Maison Bouygues
1988–1989 Alain Afflelou
1989–1992 Panasonic
1992–1994 Eurest
1994–1995 Reebok
1995–1996 Mizuno Speedy
1996–1997 Adidas Parmalat
1997–2001 Ericsson
2001–2003 Khalifa Airways
2003–2008 Neuf Telecom
2008–2010 Direct Énergie
2010–2012 Betclic
2012–2017 Intersport
2017–2018 Orange
2018–2019 Puma
2019–2022 Uber Eats
2022– Cazoo

Supporters

 
OM fans in 2007.

Virage Nord De Peretti

The atmosphere in the Stade Vélodrome is created by the dominance of OM's own supporters who are located in the Curva style ends behind both goals. The North Curve is home to the Marseille Trop Puissant, Fanatics, and Dodger's supporters associations who buy up the tickets at the start of each season and sell them on to their members.[33] The Virage Nord is next to the away enclosure, which is protected by high fences. In 2002, the Virage Nord was officially given the name of Patrice de Peretti (1972–2000), the late founder and leader of the supporters group Marseille Trop Puissant (MTP).[34] In 2010, the third kit of OM was a tribute to MTP, with the red, yellow and green colours of Africa, symbols of this left-wing curva. In 2018, owner Frank McCourt and president Jacques-Henri Eyraud decided to exclude the Yankee Nord due to a number of delictuous activities, especially concerning tickets ; they therefore forbid them to sell the said tickets, and the association is no longer officially recognized by the club.[35]

Virage Sud Chevalier Roze

The virage is named after Nicolas Roze, a noble who distinguished himself in particular by creating a hospital in Marseille during the Great Plague of Marseille in 1720.[36] As with the Virage Nord, the South Curve is controlled by supporter's associations with the Commando Ultra '84, the first group of ultra supporters in France created in August 1984, and the South Winners dominating the central section and Club Central des Supporters filling the remaining sections of the stand.[37] The 2007/08 third shirt of OM was a tribute to South Winners fans whose colours are orange, as they are traditionally left wing fans.

AEK Athens, AS Livorno and Sampdoria

 
AEK fans (Original 21) lifting an OM fans (Commando Ultra '84) banner.

There is a strong relationship between AEK Athens, AS Livorno, UC Sampdoria and Marseille.[38] Marseille fans often lift banners and create choreography in support of the fellow teams. At the opposite, also because of different political opinions they use to argue with many SS Lazio fans.

Players

First-team squad

As of 31 January 2023[39]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
18 MF   UKR Ruslan Malinovskyi (on loan from Atalanta)
21 MF   FRA Valentin Rongier (vice-captain)
23 DF   BIH Sead Kolašinac
27 MF   FRA Jordan Veretout
29 DF   BFA Issa Kaboré (on loan from Manchester City)
30 DF   POR Nuno Tavares (on loan from Arsenal)
36 GK   ESP Rubén Blanco (on loan from Celta Vigo)
47 MF   TUR Bartuğ Elmaz
70 FW   CHI Alexis Sánchez
77 MF   MAR Amine Harit
99 DF   COD Chancel Mbemba

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
DF   FRA Jordan Amavi (on loan to Getafe until 30 June 2023)
DF   ESP Pol Lirola (on loan to Elche until 30 June 2023)
DF   FRA Isaak Touré (on loan to Auxerre until 30 June 2023)
MF   SEN Pape Gueye (on loan to Sevilla until 30 June 2023)
FW   USA Konrad de la Fuente (on loan to Olympiacos until 30 June 2023)
MF   NED Kevin Strootman (on loan to Genoa until 30 June 2023)
No. Pos. Nation Player
FW   FRA Salim Ben Seghir (on loan to Valenciennes until 30 June 2023)
FW   BRA Luis Henrique (on loan to Botafogo until 30 June 2023)
FW   POL Arkadiusz Milik (on loan to Juventus until 30 June 2023)
FW   SRB Nemanja Radonjić (on loan to Torino until 30 June 2023)
FW   COL Luis Suárez (on loan to Almería until 30 June 2023)

Reserve squad

As of 1 January 2023[40]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK   FRA Evan Huriez
GK   BEL Jelle van Neck
DF   FRA Nassim Ahmed
DF   FRA Thomas Antunes
DF   FRA Amay Caprice
DF   ALG Rayan Dehilis
DF   FRA Hugo Dupont
DF   COM Aaron Kamardin
DF   COM Yakine Said M'Madi
DF   SUI Roggerio Nyakossi
MF   FRA Ugo Bertelli
MF   COM Naim Chadhuli
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF   FRA Bastien Dessus
MF   FRA Rayan Hassad
MF   FRA Bilal Nadir
MF   FRA Paolo Sciortino
MF   ENG Emran Soglo
FW   FRA Aylan Benyahia-Tani
FW   SUI Esey Gebreyesus
FW   COM Ibtoihi Hadhari
FW   ALG Jores Rahou
FW   CMR François Régis Mughe
FW   ESP Pedro Ruiz
FW   MAD Sayha Seha

Player of the season

Season Name Nationality Position Notes Ref
2001–02 Vedran Runje   Croatia Goalkeeper [41]
2002–03 Daniel Van Buyten   Belgium Defender Also named in the UNFP Team of the Season. [41]
2003–04 Didier Drogba   Ivory Coast Forward Also won the UNFP Player of the Year award and was named in the UNFP Team of the Season. [41]
2004–05 Habib Beye   Senegal Defender Also named in the UNFP Team of the Season. [41]
2005–06 Franck Ribéry   France Winger Also won UNFP Young Player of the Year and was named in the UNFP Team of the Season. [41]
2006–07 Samir Nasri   France Midfielder Also won UNFP Young Player of the Year and was named in the UNFP Team of the Season. [41]
2007–08 Steve Mandanda   France Goalkeeper Also won UNFP Goalkeeper of the Year award and was named in the UNFP Team of the Season. [41]
2008–09 Benoît Cheyrou   France Midfielder Also named in the UNFP Team of the Season. [41]
2009–10 Mamadou Niang   Senegal Forward Also named in the UNFP Team of the Season. [41]
2010–11 André Ayew   Ghana Forward [41]
2011–12 Nicolas Nkoulou   Cameroon Defender Also named in the UNFP Team of the Season. [41]
2012–13 Mathieu Valbuena   France Forward Also named in the UNFP Team of the Season. [41]
2013–14 André-Pierre Gignac   France Forward [41]
2014–15 Dimitri Payet   France Midfielder Also named in the UNFP Team of the Season. [41]
2015–16 Steve Mandanda   France Goalkeeper Also won UNFP Goalkeeper of the Year award and was named in the UNFP Team of the Season. [41]
2016–17 Florian Thauvin   France Winger [42]
2017–18 Florian Thauvin   France Winger [43]
2018–19 Hiroki Sakai   Japan Defender [44]
2019–20 Steve Mandanda   France Goalkeeper [45]
2020–21 Boubacar Kamara   France Midfielder [46]
2021–22 Dimitri Payet   France Midfielder Also named for the UNFP Player of the Year award and in the UNFP Team of the Season. [47]

Personnel

Technical staff

Position Name
Manager   Igor Tudor
Assistant managers   Hari Vukas
  Jacques Abardonado
Video analyst   Giuseppe Maiuri
Goalkeeping coach   Antonello Brambilla
Fitness coach   Carlo Spignoli
Club Doctors   Abdou Sbihi
  Jean-Baptiste Grisoli
Assistant Doctor   Mathias Giustiniani
Physiotherapists   Maxime Matton
  Youssef Rahou
  Pierre Vespignani
  Stéphane Ré
  Yannick Dyduch
Nutritionist   Cécile Capdeville
Osteopath   Gilles Davin

Last updated: 5 July 2022
Source: [1][2]

Management

Position Staff
Owner   Frank McCourt
Majority Shareholder   McCourt Global LLC
President   Pablo Longoria
Sporting Director   Javier Ribalta
Technical Director   David Friio
General Manager   Laurent Colette
Secretary-General
Legal Council
  Alexandre Miahle
Chief Financial Officer   Stéphane Tessier
Director of Strategy   Pedro Iriondo
Director of Communications   Jacques Cardoze
Director of Academy   Marco Otero

Last updated: 22 June 2022
Source: [3][4]

Honours

Marseille have won the French national championship nine times; with nine Ligue 1 titles they are behind only Saint-Étienne and Paris Saint-Germain, who both have ten. However, the first championship won by Marseille was in 1929, before the professional era of French football.[48] Marseille also have the second best record in the Coupe de France, with ten titles.[49] Marseille have achieved two championship and cup "Doubles", in 1972 and 1989.[50] They are the only French club to win the UEFA Champions League, doing so in 1993.[51]

Domestic competitions

 
Marseille players celebrate winning the Coupe de la Ligue in 2010
 
Marseille lifting the Trophée des Champions in 2011

International competitions

Ballon d'Or

The following players received the Ballon d'Or award whilst playing for Olympique de Marseille:

Two other former Ballon d'Or winners were hired by Olympique de Marseille: George Weah played for Marseille in 2000–01 after winning the Ballon d'Or in 1995 and Franz Beckenbauer coached the team for six months in 1990.

European Golden Shoe

The following players have won the European Golden Shoe whilst playing for Olympique de Marseille:

UNFP Player of the Year

The following players have won the UNFP Player of the Year whilst playing for Olympique de Marseille:

UNFP Young Player of the Year

The following players have won the UNFP Young Player of the Year whilst playing for Olympique de Marseille:

Footnotes

  1. ^ "#33 – Olympique de Marseille : les Phocéens" (in French). Footnickname. 3 May 2020. Retrieved 30 August 2021.
  2. ^ "#298 – Olympique de Marseille : les Minots" (in French). Footnickname. 25 October 2020. Retrieved 30 August 2021.
  3. ^ "Le stade Orange Vélodrome, une enceinte unique" (in French). OM.fr. 17 November 2021.
  4. ^ "L'OM vendu 45 millions d'euros par Margarita Louis-Dreyfus à Frank McCourt" (in French). L'Équipe. 16 September 2016. Retrieved 16 September 2016.
  5. ^ "Didier Deschamps the renaissance man lifts Marseille to the heights". The Guardian. 6 May 2010. Retrieved 6 May 2010.
  6. ^ . om.net. Archived from the original on 28 February 2008. Retrieved 13 January 2008.
  7. ^ "Ligue 1 – Saison 2018-2019 : Le bilan complet des affluences". 13 June 2019.
  8. ^ "Deloitte Football Money League 2015" (PDF). Deloitte. 15 January 2015. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  9. ^ a b "McCourt to Buy Marseille Soccer Club". The Wall Street Journal. 29 August 2016. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
  10. ^ "Behind The Badge: How A Rugby Fan And His Creative Wife Devised Marseille's Famous Crest". These Football Times. 9 April 2020. Retrieved 29 July 2021.
  11. ^ . OM official site. 8 April 2006. Archived from the original on 15 May 2007. Retrieved 26 April 2007.
  12. ^ France Football, N°2936 bis, PP 28–29 La nuit des longs couteaux à l'OM
  13. ^ . International Herald Tribute. 14 March 1995. Archived from the original on 28 November 2006. Retrieved 12 March 2007.
  14. ^ a b "Argentine Charged in Marseille case". The New York Times. 2 July 1993. Retrieved 12 March 2007.
  15. ^ "Wenger slams former Marseille Chairman". Eurosport. 23 January 2006. Retrieved 12 March 2007.
  16. ^ . RTL. 29 March 2007. Archived from the original on 21 April 2007. Retrieved 26 April 2007.
  17. ^ "Marseille 0–4 Liverpool". BBC Sport. 11 December 2007.
  18. ^ Bairner, Robin (5 May 2010). "Olympique de Marseille Win 2009–10 Ligue 1 Title". Goal.com. Retrieved 5 May 2010.
  19. ^ "Olympique Marseille Ligue 1 History: Why Are They Struggling To Win Another Title?". Soccerbox.com. 23 May 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2021.
  20. ^ Jean, Emmanuel (3 May 2012). . OM.net. Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
  21. ^ Dupre, Remy (19 August 2015). "Michel, légende du Real Madrid, nouvel entraîneur de l'OM". Le Monde. Retrieved 10 September 2016.
  22. ^ "Marseille: Frank McCourt promises £180m investment after buying Ligue 1 club". BBC Sport. 17 October 2016.
  23. ^ "Andoni Zubizarreta nommé directeur sportif de l'OM". OM.net. 27 October 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2016.
  24. ^ "UEFA Europa League - Marseille-Atlético". UEFA. 18 May 2018. Retrieved 29 September 2018.
  25. ^ "Marseille keep Champions League place despite breaking UEFA FFP rules". Goal.com. 19 June 2020.
  26. ^ Laurens, Julien (5 February 2021). "Marseille in crisis: Why fans invaded training ground, why Villas-Boas left, what's next for club". ESPN. Retrieved 29 July 2021.
  27. ^ "L'OM interdit de recrutement dans l'affaire Pape Gueye ?". L'Équipe (in French). Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  28. ^ "L'OM en Ligue des champions, Monaco en tour préliminaire et Rennes en Ligue Europa" [OM in the Champions League, Monaco in the prelimary round and Rennes in the Europa League]. L'Équipe (in French). 21 May 2022. Retrieved 21 May 2022.
  29. ^ a b . FIFA. 29 May 1993. Archived from the original on 11 March 2012. Retrieved 27 April 2011.
  30. ^ "French Football League – Ligue 1, Ligue 2, Coupe de la Ligue, Trophée des Champions". Ligue1.com. Retrieved 27 April 2011.[permanent dead link]
  31. ^ Antonio Missiroli. European football cultures and their integration: the'short' Twentieth Century 8 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine, EU Institute for Security Studies (ISS), 1 March 2002. Le Classique Retrieved 21 April 2012
  32. ^ Le Classico results
  33. ^ "OM-PSG: Pourquoi le virage Nord du Vélodrome est à un tournant". RMC Sport (in French). 27 October 2018.
  34. ^ "OM : 20 ans après sa mort, la légende Depé toujours intacte". La Provence (in French). 28 July 2020.
  35. ^ "Les places des Yankee redistribuées". L'Équipe (in French). 8 June 2018.
  36. ^ "L'histoire du Chevalier Roze, grand héros lors de l'épidémie de peste à Marseille". Made in Marseille. 9 March 2018.
  37. ^ "Commando Ultra, à jamais le premier". So Foot. 21 December 2020.
  38. ^ "Leftist clubs around the world". Morning Star. Retrieved 1 June 2022.
  39. ^ "Equipe professionnelle 2022–2023". Olympique de Marseille. Retrieved 14 September 2019.
  40. ^ Olympique de Marseille. . OM.net. Archived from the original on 2 September 2018. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
  41. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Daurès, Camille (1 June 2016). "Mandanda, Olympian of the 2015–16 season". Olympique de Marseille. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
  42. ^ Allione, Julien; Chaussard, Allan (20 May 2017). "Florian Thauvin, Olympique Marseille's Player of the Season 2016-17". Olympique de Marseille. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  43. ^ "Florian Thauvin élu Olympien de la saison". Olympique de Marseille (in French). 17 June 2018. Retrieved 10 July 2019.
  44. ^ Geigerman, Adam (15 June 2019). "Hiroki Sakai, is your Olympien of the 2018-19 Season". Olympique de Marseille. Retrieved 10 July 2019.
  45. ^ "Mandanda Olympien de la saison 2019-20". Olympique de Marseille (in French). 10 June 2020. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
  46. ^ "La belle saison de Boubacar Kamara". Olympique de Marseille (in French). 8 June 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  47. ^ "Dimitri Payet, Olympien de la saison 2021-22". Olympique de Marseille (in French). 24 May 2022. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  48. ^ François Mazet and Frédéric Pauron. "France – List of Champions". RSSSF. Retrieved 18 February 2009.
  49. ^ François Mazet and Frédéric Pauron. "France – List of Cup Finals". RSSSF. Retrieved 18 February 2009.
  50. ^ Stokkermans, Karel. "Doing the Double: Total Number of Domestic Doubles". RSSSF. Retrieved 18 February 2009.
  51. ^ "1992/93: French first for Marseille". UEFA. Retrieved 18 September 2009.
  52. ^ Until 2002, when the Ligue 1 was formed, the top tier of French football was known as Division 1.
  53. ^ The trophy was known as Challenge des Champions until 1995, and as Trophée des Champions ever since.

References

External links

  • Official site

olympique, marseille, women, team, women, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, s. For the women s team see Olympique de Marseille women This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Olympique de Marseille news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Olympique de Marseille French pronunciation ɔlɛ pik de maʁsɛj locally ɔlɛ ˈpike de maxˈsɛje Occitan Olimpic de Marselha pronounced ulimˈpi de maʀˈsejɔ also known simply as Marseille or by the abbreviation OM IPA o ɛm locally oˈɛme is a French professional men s football club based in Marseille Provence Alpes Cote d Azur Founded in 1899 the club plays in Ligue 1 and have spent most of their history in the top tier of French football The club has won nine Ligue 1 titles ten Coupes de France and three Coupes de la Ligue In 1993 coach Raymond Goethals led the team to become the first and only French club to win the UEFA Champions League defeating Milan 1 0 in the final the first under the UEFA Champions League branding of the tournament In 2010 Marseille won its first Ligue 1 title in 18 years under the management of former club captain Didier Deschamps 5 MarseilleFull nameOlympique de MarseilleNickname s Les Phoceens The Phocaeans 1 Les Olympiens The Olympians Les Minots The youngs from Marseille 2 Short nameOM MarseilleFounded31 August 1899 123 years ago 1899 08 31 GroundStade VelodromeCapacity67 394 3 OwnerFrank McCourt 95 Margarita Louis Dreyfus 5 4 PresidentPablo LongoriaHead coachIgor TudorLeagueLigue 12021 22Ligue 1 2nd of 20WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent seasonMarseille s home ground is the 67 394 capacity Stade Velodrome in the southern part of the city where they have played since 1937 6 The club has a large fan base having regularly averaged the highest attendance in French football Marseille s average home gate for the 2018 19 season was 50 361 the highest in Ligue 1 7 The stadium underwent renovation from 2011 to 2014 increasing its capacity to 67 000 ahead of France s hosting of UEFA Euro 2016 In 2015 the club was ranked 23rd globally in terms of annual revenue generating 130 5 million 8 Marseille traditionally play in an all white kit with sky blue detailing In 1997 Marseille was purchased by Franco Swiss businessman Robert Louis Dreyfus Following his death in 2009 his widow Margarita became the club s majority shareholder in 2010 In 2016 American businessman Frank McCourt bought the club from her and appointed businessman Jacques Henri Eyraud as the club president although he was replaced by Pablo Longoria in 2021 9 Contents 1 History 1 1 1965 1986 Leclerc era and crisis 1 2 1986 1996 Tapie era bribery scandal and decline 1 3 1996 2009 Return to success 1 4 2009 2014 Deschamps Baup Anigo 1 5 2014 2015 Bielsa era and stagnation 1 6 2016 present New ownership and revival 2 Le Classique 3 Stadium 4 Kits and crest 4 1 Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors 5 Supporters 5 1 Virage Nord De Peretti 5 2 Virage Sud Chevalier Roze 5 3 AEK Athens AS Livorno and Sampdoria 6 Players 6 1 First team squad 6 2 Out on loan 6 3 Reserve squad 6 4 Player of the season 7 Personnel 7 1 Technical staff 7 2 Management 8 Honours 8 1 Domestic competitions 8 2 International competitions 8 3 Ballon d Or 8 4 European Golden Shoe 8 5 UNFP Player of the Year 8 6 UNFP Young Player of the Year 9 Footnotes 10 References 11 External linksHistory EditSee also Olympique de Marseille seasons OM founder Rene Dufaure de Montmirail Olympique de Marseille was founded as an omnisport club in 1892 by Rene Dufaure de Montmirail a French sports official Known as Sporting Club US Phoceenne and Football Club de Marseille in the first five years after its foundation the club adopted the name Olympique de Marseille in 1899 in honour of the anniversary of Marseille s founding by Greeks from Phocaea some 25 centuries earlier with the name Olympique coming from ancient Olympic Games 10 At first rugby union was the most important team sport of the club the motto Droit au but coming from rugby Affiliated with the Union des Societes Francaises de Sports Athletiques USFSA since 1898 it was only in 1902 thanks to English and German people according to Andre Gascard that football began to be played by Olympique de Marseille Richer and better organised than other football teams of Marseille Sporting Stade Phoceenne Olympique de Marseille then playing at the Stade de l Huveaune took the leadership in the city In 1904 Olympique de Marseille won the first Championnat du Littoral involving opposing teams from Marseille and its suburbs and took part in the final rounds of the 11th French championship At that time the word football applied to rugby and people used the word Association which would be soccer in North America for football The team of 1911 During the 1920s Olympique de Marseille became an important team in France winning the Coupe de France in 1924 1926 and 1927 The team won the French championship in 1929 defeating Club francais The Coupe de France in 1924 was the club s first major title won against FC Sete a side that dominated French football at the time In the 20s numerous French internationals such as Jules Dewaquez Jean Boyer or Joseph Alcazar played for Marseille 11 In 1930 Marseille lost against Sete which would be the winner in the semi final round In 1931 the team became champion of the South East with victories against rivals such as Sete In the Coupe de France l OM lost in five matches to Club francais winning the second match that was cancelled due to the disqualification of Marseille striker Vernicke Even though the 1931 32 season was less successful Marseille easily entered the professional ranks becoming a member of the union of professional clubs in 1932 On 13 January 1932 at 9 15 pm at the Brasserie des Sports Mr Dard Mr Bison Dr Rollenstein Mr Etchepare Mr Leblanc Mr Mille Mr Anfosso Mr Sabatier Mr Seze Mr Bazat Mr Molteroj and Mr Pollack elected the following committee Honorary presidents Paul Le Cesne et Fernand Bouisson President M Dard Vice Presidents Mr Leblanc Mr Bison Mr Etchepare Dr Rollenstein et Mr Anfosso general secretary Mr Possel Daydier Treasurer Mr Bison assisted by Mr Ribel For the first championship Division 1 was divided into two pools Marseille finished second in the first behind Lille For its first match of the championship Marseille defeated the future champion Lille In 1937 Marseille won its first professional French championship thanks to goal difference 30 for Marseille 17 for Sochaux The arrival of Vasconcellos made the defence stronger whereas former goalkeeper Laurent Di Lorto shone with Sochaux and France In the meantime Marseille won the Coupe de France in 1935 and 1938 but failed a double success in 1934 due to FC Sete In 1938 Larbi Benbarek signed with Marseille and became the black pearl for the team World War II would cut his career short The 1942 43 season was full of records 100 goals in 30 matches including 20 in one match 20 2 against Avignon in which Aznar scored nine goals including the first eight Marseille was leading 8 0 playing only 70 minutes Aznar scored 45 goals in 30 matches plus 11 in cup games for a record of 56 goals in 38 matches With the minots young players of the moment Scotti Robin Dard Pironti Marseille won the cup in two matches against Bordeaux 4 0 In 1948 thanks to a draw against Sochaux Marseille became the champions of France The two last victories at the Stade Velodrome against Roubaix 6 0 and Metz 6 3 were important as Aznar and Robin s returned in spring In 1952 Marseille were about to be relegated but Gunnar Andersson saved his team finishing as top scorer with 31 goals The team won 5 3 on aggregate against Valenciennes The same year Marseille lost at the Stade Velodrome against Saint Etienne 10 3 but Liberati was injured In 1953 Gunnar Andersson would take the record of goals scored in one season with 35 Marseille was runner up in the Coupe de France Nice won 2 1 in 1954 and the Coupe Drago in 1957 to Lens which won 3 1 Marseille were struggling at the time and were relegated for the first time in 1959 From 1959 to 1965 the team played in the second division except during the 1962 63 season finishing 20th out of 20 in the first division In 1965 Marcel Leclerc became president 1965 1986 Leclerc era and crisis Edit Brazilian 1970 World Cup winner Jairzinho joined OM in 1974 The first period of Olympique de Marseille s domination of the French League started in the early 1970s under Marcel Leclerc s presidency 1965 1972 His ambition allowed Marseille to return to the First division in 1965 66 They went on to win the Coupe de France in 1969 as well as the First division in 1971 with a record of 44 goals by Josip Skoblar helped by Roger Magnusson The arrival of Georges Carnus and Bernard Bosquier from Saint Etienne helped them to win the Ligue 1 and the Coupe de France in 1972 Marseille played in the European Cup in 1971 72 and 1972 73 but were knocked out by Ajax of Johan Cruyff and Juventus respectively However success was not to last Marcel Leclerc was forced to leave the club on 19 July 1972 The President was a stubborn man and he threatened the league to withdraw his professional team from Ligue 1 because the federation refused to accept three foreign players per team Leclerc wanted to acquire the Hungarian star Zoltan Varga but he had already the maximum number of two foreigners in his team Marseille decided instead of following Leclerc against the league to fire him 12 Then followed an era of crisis with Marseille only winning a Coupe de France in 1976 and being relegated to the second division where they played with a bunch of young local players the Minots who allowed the team to return to First division in 1984 Eric Di Meco was one of them 1986 1996 Tapie era bribery scandal and decline Edit Main article French football bribery scandal On 12 April 1986 Bernard Tapie became president thanks to Marseille mayor Gaston Defferre and promptly built the greatest team seen in France up to that point His first signings were Karl Heinz Forster and Alain Giresse who were bought after the 1986 FIFA World Cup Tapie signed a large number of highly regarded players over the next few years in his pursuit of the European Cup such as Jean Pierre Papin Chris Waddle Klaus Allofs Enzo Francescoli Abedi Pele Didier Deschamps Basile Boli Marcel Desailly Rudi Voller Tony Cascarino and Eric Cantona as well as appointing high profile coaches like Franz Beckenbauer Gerard Gili and Raymond Goethals Between 1989 and 1992 Olympique de Marseille won four league titles in a row and the French Cup The team also reached the Champions Cup final for the first time in 1991 losing on penalties to Red Star Belgrade The highlight of the club s history is winning the new format Champions League in 1993 Basile Boli scored the only goal against Italy s Milan in the final held in Munich s Olympic Stadium That triumph was the first time ever for a French club and it made Didier Deschamps and Fabien Barthez the youngest captain and goalkeeper respectively to capture the title This triumph however was followed by a decade of decline In 1994 due to financial irregularities and a match fixing scandal involving then president Bernard Tapie they suffered enforced relegation to the second division where Marseille stayed for two years before returning to the First division Moreover they lost their 1992 93 Division 1 title and the right to play in the 1993 94 UEFA Champions League the 1993 European Super Cup and the 1993 Intercontinental Cup This scandal called l affaire VA OM VA for Union Sportive Valenciennes Anzin and OM for Olympique de Marseille was exposed by Valenciennes whose players Jacques Glassmann 13 Jorge Burruchaga 14 and Christophe Robert 14 were contacted by Marseille player Jean Jacques Eydelie 15 to let OM win and more importantly not to injure any OM player ahead of the UEFA Champions League final 1996 2009 Return to success Edit OM won six titles with Didier Deschamps as manager between 2009 and 2011 Marseille returned to the top flight in 1996 with backing from Adidas s CEO Robert Louis Dreyfus He chose Rolland Courbis as coach signed Fabrizio Ravanelli Laurent Blanc and Andreas Kopke and Marseille finished 11th for his return For the 1998 99 season the team celebrated their centenary and built a team of stars Robert Pires Florian Maurice and Christophe Dugarry culminating in a second place finish in the French championship behind Bordeaux and an appearance in the UEFA Cup Final in 1999 losing to Parma Courbis left the team in November 1999 after a poor start to the season The closest Marseille got to another trophy was when they reached the UEFA Cup Final in 2004 impressively beating Dnipro Internazionale Liverpool and Newcastle United along the way But they were beaten in the final by newly crowned Spanish champions Valencia and once again fans were forced to continue waiting for the next trophy to come along In 2005 Marseille succeeded in winning the Intertoto Cup beating the likes of Lazio and Deportivo de La Coruna in doing so and earning another shot at the UEFA Cup Didier Drogba played for OM in the 2003 2004 season In January 2007 there was negotiation between Louis Dreyfus and Jack Kachkar a Canadian doctor and businessman CEO of pharmaceutical company Inyx about selling the club As Jack Kachkar took too much time to buy the team Louis Dreyfus decided on 22 March 2007 not to sell to the Canadian businessman 16 Another close call to glory was in the Coupe de France final against Sochaux in May 2007 However they lost on penalties after a 2 2 draw after extra time to the disappointment of everyone linked with the club but they soon wiped all that disappointment away by qualifying for the 2007 08 UEFA Champions League group stage after securing second place with one game to spare In the Champions League Marseille became the first French team to win at Anfield when they beat 2007 runners up Liverpool 1 0 and the team took six out of six points from their opening two games They only drew one more match and in a winner takes all final group game they lost 4 0 to Liverpool who became the first English team to win at the Stade Velodrome Marseille coming third in the Champions League Group A then joined the UEFA Cup 17 Marseille finished the 2008 09 season with a second place finish in Ligue 1 following a tight race with Bordeaux for the title This earned them direct entry into the group stages of the UEFA Champions League their third consecutive season in the competition Marseille won the 2010 Coupe de la Ligue Final beating Bordeaux 3 1 at the Stade de France in March 2010 This was their first major title since their Champions League triumph 17 years earlier Two months later Marseille won their first league championship for 18 years with two games to spare after beating Rennes 3 1 18 19 Marseille defeated rivals Paris Saint Germain PSG on penalties to win the 2010 Trophee des Champions at Stade 7 Novembre in Rades Tunisia before the season began Marseille then became the first team to win back to back Coupe de la Ligue successes when they won the 2011 edition by beating Montpellier 1 0 on 23 April Before that they qualified for the last 16 of the UEFA Champions League for the first time since their historic success but lost 2 1 at Old Trafford to Manchester United and also set a Champions League record by thrashing Zilina 7 0 in what was the biggest away win in the competition s history In 2011 Marseille lost the Ligue 1 championship title but qualified for the UEFA Champions League for the fifth time in a row a club record On 27 July 2011 Marseille won the 2011 Trophee des Champions title by beating Lille 5 4 at Stade de Tanger in Morocco The result was significant as OM were 3 1 down with five minutes to go only to embark on a remarkable comeback which saw 5 goals scored in the last five minutes with Andre Ayew scoring a hat trick 2009 2014 Deschamps Baup Anigo Edit The club struggled in the 2011 12 season going to the bottom of the Ligue 1 table after six matches Nevertheless Marseille rebounded winning 3 0 against Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League as well as a 3 0 success over rivals PSG in November of that year Marseille ended 2011 with a good sequence also qualifying for the knockout stages of the Champions League for the second season running In February 2012 Marseille embarked on 13 games without victory 20 but rallied to qualify for the quarter finals of the Champions League for the first time since winning the competition in 1993 Despite an indifferent club form OM lost to eventual finalists Bayern Munich and slumped to an overall tenth place finish in Ligue 1 However the club retained the Coupe de la Ligue for the third year running beating Lyon 1 0 in the Final In the summer of 2012 Deschamps resigned and later took on the France job Elie Baup took over leading the club to a surprising second place finish in the 2012 13 season despite selling multiple key players including Loic Remy Cesar Azpilicueta and Stephane Mbia Marseille returned to the Champions League spending close to 40 million on the likes of Dimitri Payet Florian Thauvin and Giannelli Imbula The club were top of the table at the end of August 2013 but OM proceeded to lose all six games in Europe suffering the ignominy of becoming the first French team and the biggest European team to date to have picked up zero points in a Champions League group stage Baup was sacked on 7 December 2013 following the 1 0 defeat to Nantes at Stade Velodrome He was replaced on an interim basis by Jose Anigo In Anigo s brief tenure OM went out of the two cups and struggled leading to continued protests and jeers by fans The club finished sixth in the 2014 season missing out on an important European competition place for the first time in ten years Anigo left the club soon after taking on an ambassadorial scouting role in North Africa his first post outside of the city for more than four decades 2014 2015 Bielsa era and stagnation Edit Dimitri Payet is the leader of the OM Champions project of Frank McCourt Marseille announced on 2 May 2014 an agreement with Marcelo Bielsa who took the managerial hotseat Bielsa was the club s first Argentine coach and the first coach to lead the team into the renovated Velodrome which opened in August with a fixture against Montpellier In Bielsa s first season in charge the club led the league table for seven months but finished fourth and thus qualified for the UEFA Europa League June 2015 saw three key players leave the club Andre Pierre Gignac and Andre Ayew left the club for Tigres UANL and Swansea City respectively after their contracts expired while Dimitri Payet left to join West Ham United for a 15 million transfer fee After a solid pre season which included a 2 0 win over Juventus in the Robert Louis Dreyfus Trophy and the signature of nine players Bielsa resigned from his post just minutes after the first Ligue 1 game of the 2015 16 season against Caen Marseille lost the game 1 0 and Bielsa shocked the footballing world with his unexpected decision citing a lack of trust with the club s management who he said had reneged on a previously agreed contract extension Bielsa s departure reportedly left his players in a state of shock many of whom learnt the news via social media in the dressing room On 19 August 2015 Michel was announced as Marseille s new coach 21 He endured a frustrating season with OM failing to win a home game in Ligue 1 for more than six months Following a number of poor performances Michel was sacked in April by club owner Margarita Louis Dreyfus citing poor conduct as the team s coach The sacking came on the eve of the club s Coupe de France semi final fixture As in 2015 Passi was installed as the caretaker coach Under his direction Marseille reached the Coupe de France final for the first time in nine years losing out 4 2 to rivals Paris Saint Germain OM would finish the league season in 13th the club s worst league finish in 15 years In the summer of 2016 Marseille once more sold off a number of key players to meet financial obligations and to clear its wage bill ahead of an impending takeover Steve Mandanda the club s long serving captain ended eight years at the club and moved to Crystal Palace Nicolas N Koulou moved to Lyon while striker Michy Batshuayi was sold to Chelsea for a club record 40 million 2016 present New ownership and revival Edit Marseille began the 2016 17 Ligue 1 season with interim manager Franck Passi at the helm On 29 August 2016 it was announced that American businessman Frank McCourt had agreed to buy the club from Margarita Louis Dreyfus 9 The purchase deal was completed for a reported price tag of 45 million on 17 October 2016 22 Within the next few days McCourt appointed Jacques Henri Eyraud as the club s president Rudi Garcia as the manager of the club s first team and Andoni Zubizarreta as director of sport 23 On 3 May 2018 Marseille reached the final of the 2017 18 UEFA Europa League after eliminating Red Bull Salzburg in the semi finals 3 2 on aggregate 14 years after its last final in a European competition in 2004 against Valencia However they lost the final to Atletico Madrid 24 In the 2019 20 Ligue 1 season Andre Villas Boas became head coach Marseille finished second after the season was ended early due to the coronavirus pandemic thus qualifying for the 2020 21 UEFA Champions League for the first time since 2013 14 25 In February 2021 after this string of losses conflict with players and lack of support from sporting director Pablo Longoria and President Jacques Henri Eyraud head coach Andre Villas Boas offered to resign three days after a violent riot by protesting Marseille fans at the team training grounds had forced postponement of a league match with Rennes Marseille sacked Villas Boas and replaced the coach with Argentine Jorge Sampaoli The club also appointed Pablo Longoria to be the team s new president replacing Jacques Henri Eyraud as Eyraud had also been a target of the ire of Marseille fans 26 In January 2022 Marseille player Pape Gueye was banned from playing for 4 months by FIFA while Marseille were given a ban on making transfers in both the summer 2022 and January 2023 transfer windows and forced to pay 2 5 million to Watford This came after the English club brought litigation against Marseille over the transfer of Gueye who had originally signed a contract with Watford but after finding out his agent had lied to him about the salary on offer broke the contract and signed with Marseille Marseille appealed FIFA s decision 27 In the 2021 22 Ligue 1 season Marseille finished in second place securing Champions League football for the first time since 2020 In the final matchday they were helped by Lens s equalizing goal in the final moments of a 2 2 draw with Monaco 28 Le Classique EditMain article Le Classique PSG OM in 2007 Le Classique is a football match that is contested between Paris Saint Germain and Olympique de Marseille The term Classique is modelled on El Clasico contested between Barcelona and Real Madrid Like all the game s major rivalries the antipathy between PSG and Marseille extends outside the pitch The French clasico has a historical cultural and social importance that makes it more than just a football game pitching capital against province and the traditional wealth and high culture of Paris against the industrial and cosmopolitan traditions of Marseille However this rivalry appears only in the 1990s where it is promoted by the respective owners of PSG Canal the TV channel which broadcast the Ligue 1 football matches and Olympique de Marseile Bernard Tapie also owner of the sports company Adidas for obvious marketing reasons It is sometimes seen as the favourite son of French football against its enfants terribles 29 30 With PSG being located in the north in the French capital and Marseille located along the Mediterranean coast the rivalry is often referred to as the North versus the South PSG and Marseille are two of just three French clubs to have won major European trophies PSG having won the UEFA Cup Winners Cup in 1996 and Marseille won the UEFA Champions League in 1993 and they were the two dominant forces before the emergence of Lyon at the beginning of the 21st century However despite their recent ups and downs PSG and Marseille remain fierce rivals giving this match a special atmosphere 29 31 Le Classique is also known as Le Classico 32 Stadium EditMain article Stade Velodrome Stade Velodrome in 2015 against PSG the tifo was deployed during the players entrance From 1904 to 1937 Marseille played at the Stade de l Huveaune a stadium owned by the club in contrast to its current stadium L Huveaune once named Stade Fernand Buisson in honour of a former rugby player of the club who became a member of the French National Assembly was renovated at the beginning of the twenties thanks to supporter s financial help It had a capacity of 15 000 In 1937 l OM moved into the much larger Stade Velodrome after compelling the city of Marseille to lower its rent The club made use of the Stade de l Huveaune again during the renovation of the Velodrome for Euro 1984 during the 1982 83 season The Velodrome again underwent redevelopment in time for the 1998 World Cup and was transformed into an immense ground composed of two Curva ends Virage Nord and Virage Sud North Curve and South Curve which house the supporters groups as well as the main stand Jean Bouin and the imposing Ganay stand In a third renovation in preparation for Euro 2016 the municipality covered the stands with a roof and increased its capacity to 67 000 to host the Euro 2016 games Before the start of each home game the song Jump by Van Halen is heard When a goal is scored by Marseille in their home matches the song Come with Me by Puff Daddy is played Kits and crest Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Olympique de Marseille kits Marseille s traditional kit colours were white shirts and shorts with blue socks until 1986 Since 1986 Marseille have played with white shirts white shorts and white socks and the blue color became lighter due to Adidas marketing but in 2012 2013 the club returned to its original kit wearing blue socks Club founder Rene Dufaure de Montmirail drew inspiration from his personal seal which featured interlaced letters D and M to create the club s first badge The club s motto Droit au but dates from the days when the club s main sport was rugby under the name Football Club de Marseille The original badge featured an ornate letter M superimposed over an O with the club motto draped across the glyph The logo persisted for three decades until 1935 when an art deco shield was adopted with a simple M encased within the O In 1972 OM redesigned its logo this time preferring a complex M letterform In 1986 the club re adopted its first badge the logo evolved slightly over the next few decades gaining a star in 1993 to commemorate the club s UEFA Champions League trophy To commemorate the club s 100th anniversary in 1999 a variant featuring a golden O and a turquoise M was used a similar 110th anniversary logo was used during the 2009 10 season The most recent form was revealed on 17 February 2004 the O and M are rendered as a single unit in turquoise without shading or borders and the logo is capped by the golden star representing the victory in the Champions League and sits above The club s motto Droit Au But French for Straight to the Goal also rendered in gold appears under the badge Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors Edit Years Supplier Sponsor1969 1971 Le Coq Sportif none1971 1972 BUT 1972 1973 Le Toro1973 1974 Michel Axel1974 1976 Adidas1976 1977 Centre Barneoud1977 1980 Mas d Auge1980 1981 Zoo de Marseille1981 1982 Faure1982 1983 Euromarche1983 1986 RMC1986 1988 Maison Bouygues1988 1989 Alain Afflelou1989 1992 Panasonic1992 1994 Eurest1994 1995 Reebok1995 1996 Mizuno Speedy1996 1997 Adidas Parmalat1997 2001 Ericsson2001 2003 Khalifa Airways2003 2008 Neuf Telecom2008 2010 Direct Energie2010 2012 Betclic2012 2017 Intersport2017 2018 Orange2018 2019 Puma2019 2022 Uber Eats2022 CazooSupporters Edit OM fans in 2007 Virage Nord De Peretti Edit The atmosphere in the Stade Velodrome is created by the dominance of OM s own supporters who are located in the Curva style ends behind both goals The North Curve is home to the Marseille Trop Puissant Fanatics and Dodger s supporters associations who buy up the tickets at the start of each season and sell them on to their members 33 The Virage Nord is next to the away enclosure which is protected by high fences In 2002 the Virage Nord was officially given the name of Patrice de Peretti 1972 2000 the late founder and leader of the supporters group Marseille Trop Puissant MTP 34 In 2010 the third kit of OM was a tribute to MTP with the red yellow and green colours of Africa symbols of this left wing curva In 2018 owner Frank McCourt and president Jacques Henri Eyraud decided to exclude the Yankee Nord due to a number of delictuous activities especially concerning tickets they therefore forbid them to sell the said tickets and the association is no longer officially recognized by the club 35 Virage Sud Chevalier Roze Edit The virage is named after Nicolas Roze a noble who distinguished himself in particular by creating a hospital in Marseille during the Great Plague of Marseille in 1720 36 As with the Virage Nord the South Curve is controlled by supporter s associations with the Commando Ultra 84 the first group of ultra supporters in France created in August 1984 and the South Winners dominating the central section and Club Central des Supporters filling the remaining sections of the stand 37 The 2007 08 third shirt of OM was a tribute to South Winners fans whose colours are orange as they are traditionally left wing fans AEK Athens AS Livorno and Sampdoria Edit AEK fans Original 21 lifting an OM fans Commando Ultra 84 banner There is a strong relationship between AEK Athens AS Livorno UC Sampdoria and Marseille 38 Marseille fans often lift banners and create choreography in support of the fellow teams At the opposite also because of different political opinions they use to argue with many SS Lazio fans Players EditFirst team squad Edit As of 31 January 2023 39 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player1 GK CMR Simon Ngapandouetnbu3 DF CIV Eric Bailly on loan from Manchester United 4 DF FRA Samuel Gigot5 DF ARG Leonardo Balerdi6 MF FRA Matteo Guendouzi 3rd captain 7 DF FRA Jonathan Clauss8 MF MAR Azzedine Ounahi9 FW POR Vitinha10 MF FRA Dimitri Payet captain 16 GK ESP Pau Lopez17 FW TUR Cengiz Under No Pos Nation Player18 MF UKR Ruslan Malinovskyi on loan from Atalanta 21 MF FRA Valentin Rongier vice captain 23 DF BIH Sead Kolasinac27 MF FRA Jordan Veretout29 DF BFA Issa Kabore on loan from Manchester City 30 DF POR Nuno Tavares on loan from Arsenal 36 GK ESP Ruben Blanco on loan from Celta Vigo 47 MF TUR Bartug Elmaz70 FW CHI Alexis Sanchez77 MF MAR Amine Harit99 DF COD Chancel MbembaOut on loan Edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player DF FRA Jordan Amavi on loan to Getafe until 30 June 2023 DF ESP Pol Lirola on loan to Elche until 30 June 2023 DF FRA Isaak Toure on loan to Auxerre until 30 June 2023 MF SEN Pape Gueye on loan to Sevilla until 30 June 2023 FW USA Konrad de la Fuente on loan to Olympiacos until 30 June 2023 MF NED Kevin Strootman on loan to Genoa until 30 June 2023 No Pos Nation Player FW FRA Salim Ben Seghir on loan to Valenciennes until 30 June 2023 FW BRA Luis Henrique on loan to Botafogo until 30 June 2023 FW POL Arkadiusz Milik on loan to Juventus until 30 June 2023 FW SRB Nemanja Radonjic on loan to Torino until 30 June 2023 FW COL Luis Suarez on loan to Almeria until 30 June 2023 Reserve squad Edit As of 1 January 2023 40 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player GK FRA Evan Huriez GK BEL Jelle van Neck DF FRA Nassim Ahmed DF FRA Thomas Antunes DF FRA Amay Caprice DF ALG Rayan Dehilis DF FRA Hugo Dupont DF COM Aaron Kamardin DF COM Yakine Said M Madi DF SUI Roggerio Nyakossi MF FRA Ugo Bertelli MF COM Naim Chadhuli No Pos Nation Player MF FRA Bastien Dessus MF FRA Rayan Hassad MF FRA Bilal Nadir MF FRA Paolo Sciortino MF ENG Emran Soglo FW FRA Aylan Benyahia Tani FW SUI Esey Gebreyesus FW COM Ibtoihi Hadhari FW ALG Jores Rahou FW CMR Francois Regis Mughe FW ESP Pedro Ruiz FW MAD Sayha SehaPlayer of the season Edit Season Name Nationality Position Notes Ref2001 02 Vedran Runje Croatia Goalkeeper 41 2002 03 Daniel Van Buyten Belgium Defender Also named in the UNFP Team of the Season 41 2003 04 Didier Drogba Ivory Coast Forward Also won the UNFP Player of the Year award and was named in the UNFP Team of the Season 41 2004 05 Habib Beye Senegal Defender Also named in the UNFP Team of the Season 41 2005 06 Franck Ribery France Winger Also won UNFP Young Player of the Year and was named in the UNFP Team of the Season 41 2006 07 Samir Nasri France Midfielder Also won UNFP Young Player of the Year and was named in the UNFP Team of the Season 41 2007 08 Steve Mandanda France Goalkeeper Also won UNFP Goalkeeper of the Year award and was named in the UNFP Team of the Season 41 2008 09 Benoit Cheyrou France Midfielder Also named in the UNFP Team of the Season 41 2009 10 Mamadou Niang Senegal Forward Also named in the UNFP Team of the Season 41 2010 11 Andre Ayew Ghana Forward 41 2011 12 Nicolas Nkoulou Cameroon Defender Also named in the UNFP Team of the Season 41 2012 13 Mathieu Valbuena France Forward Also named in the UNFP Team of the Season 41 2013 14 Andre Pierre Gignac France Forward 41 2014 15 Dimitri Payet France Midfielder Also named in the UNFP Team of the Season 41 2015 16 Steve Mandanda France Goalkeeper Also won UNFP Goalkeeper of the Year award and was named in the UNFP Team of the Season 41 2016 17 Florian Thauvin France Winger 42 2017 18 Florian Thauvin France Winger 43 2018 19 Hiroki Sakai Japan Defender 44 2019 20 Steve Mandanda France Goalkeeper 45 2020 21 Boubacar Kamara France Midfielder 46 2021 22 Dimitri Payet France Midfielder Also named for the UNFP Player of the Year award and in the UNFP Team of the Season 47 Personnel EditSee also List of Olympique de Marseille managers and presidents Technical staff Edit Position NameManager Igor TudorAssistant managers Hari Vukas Jacques AbardonadoVideo analyst Giuseppe MaiuriGoalkeeping coach Antonello BrambillaFitness coach Carlo SpignoliClub Doctors Abdou Sbihi Jean Baptiste GrisoliAssistant Doctor Mathias GiustinianiPhysiotherapists Maxime Matton Youssef Rahou Pierre Vespignani Stephane Re Yannick DyduchNutritionist Cecile CapdevilleOsteopath Gilles DavinLast updated 5 July 2022Source 1 2 Management Edit Position StaffOwner Frank McCourtMajority Shareholder McCourt Global LLCPresident Pablo LongoriaSporting Director Javier RibaltaTechnical Director David FriioGeneral Manager Laurent ColetteSecretary GeneralLegal Council Alexandre MiahleChief Financial Officer Stephane TessierDirector of Strategy Pedro IriondoDirector of Communications Jacques CardozeDirector of Academy Marco OteroLast updated 22 June 2022Source 3 4 Honours EditMarseille have won the French national championship nine times with nine Ligue 1 titles they are behind only Saint Etienne and Paris Saint Germain who both have ten However the first championship won by Marseille was in 1929 before the professional era of French football 48 Marseille also have the second best record in the Coupe de France with ten titles 49 Marseille have achieved two championship and cup Doubles in 1972 and 1989 50 They are the only French club to win the UEFA Champions League doing so in 1993 51 Domestic competitions Edit Marseille players celebrate winning the Coupe de la Ligue in 2010 Marseille lifting the Trophee des Champions in 2011 French Championship Ligue 1 52 Winners 9 1936 37 1947 48 1970 71 1971 72 1988 89 1989 90 1990 91 1991 92 2009 10 Runners up 13 1937 38 1938 39 1969 70 1974 75 1986 87 1993 94 1998 99 2006 07 2008 09 2010 11 2012 13 2019 20 2021 22 Ligue 2 Winners 1 1994 95 Runners up 2 1965 66 1995 96 Coupe de France Winners 10 1923 24 1925 26 1926 27 1934 35 1937 38 1942 43 1968 69 1971 72 1975 76 1988 89 Runners up 9 1933 34 1939 40 1953 54 1985 86 1986 87 1990 91 2005 06 2006 07 2015 16 Coupe de la Ligue Winners 3 2009 10 2010 11 2011 12 Trophee des Champions 53 Winners 3 1971 2010 2011 Runners up 3 1969 1972 2020 Coupe Charles Drago Winners 1 1957International competitions Edit Further information Olympique de Marseille in European football European Cup UEFA Champions League Winners 1 1992 93 Runners up 1 1990 91 UEFA Cup UEFA Europa League Runners up 3 1998 99 2003 04 2017 18 UEFA Intertoto Cup Winners 1 2005Ballon d Or Edit The following players received the Ballon d Or award whilst playing for Olympique de Marseille Jean Pierre Papin 1991Two other former Ballon d Or winners were hired by Olympique de Marseille George Weah played for Marseille in 2000 01 after winning the Ballon d Or in 1995 and Franz Beckenbauer coached the team for six months in 1990 European Golden Shoe Edit The following players have won the European Golden Shoe whilst playing for Olympique de Marseille Josip Skoblar 44 goals 1971UNFP Player of the Year Edit The following players have won the UNFP Player of the Year whilst playing for Olympique de Marseille Didier Drogba 2004UNFP Young Player of the Year Edit The following players have won the UNFP Young Player of the Year whilst playing for Olympique de Marseille Franck Ribery 2006 Samir Nasri 2007 William Saliba 2022Footnotes Edit 33 Olympique de Marseille les Phoceens in French Footnickname 3 May 2020 Retrieved 30 August 2021 298 Olympique de Marseille les Minots in French Footnickname 25 October 2020 Retrieved 30 August 2021 Le stade Orange Velodrome une enceinte unique in French OM fr 17 November 2021 L OM vendu 45 millions d euros par Margarita Louis Dreyfus a Frank McCourt in French L Equipe 16 September 2016 Retrieved 16 September 2016 Didier Deschamps the renaissance man lifts Marseille to the heights The Guardian 6 May 2010 Retrieved 6 May 2010 Velodrome Stadium om net Archived from the original on 28 February 2008 Retrieved 13 January 2008 Ligue 1 Saison 2018 2019 Le bilan complet des affluences 13 June 2019 Deloitte Football Money League 2015 PDF Deloitte 15 January 2015 Retrieved 15 January 2015 a b McCourt to Buy Marseille Soccer Club The Wall Street Journal 29 August 2016 Retrieved 30 August 2016 Behind The Badge How A Rugby Fan And His Creative Wife Devised Marseille s Famous Crest These Football Times 9 April 2020 Retrieved 29 July 2021 History of l OM OM official site 8 April 2006 Archived from the original on 15 May 2007 Retrieved 26 April 2007 France Football N 2936 bis PP 28 29 La nuit des longs couteaux a l OM Tapie Directly Implicated As Marseille Trial Opens International Herald Tribute 14 March 1995 Archived from the original on 28 November 2006 Retrieved 12 March 2007 a b Argentine Charged in Marseille case The New York Times 2 July 1993 Retrieved 12 March 2007 Wenger slams former Marseille Chairman Eurosport 23 January 2006 Retrieved 12 March 2007 Kachkar It s over now RTL 29 March 2007 Archived from the original on 21 April 2007 Retrieved 26 April 2007 Marseille 0 4 Liverpool BBC Sport 11 December 2007 Bairner Robin 5 May 2010 Olympique de Marseille Win 2009 10 Ligue 1 Title Goal com Retrieved 5 May 2010 Olympique Marseille Ligue 1 History Why Are They Struggling To Win Another Title Soccerbox com 23 May 2015 Retrieved 29 July 2021 Jean Emmanuel 3 May 2012 Le soulagement et apres OM net Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 6 May 2012 Dupre Remy 19 August 2015 Michel legende du Real Madrid nouvel entraineur de l OM Le Monde Retrieved 10 September 2016 Marseille Frank McCourt promises 180m investment after buying Ligue 1 club BBC Sport 17 October 2016 Andoni Zubizarreta nomme directeur sportif de l OM OM net 27 October 2016 Retrieved 27 October 2016 UEFA Europa League Marseille Atletico UEFA 18 May 2018 Retrieved 29 September 2018 Marseille keep Champions League place despite breaking UEFA FFP rules Goal com 19 June 2020 Laurens Julien 5 February 2021 Marseille in crisis Why fans invaded training ground why Villas Boas left what s next for club ESPN Retrieved 29 July 2021 L OM interdit de recrutement dans l affaire Pape Gueye L Equipe in French Retrieved 15 January 2022 L OM en Ligue des champions Monaco en tour preliminaire et Rennes en Ligue Europa OM in the Champions League Monaco in the prelimary round and Rennes in the Europa League L Equipe in French 21 May 2022 Retrieved 21 May 2022 a b France s passion play FIFA 29 May 1993 Archived from the original on 11 March 2012 Retrieved 27 April 2011 French Football League Ligue 1 Ligue 2 Coupe de la Ligue Trophee des Champions Ligue1 com Retrieved 27 April 2011 permanent dead link Antonio Missiroli European football cultures and their integration the short Twentieth Century Archived 8 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine EU Institute for Security Studies ISS 1 March 2002 Le Classique Retrieved 21 April 2012 Le Classico results OM PSG Pourquoi le virage Nord du Velodrome est a un tournant RMC Sport in French 27 October 2018 OM 20 ans apres sa mort la legende Depe toujours intacte La Provence in French 28 July 2020 Les places des Yankee redistribuees L Equipe in French 8 June 2018 L histoire du Chevalier Roze grand heros lors de l epidemie de peste a Marseille Made in Marseille 9 March 2018 Commando Ultra a jamais le premier So Foot 21 December 2020 Leftist clubs around the world Morning Star Retrieved 1 June 2022 Equipe professionnelle 2022 2023 Olympique de Marseille Retrieved 14 September 2019 Olympique de Marseille Equipe Nationale 2 2018 2019 OM net Archived from the original on 2 September 2018 Retrieved 15 November 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Daures Camille 1 June 2016 Mandanda Olympian of the 2015 16 season Olympique de Marseille Retrieved 23 July 2016 Allione Julien Chaussard Allan 20 May 2017 Florian Thauvin Olympique Marseille s Player of the Season 2016 17 Olympique de Marseille Retrieved 21 May 2017 Florian Thauvin elu Olympien de la saison Olympique de Marseille in French 17 June 2018 Retrieved 10 July 2019 Geigerman Adam 15 June 2019 Hiroki Sakai is your Olympien of the 2018 19 Season Olympique de Marseille Retrieved 10 July 2019 Mandanda Olympien de la saison 2019 20 Olympique de Marseille in French 10 June 2020 Retrieved 10 June 2020 La belle saison de Boubacar Kamara Olympique de Marseille in French 8 June 2021 Retrieved 8 June 2021 Dimitri Payet Olympien de la saison 2021 22 Olympique de Marseille in French 24 May 2022 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Francois Mazet and Frederic Pauron France List of Champions RSSSF Retrieved 18 February 2009 Francois Mazet and Frederic Pauron France List of Cup Finals RSSSF Retrieved 18 February 2009 Stokkermans Karel Doing the Double Total Number of Domestic Doubles RSSSF Retrieved 18 February 2009 1992 93 French first for Marseille UEFA Retrieved 18 September 2009 Until 2002 when the Ligue 1 was formed the top tier of French football was known as Division 1 The trophy was known as Challenge des Champions until 1995 and as Trophee des Champions ever since References EditPecheral Alain 2007 La grande histoire de l OM L Equipe ISBN 978 2 916400 07 5 Agnello Thierry 2008 Droit au but l histoire de l Olympique de Marseille Hugo Sport ISBN 978 2 7556 0183 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Olympique de Marseille Official site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Olympique de Marseille amp oldid 1139624349, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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