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Stade Brestois 29

Stade Brestois 29, commonly known as Stade Brestois or simply Brest,[a] is a French professional football club based in Brest. It was founded in 1950 following the merger of five local patronages, including Armoricaine de Brest, founded in 1903.

Brest
Full nameStade Brestois 29
Nickname(s)Les Pirates (The Pirates)
Les Ti’Zefs[1]
Founded1903; 120 years ago (1903) (as Armoricaine de Brest)
26 June 1950; 73 years ago (1950-06-26) (as Stade brestois)
1982; 41 years ago (1982) (as Brest Armorique FC)
GroundStade Francis-Le Blé
Capacity15,931
PresidentDenis Le Saint
ManagerEric Roy
LeagueLigue 1
2022–23Ligue 1, 14th of 20
WebsiteClub website
Current season

In its early years, the club made a rapid rise in the hierarchy of regional football, to the point of being promoted to the French Amateur Championship, the third level of French football, in 1958. The club joined the Second Division in 1970, then finally reached the First Division in 1979. It experienced its sporting peak between 1981 and 1991 under the presidency of François Yvinec, playing nine seasons in the elite in ten years. In 1991, the club was demoted before filing for bankruptcy a few months later. The club only returned to the second division in 2004 and Ligue 1 in 2010. At the end of the 2012–2013 season, it had respectively thirteen and seventeen seasons in the French First and Second divisions.[2]

The Brest club has been chaired since 10 May 2016 by entrepreneur Denis Le Saint.

Following the 2018–19 season, the club has played in Ligue 1, the top division of French football.

History edit

Sources do not agree as to the date of the club's creation. According to the version presented by the current club, it was born in 1950 from the merger of five local patronages.[3] However, the Stade Brestois when it was created took over the structures and the place of Armoricaine de Brest, founded in 1903, of which it would therefore be the direct heir.[citation needed]

Armoricaine de Brest (1903–1950) edit

The sports section of Saint Louis patronage was created in 1903 by taking the name of Armoricaine de Brest and adopting a motto: "Pen Huel" ("Heads up" in Breton). Before the First World War, 500 young people and 400 children attended the various patronage activities: military preparation, shooting, football, athletics, men's gymnastics, theatre, choir, brass band, study circles. The war thinned the ranks of the Armoricans but activities quickly resumed.[citation needed]

In 1922, Father Cozanet had a stadium built at Petit Paris, on the site of the current Stade Francis-Le Blé, a grandstand still bearing the Armorican motto (the Pen Huel stand) as its name. The stadium was inaugurated on 9 February 1923 during a meeting between the Armoricaine and the Stade Français. From the ranks of the Armorican, between the wars, French internationals Alexis Thépot, Robert Coat and Jean Guéguen emerged.[citation needed]

The patronage of the Armorican contested the 16th finals of the Coupe de France in 1921 and 1927, the 32nd finals in 1923, 1926, 1928, 1930, 1931 and 1935. In 1926, the Armoricaine took away the title of champion of France patronage by winning in the final against Saint-Jean-de-Luz (3-0). The goalkeeper Alexis Thépot, who obtained a selection while he was part of the Armoricaine squad in 1927 against England, is one of the club's brightest players during this period.[citation needed]

The rise of the Stade Brestois (1950–1982) edit

In 1950, the merger initiated by Canon Balbous between five Catholic patronages (the Armoricaine de Saint-Louis, the Avenir de Saint-Martin, the Flamme du Pilier Rouge, the Milice de Saint-Michel and the Jeune de Saint-Marc) gave birth to Stade Brest. One of the objectives of this merger of Catholic teams is to supplant the great Brest club of the time, AS Brest, which is secular.[citation needed]

At its birth, the Stade Brestois had as President (then as Honorary President until his death in 1998) Jean Offret.[citation needed]

Taking over the place of Armoricaine in the first division of Brittany, the Stadium was promoted in Promotion d'honneur in 1951, in regional honour division (just created) in 1952 before joining the Honour Division (1953). Stade Brestois finally reached the French Amateur Championship (CFA) in 1958, taking advantage of the withdrawal of the Voltigeurs de Châteaubriant. The club is finally evolving at the same level as its rival AS Brest. In 1963, the club went back down to the honor division, but returned to the CFA in 1966. Continuing its rise in the hierarchy of French football, the Stade Brestois then acceded to the second division following its enlargement in 1970.[citation needed]

In 1979, the Stade Brestois was promoted to the Division 1 for the first time in its history. This apprenticeship year ends with a last place in the standings, but Stade goes back up the following season. The club, whose new president is called François Yvinec, is this time quite comfortably in Division 1. Despite a certain instability in the post of coach, the Breton club confirmed its place in the elite during the following seasons.[citation needed]

The peak with the Brest Armorique then the brutal fall (1982–1991) edit

In 1983, President François Yvinec decided to change the name of the club to that of FC Brest Armorique in order to better specify the geographical location of the club. The year 1986 is a turning point in the life of the club. From this season, the Bretons embark on the path of "football-business" by recruiting South American stars, who after a fanfare debut allow them to reach a historic (and still unmatched) 8th place in Division 1 in 1987. However, behind the scenes, the rupture between the president and the coach Raymond Keruzoré leads to the resignation of the latter, then to the withdrawal of the main sponsor, the Leclerc stores.[citation needed]

Young Paul Le Guen, Vincent Guérin and Patrick Colleter are not enough to keep the club going, which went down to Division 2 in 1988 with its promising young generation. It was against the Racing Club de Strasbourg that they regained their place in the elite a year later after play-offs which remain as a great moment in the history of the club.[citation needed]

Back in the first division, the Brest team is made up of talented young players such as Corentin Martins, David Ginola, the Paraguayan Roberto Cabañas or the future world champion Stéphane Guivarc'h, who allow the club to rank well in the elite. But in 1991, despite the 11th place obtained by Brest in the league, the club's significant deficit led to its administrative relegation to the Second Division.[4]

The club on the banks of the Penfeld ended up imploding in December of that same year. During his last match with the rival Guingamp, the invasion of the lawn by the exasperated Brest supporters forces David Ginola to call for calm so that the match can resume. The results of matches played by the club since the start of the competition are void. The club, whose liabilities are estimated at 150 million francs, filed for bankruptcy.[5]

The professional team is dissolved, the Brest players are released. The reserve team, which then plays in the third division, becomes the pennant team.[citation needed]

The years in amateur championships (1991–2004) edit

In 1993, the club was promoted to the brand new National 1 championship. Following the merger of the two National groups in 1997, the Stade Brestois was relegated to the French Amateur Championship, where three seasons remained.[citation needed]

After ten years in the amateur championships, the Breton club, which regained its original name (in 1993), went back to the National championship in 2000, where four seasons remained.[citation needed]

The rebirth of Stade Brestois (2004–2013) edit

In 2004, led by a young Franck Ribéry, the club secured promotion to Ligue 2, the second division of French football. The club managed to stay at this level in the following years. However, Brest was not a serious candidate for promotion until the end of the decade. The 2009–10 season saw the Breton club, coached by Alex Dupont, finish in second place, which secured automatic promotion to Ligue 1, following a 2–0 victory against Tours on 30 April 2010. In addition, the team had a good run in the Coupe de France, eventually falling in the round of 16 to RC Lens in extra time.[citation needed]

The club managed to ensure its position in the top division, obtained on 29 May 2011 despite a defeat at home against Toulouse. During the 2011–12 season, Brest secured its place in the first division with a win over Évian on the final day of the season. It was also the club's first away win during the campaign.[citation needed]

Players edit

Current squad edit

As of 25 September 2023[6]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF   FRA Bradley Locko
3 DF   FRA Lilian Brassier
4 DF   MAR Achraf Dari
5 DF   FRA Brendan Chardonnet (captain)
7 FW   URU Martín Satriano (on loan from Inter Milan)
8 MF   FRA Hugo Magnetti
9 FW   BEN Steve Mounié
10 FW   FRA Romain Del Castillo
11 FW   FRA Axel Camblan
12 DF   CIV Luck Zogbé
14 FW   FRA Adrien Lebeau
16 GK   FRA Yan Marillat
19 DF   FRA Jordan Amavi (on loan from Marseille)
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 MF   FRA Pierre Lees-Melou (vice-captain)
21 FW   ALG Billal Brahimi (on loan from Nice)
22 FW   FRA Jérémy Le Douaron
23 MF   MLI Kamory Doumbia (on loan from Reims)
25 DF   FRA Julien Le Cardinal (on loan from Lens)
27 DF   FRA Kenny Lala
28 MF   FRA Jonas Martin
29 MF   POR Mathias Pereira Lage
30 GK   FRA Grégoire Coudert
40 GK   NED Marco Bizot
44 DF   FRA Josué Escartin
45 MF   FRA Mahdi Camara

Out 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
18 MF   FRA Hiang'a Mbock (at Caen until end of season)
70 MF   ENG Karamoko Dembélé (at Blackpool until end of season)
97 FW   FRA Taïryk Arconte (at Rodez until end of season)

Notable players edit

Below are the notable former and current players who have represented Stade Brestois in league and international competition since the club's foundation in 1903. To appear in the section below, a player must have either played in at least 80 official matches for the club or represented their country's national team either while playing for Brest or after departing the club. For a complete list of Stade Brestois players, see Category:Stade Brestois 29 players.

Club officials edit

Position Name
Manager   Eric Roy
Assistant Manager   Julien Lachuer
First-Team Coach   Bruno Grougi
Goalkeeping Coach   Christophe Revel
Conditioning Coach   Yvan Bourgis
Sporting Director   Grégory Lorenzi
Team Coordinator   Matthieu Jézéquel
Doctor   Michel Kergastel
Physiotherapist   Gilles Baudouin
  Erwan Orlach
Scout   Thierry Bonalair
Head of Marketing   Pascal Robert
Marketing Staff   Jean-Luc Le Magueresse
Board Member   Daniel Le Roux
  Yvon Kermarec

Coaches edit

Club honours edit

History of last 24 years edit

Season Level Div. Pos. GP W D L GF GA Points Eur.Cup Entrance French Cup French League Cup Av.Attendance[7]
as Stade Brestois 29
1997–98 4 CFA-D 9. 34 12 10 12 45 40 46 --- qual.stage 530
1998–99 9. 34 12 12 10 44 38 48 qual.stage
1999–00 1. 34 20 9 5 50 31 69 R. 1/32
2000–01 3 Championnat National 6. 38 19 6 13 64 48 63 qual.stage
2001–02 13. 38 11 11 16 40 43 44 qual.stage
2002–03 10. 38 13 11 14 49 44 50 qual.stage
2003–04 2. 38 20 8 10 45 30 68 R.1/8
2004–05 2 Ligue 2 9. 38 13 16 9 38 34 55 R.1/32 R.1/16 7,340'
2005–06 17. 38 9 15 14 34 48 42 R.1/8 qual.stage 6,167
2006–07 14. 38 10 15 13 40 40 45 R.1/32 qual.stage 5,932
2007–08 7. 38 15 12 11 38 38 57 R.1/16 R.1/32 5,739
2008–09 14. 38 13 6 19 45 50 45 R.1/16 qual.stage 6,334
2009–10 2. 38 20 7 11 53 34 67 R.1/8 first round 7,702
2010–11 1 Ligue 1 16. 38 11 13 14 36 43 46 R.1/32 third round 13,549
2011–12 15. 38 8 17 13 31 38 41 R.1/64 third round 13,597
2012–13 20. 38 8 5 25 32 62 29 R.1/16 third round 11,796
2013–14 2 Ligue 2 7. 38 15 11 12 38 32 56 R.1/32 third round 7,609
2014–15 6. 38 14 15 9 41 27 57 R.1/4 first round 7,557
2015–16 10. 38 12 11 15 34 41 47 qual. stage first round 6,887
2016–17 5. 38 19 8 11 58 44 65 R.1/64 second round 8,042
2017–18 38 18 11 9 58 43 65 qual. stage first round 7,458
2018–19 2. 38 21 11 6 64 35 74 R.1/64 second round 9,216
2019–20 1 Ligue 1 14. 28 8 10 10 34 37 34 R.1/64 R.1/4 13,699 (14 matches played)
2020–21 17. 38 11 8 19 50 66 41 R.1/16 x 4,496 (With 4 games played outside camera)
2021–22 11. 38 13 9 16 49 58 48 R.1/8 11,710
2022–23 14. 38 11 11 16 44 54 44 R.1/32 12,657
2023–24 TBD 34 0 0 0 0 0 0 TBC 0

Partnership edit

Since September 2011, Stade Brestois 29 sponsors its amateur American counterpart in New York City, Stade Brestois New York.[8][9]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Stade Brest, used by some English-speaking media outlets and journalists, is not a grammatically correct name for the club.

References edit

  1. ^ "#445 – Stade Brestois : les Ti'Zefs" (in French). Footnickname. 15 March 2021. Retrieved 22 December 2021.
  2. ^ Stade brestois, club profile on the Ligue de Football Professionnel websites.
  3. ^ "L'historique du Club". Stade Brestois Official Site.
  4. ^ "Saison 1990-1991 (Division 1)". Stade Brestois Official Site.
  5. ^ "Le club de Brest est mis en liquidation judiciaire et exclu du championnat de deuxième division". Le Monde. 8 December 1991.
  6. ^ "Effectif". Stade Brestois Official Site. Retrieved 5 September 2023.
  7. ^ Average attendances since 2004 from lfp.fr: Ligue 1 – Affluences par journée, par club, taux de remplissage (Ligue1 seasons), Ligue 2 – Affluences par journée, par club, taux de remplissage (Ligue2 seasons)
  8. ^ "Stade Brestois provide Bretons in NY with soccer equipment". Le Telegramme. 26 September 2011.
  9. ^ "Stade Brestois is represented in NY". Ouest France. 27 September 2011.

External links edit

  • Official website   (in French)

stade, brestois, confused, with, stade, brestois, york, commonly, known, stade, brestois, simply, brest, french, professional, football, club, based, brest, founded, 1950, following, merger, five, local, patronages, including, armoricaine, brest, founded, 1903. Not to be confused with Stade Brestois New York Stade Brestois 29 commonly known as Stade Brestois or simply Brest a is a French professional football club based in Brest It was founded in 1950 following the merger of five local patronages including Armoricaine de Brest founded in 1903 BrestFull nameStade Brestois 29Nickname s Les Pirates The Pirates Les Ti Zefs 1 Founded1903 120 years ago 1903 as Armoricaine de Brest 26 June 1950 73 years ago 1950 06 26 as Stade brestois 1982 41 years ago 1982 as Brest Armorique FC GroundStade Francis Le BleCapacity15 931PresidentDenis Le SaintManagerEric RoyLeagueLigue 12022 23Ligue 1 14th of 20WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent seasonIn its early years the club made a rapid rise in the hierarchy of regional football to the point of being promoted to the French Amateur Championship the third level of French football in 1958 The club joined the Second Division in 1970 then finally reached the First Division in 1979 It experienced its sporting peak between 1981 and 1991 under the presidency of Francois Yvinec playing nine seasons in the elite in ten years In 1991 the club was demoted before filing for bankruptcy a few months later The club only returned to the second division in 2004 and Ligue 1 in 2010 At the end of the 2012 2013 season it had respectively thirteen and seventeen seasons in the French First and Second divisions 2 The Brest club has been chaired since 10 May 2016 by entrepreneur Denis Le Saint Following the 2018 19 season the club has played in Ligue 1 the top division of French football Contents 1 History 1 1 Armoricaine de Brest 1903 1950 1 2 The rise of the Stade Brestois 1950 1982 1 3 The peak with the Brest Armorique then the brutal fall 1982 1991 1 4 The years in amateur championships 1991 2004 1 5 The rebirth of Stade Brestois 2004 2013 2 Players 2 1 Current squad 2 2 Out on loan 2 3 Notable players 3 Club officials 4 Coaches 5 Club honours 6 History of last 24 years 7 Partnership 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksHistory editSources do not agree as to the date of the club s creation According to the version presented by the current club it was born in 1950 from the merger of five local patronages 3 However the Stade Brestois when it was created took over the structures and the place of Armoricaine de Brest founded in 1903 of which it would therefore be the direct heir citation needed Armoricaine de Brest 1903 1950 edit The sports section of Saint Louis patronage was created in 1903 by taking the name of Armoricaine de Brest and adopting a motto Pen Huel Heads up in Breton Before the First World War 500 young people and 400 children attended the various patronage activities military preparation shooting football athletics men s gymnastics theatre choir brass band study circles The war thinned the ranks of the Armoricans but activities quickly resumed citation needed In 1922 Father Cozanet had a stadium built at Petit Paris on the site of the current Stade Francis Le Ble a grandstand still bearing the Armorican motto the Pen Huel stand as its name The stadium was inaugurated on 9 February 1923 during a meeting between the Armoricaine and the Stade Francais From the ranks of the Armorican between the wars French internationals Alexis Thepot Robert Coat and Jean Gueguen emerged citation needed The patronage of the Armorican contested the 16th finals of the Coupe de France in 1921 and 1927 the 32nd finals in 1923 1926 1928 1930 1931 and 1935 In 1926 the Armoricaine took away the title of champion of France patronage by winning in the final against Saint Jean de Luz 3 0 The goalkeeper Alexis Thepot who obtained a selection while he was part of the Armoricaine squad in 1927 against England is one of the club s brightest players during this period citation needed The rise of the Stade Brestois 1950 1982 edit In 1950 the merger initiated by Canon Balbous between five Catholic patronages the Armoricaine de Saint Louis the Avenir de Saint Martin the Flamme du Pilier Rouge the Milice de Saint Michel and the Jeune de Saint Marc gave birth to Stade Brest One of the objectives of this merger of Catholic teams is to supplant the great Brest club of the time AS Brest which is secular citation needed At its birth the Stade Brestois had as President then as Honorary President until his death in 1998 Jean Offret citation needed Taking over the place of Armoricaine in the first division of Brittany the Stadium was promoted in Promotion d honneur in 1951 in regional honour division just created in 1952 before joining the Honour Division 1953 Stade Brestois finally reached the French Amateur Championship CFA in 1958 taking advantage of the withdrawal of the Voltigeurs de Chateaubriant The club is finally evolving at the same level as its rival AS Brest In 1963 the club went back down to the honor division but returned to the CFA in 1966 Continuing its rise in the hierarchy of French football the Stade Brestois then acceded to the second division following its enlargement in 1970 citation needed In 1979 the Stade Brestois was promoted to the Division 1 for the first time in its history This apprenticeship year ends with a last place in the standings but Stade goes back up the following season The club whose new president is called Francois Yvinec is this time quite comfortably in Division 1 Despite a certain instability in the post of coach the Breton club confirmed its place in the elite during the following seasons citation needed The peak with the Brest Armorique then the brutal fall 1982 1991 edit In 1983 President Francois Yvinec decided to change the name of the club to that of FC Brest Armorique in order to better specify the geographical location of the club The year 1986 is a turning point in the life of the club From this season the Bretons embark on the path of football business by recruiting South American stars who after a fanfare debut allow them to reach a historic and still unmatched 8th place in Division 1 in 1987 However behind the scenes the rupture between the president and the coach Raymond Keruzore leads to the resignation of the latter then to the withdrawal of the main sponsor the Leclerc stores citation needed Young Paul Le Guen Vincent Guerin and Patrick Colleter are not enough to keep the club going which went down to Division 2 in 1988 with its promising young generation It was against the Racing Club de Strasbourg that they regained their place in the elite a year later after play offs which remain as a great moment in the history of the club citation needed Back in the first division the Brest team is made up of talented young players such as Corentin Martins David Ginola the Paraguayan Roberto Cabanas or the future world champion Stephane Guivarc h who allow the club to rank well in the elite But in 1991 despite the 11th place obtained by Brest in the league the club s significant deficit led to its administrative relegation to the Second Division 4 The club on the banks of the Penfeld ended up imploding in December of that same year During his last match with the rival Guingamp the invasion of the lawn by the exasperated Brest supporters forces David Ginola to call for calm so that the match can resume The results of matches played by the club since the start of the competition are void The club whose liabilities are estimated at 150 million francs filed for bankruptcy 5 The professional team is dissolved the Brest players are released The reserve team which then plays in the third division becomes the pennant team citation needed The years in amateur championships 1991 2004 edit In 1993 the club was promoted to the brand new National 1 championship Following the merger of the two National groups in 1997 the Stade Brestois was relegated to the French Amateur Championship where three seasons remained citation needed After ten years in the amateur championships the Breton club which regained its original name in 1993 went back to the National championship in 2000 where four seasons remained citation needed The rebirth of Stade Brestois 2004 2013 edit In 2004 led by a young Franck Ribery the club secured promotion to Ligue 2 the second division of French football The club managed to stay at this level in the following years However Brest was not a serious candidate for promotion until the end of the decade The 2009 10 season saw the Breton club coached by Alex Dupont finish in second place which secured automatic promotion to Ligue 1 following a 2 0 victory against Tours on 30 April 2010 In addition the team had a good run in the Coupe de France eventually falling in the round of 16 to RC Lens in extra time citation needed The club managed to ensure its position in the top division obtained on 29 May 2011 despite a defeat at home against Toulouse During the 2011 12 season Brest secured its place in the first division with a win over Evian on the final day of the season It was also the club s first away win during the campaign citation needed Players editCurrent squad edit As of 25 September 2023 6 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player2 DF nbsp FRA Bradley Locko3 DF nbsp FRA Lilian Brassier4 DF nbsp MAR Achraf Dari5 DF nbsp FRA Brendan Chardonnet captain 7 FW nbsp URU Martin Satriano on loan from Inter Milan 8 MF nbsp FRA Hugo Magnetti9 FW nbsp BEN Steve Mounie10 FW nbsp FRA Romain Del Castillo11 FW nbsp FRA Axel Camblan12 DF nbsp CIV Luck Zogbe14 FW nbsp FRA Adrien Lebeau16 GK nbsp FRA Yan Marillat19 DF nbsp FRA Jordan Amavi on loan from Marseille No Pos Nation Player20 MF nbsp FRA Pierre Lees Melou vice captain 21 FW nbsp ALG Billal Brahimi on loan from Nice 22 FW nbsp FRA Jeremy Le Douaron23 MF nbsp MLI Kamory Doumbia on loan from Reims 25 DF nbsp FRA Julien Le Cardinal on loan from Lens 27 DF nbsp FRA Kenny Lala28 MF nbsp FRA Jonas Martin29 MF nbsp POR Mathias Pereira Lage30 GK nbsp FRA Gregoire Coudert40 GK nbsp NED Marco Bizot44 DF nbsp FRA Josue Escartin45 MF nbsp FRA Mahdi CamaraOut 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 Player18 MF nbsp FRA Hiang a Mbock at Caen until end of season 70 MF nbsp ENG Karamoko Dembele at Blackpool until end of season 97 FW nbsp FRA Tairyk Arconte at Rodez until end of season Notable players edit Below are the notable former and current players who have represented Stade Brestois in league and international competition since the club s foundation in 1903 To appear in the section below a player must have either played in at least 80 official matches for the club or represented their country s national team either while playing for Brest or after departing the club For a complete list of Stade Brestois players see Category Stade Brestois 29 players nbsp Jose Luis Brown nbsp Jorge Higuain nbsp Julio Cesar nbsp Gerard Buscher nbsp Patrick Colleter nbsp David Ginola nbsp Vincent Guerin nbsp Stephane Guivarc h nbsp Bernard Lama nbsp Paul Le Guen nbsp Yvon Le Roux nbsp Corentin Martins nbsp Bernard Pardo nbsp Pascal Pierre nbsp Franck Ribery nbsp Nolan Roux nbsp Roberto Cabanas nbsp Drago VabecClub officials editPosition NameManager nbsp Eric RoyAssistant Manager nbsp Julien LachuerFirst Team Coach nbsp Bruno GrougiGoalkeeping Coach nbsp Christophe RevelConditioning Coach nbsp Yvan BourgisSporting Director nbsp Gregory LorenziTeam Coordinator nbsp Matthieu JezequelDoctor nbsp Michel KergastelPhysiotherapist nbsp Gilles Baudouin nbsp Erwan OrlachScout nbsp Thierry BonalairHead of Marketing nbsp Pascal RobertMarketing Staff nbsp Jean Luc Le MagueresseBoard Member nbsp Daniel Le Roux nbsp Yvon KermarecCoaches editFrancis Chopin 1950 62 Albert Toris 1962 63 Sarkis Garabedian 1963 76 Armand Fouillen 1 1963 76 Ernest Rannou 1964 66 Alain de Martigny 1 1976 82 Dusan Nenkovic 1982 84 Robert Dewilder 1984 86 Raymond Keruzore 1986 87 Bernard Maligorne 1987 89 Slavoljub Muslin 1989 91 Armand Fouillen 2 1991 93 Yvon Le Roux 1991 93 Yves Todorov 1993 94 Pierre Garcia 1994 95 Denis Goavec 1995 97 Pascal Robert 1997 99 Alain de Martigny 2 1999 02 Sylvain Matrisciano 2002 03 Albert Rust July 2003 Mar 2006 Thierry Goudet March 2006 Dec 2006 Pascal Janin Jan 2007 Oct 2008 Gerald Baticle Nov 2008 May 2009 Alex Dupont 1 May 2009 Apr 2012 Landry Chauvin May 2012 Apr 2013 Corentin Martins interim April 2013 May 2013 Alex Dupont 2 June 2013 May 2016 Jean Marc Furlan May 2016 May 2019 Olivier Dall Oglio 2019 May 2021 Michel Der Zakarian May 2021 October 2022 Club honours editLigue 2 Champions 1980 81 Coupe de France Quarter finalist 2 1982 83 2014 15 Coupe Gambardella Winner 1990 Division d Honneur Bretagne Champions 4 1966 1972 1977 2005 Cup of Brittany Winner 1969 Championnat de France des patronages catholic football league Winner 1923History of last 24 years editSeason Level Div Pos GP W D L GF GA Points Eur Cup Entrance French Cup French League Cup Av Attendance 7 as Stade Brestois 291997 98 4 CFA D 9 34 12 10 12 45 40 46 qual stage 5301998 99 9 34 12 12 10 44 38 48 qual stage 1999 00 1 34 20 9 5 50 31 69 R 1 322000 01 3 Championnat National 6 38 19 6 13 64 48 63 qual stage2001 02 13 38 11 11 16 40 43 44 qual stage2002 03 10 38 13 11 14 49 44 50 qual stage2003 04 2 38 20 8 10 45 30 68 R 1 82004 05 2 Ligue 2 9 38 13 16 9 38 34 55 R 1 32 R 1 16 7 340 2005 06 17 38 9 15 14 34 48 42 R 1 8 qual stage 6 1672006 07 14 38 10 15 13 40 40 45 R 1 32 qual stage 5 9322007 08 7 38 15 12 11 38 38 57 R 1 16 R 1 32 5 7392008 09 14 38 13 6 19 45 50 45 R 1 16 qual stage 6 3342009 10 2 38 20 7 11 53 34 67 R 1 8 first round 7 7022010 11 1 Ligue 1 16 38 11 13 14 36 43 46 R 1 32 third round 13 5492011 12 15 38 8 17 13 31 38 41 R 1 64 third round 13 5972012 13 20 38 8 5 25 32 62 29 R 1 16 third round 11 7962013 14 2 Ligue 2 7 38 15 11 12 38 32 56 R 1 32 third round 7 6092014 15 6 38 14 15 9 41 27 57 R 1 4 first round 7 5572015 16 10 38 12 11 15 34 41 47 qual stage first round 6 8872016 17 5 38 19 8 11 58 44 65 R 1 64 second round 8 0422017 18 38 18 11 9 58 43 65 qual stage first round 7 4582018 19 2 38 21 11 6 64 35 74 R 1 64 second round 9 2162019 20 1 Ligue 1 14 28 8 10 10 34 37 34 R 1 64 R 1 4 13 699 14 matches played 2020 21 17 38 11 8 19 50 66 41 R 1 16 x 4 496 With 4 games played outside camera 2021 22 11 38 13 9 16 49 58 48 R 1 8 11 7102022 23 14 38 11 11 16 44 54 44 R 1 32 12 6572023 24 TBD 34 0 0 0 0 0 0 TBC 0Partnership editSince September 2011 Stade Brestois 29 sponsors its amateur American counterpart in New York City Stade Brestois New York 8 9 Notes edit Stade Brest used by some English speaking media outlets and journalists is not a grammatically correct name for the club References edit 445 Stade Brestois les Ti Zefs in French Footnickname 15 March 2021 Retrieved 22 December 2021 Stade brestois club profile on the Ligue de Football Professionnel websites L historique du Club Stade Brestois Official Site Saison 1990 1991 Division 1 Stade Brestois Official Site Le club de Brest est mis en liquidation judiciaire et exclu du championnat de deuxieme division Le Monde 8 December 1991 Effectif Stade Brestois Official Site Retrieved 5 September 2023 Average attendances since 2004 from lfp fr Ligue 1 Affluences par journee par club taux de remplissage Ligue1 seasons Ligue 2 Affluences par journee par club taux de remplissage Ligue2 seasons Stade Brestois provide Bretons in NY with soccer equipment Le Telegramme 26 September 2011 Stade Brestois is represented in NY Ouest France 27 September 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stade Brestois 29 Official website nbsp in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stade Brestois 29 amp oldid 1183090373, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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