AS Corbeil-Essonnes (football)
Full name | Association Sportive de Corbeil-Essonnes |
---|---|
Short name | ASCE |
Founded | 1951 |
Dissolved | 2016 |
Stadium | Stade Albert Mercier Stade de Robinson |
Website | Club website |
Association Sportive de Corbeil-Essonnes was a football team located in Corbeil-Essonnes, France.[1] Founded in 1951, it was the football section of the parent multi-sport club AS Corbeil-Essonnes, but the section stopped operations in 2016.[2] The colours of the team were green and white.[3]
History
AS Corbeil-Essonnes was founded in 1951 as the product of a merger between FC Corbeil and Sporting Club Essonne.[1] The highest tier it played at in its history was the Division 2, which it reached in the 1980–81 and 1982–83 seasons.[2] The furthest Corbeil-Essonnes progressed in the Coupe de France was the round of 64, achieving this feat in the 1960–61 and 1984–85 editions of the tournament.[3]
In 2016, the football section of AS Corbeil-Essonnes closed down.[2]
Managerial history
- Joseph Mercier [fr]
- 1970–1979: José Garcia [fr]
- 1979–1980: Bernard Deferrez [fr]
- 1982–1983: Osvaldo Piazza
- 1988–1989: André Bodji [fr]
- 1993–1994: Camille Choquier
- 1994–1998: Rudi Garcia
- 2001–2003: Isaac N'Gata
Notable former players
- François Blin [fr]
- Frédéric Bompard
- Demba Diagouraga
- Rudi Garcia
- Attilio Moretti [fr]
- Guy Nosibor
- Stéphane Persol
- Osvaldo Piazza
- Walid Regragui
- Djamel Zidane
Honours
Honour | No. | Years |
---|---|---|
Division d'Honneur Paris | 3 | 1959–60, 1974–75, 1996–97 |
Division 3 North Group | 1 | 1981–82 |
References
- ^ a b "Histoire & Palmarès" [History & Awards]. AS Corbeil-Essonnes (in French). Archived from the original on 2010-11-02. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
- ^ a b c d "CORBEIL-ESSONNES". Stat Football Club France (in French). Archived from the original on 2016-04-16. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
- ^ a b "Football - Corbeil-Essonnes". LesSports.info (in French). Archived from the original on 2017-08-22. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
External links
- Club website
- v
- t
- e
- Abbeville
- Aix-en-Provence
- Alès
- Ancenis
- Angers
- Angoulême
- Antibes
- Arles-Avignon
- Auxerre
- Avignon
- CA Bastia
- Beauvais
- Besançon
- Béziers
- Blénod
- Blois
- Bordeaux
- Brest
- Boulogne
- Bourg-en-Bresse
- Bourges
- Calais
- Cambrai
- Cannes
- Cercle Dijon
- Chambly
- Charleville
- Châteauroux
- Châtellerault
- Chaumont
- Cherbourg
- Cholet
- Club Français
- Colmar
- Concarneau
- Corbeil-Essonnes
- Creil
- Créteil
- Dijon
- Douai
- Épinal
- Entente BFN
- Évian
- Évreux
- Excelsior
- Fives
- Fontainebleau
- Forbach
- GSC Marseille
- Gazélec Ajaccio
- Gueugnon
- Haguenau
- Hazebrouck
- Hyères
- Istres
- La Ciotat
- La Roche-sur-Yon
- La Rochelle
- Le Havre
- Le Mans
- Lens
- Le Puy Foot
- Le Touquet
- Libourne-Saint-Seurin
- Lille
- Olympique Lillois
- Limoges Foot
- Longwy
- Louhans-Cuiseaux
- Lucé
- Lyon
- Lyon OU
- Malakoff
- Mantes
- Marignane
- Marseille
- Melun
- Melun-Fontainebleau
- Merlebach
- Monaco
- Montceau-les-Mines
- Montélimar
- Montluçon
- Montmorillon
- Montpellier
- Mouzon
- Mulhouse
- FC Nancy
- Nantes
- Nevers
- Nice
- Nîmes
- Niort
- Nœux-les-Mines
- Orléans
- Paris-Charenton
- Paris-Joinville
- Paris-Neuilly
- Paris Saint-Germain
- Quevilly-Rouen
- Racing Paris
- Perpignan
- Poissy
- Poitiers
- Quimper
- Reims
- Rennes
- Racing Roubaix
- Roubaix-Tourcoing
- Rouen
- Saint-Brieuc
- Saint-Dié
- Saint-Dizier
- Saint-Étienne
- Saint-Quentin
- Saint-Seurin
- Sedan
- Sète
- Sochaux
- Stade Français
- Strasbourg
- Tavaux
- Thionville
- Thonon
- Toulon
- Toulouse
- Toulouse (1937)
- Tours
- Troyes AF
- Troyes ASTS
- Valence
- Valenciennes
- Vannes
- Vauban Strasbourg
- Villefranche
- Viry-Châtillon
- Vittel
- Wasquehal
This article about a French association football club is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e