GOAL FC

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GOAL FC
160px
Full name Grand Ouest Association Lyonnaise Football Club
Founded 2000; 24 years ago (2000) (as Monts d'Or)
2020; 4 years ago (2020) (as GOAL FC)
Ground Stade Ludovic Giuly,
Chasselay
Ground Capacity 5000
Chairman Jocelyn Fontanel
Olivier Delorme
Manager Fabien Pujo
Website Club home page

Grand Ouest Association Lyonnaise Football Club (short: GOAL FC, or Goal FC) is a French association football club founded in 2000. They compete in the Championnat National from 2023–24 after achieving promotion from Championnat National 2 in 2022–23.

History

Founded in 2000 as Beaujolais Monts d'Or, the club became Monts d'Or Azergues in 2005 and Monts d'Or Anse Foot in 2017.[1] The club took its current name in 2020 when it merged with smaller amateur clubs Tassin FC, Champagne Sport FC and Futsal Saône Monts d'Or. The new club had over 1,800 registered players across all age groups and activities, making it France's largest.[2][3] They are based in the towns of Chasselay, Anse, Tassin-la-Demi-Lune, and Champagne-au-Mont-d'Or in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region, and their main home stadium is the Stade Ludovic Giuly in Chasselay, named after France international Ludovic Giuly.

On the pitch, the club won the fifth-tier Championnat de France Amateur 2 in 2009–10. In January 2013, they announced the signing of Lyon-born former France international and FC Barcelona player Ludovic Giuly from June.[4] He scored in a draw with FC Istres of Ligue 2 in the last 32 of the Coupe de France on 4 January 2014, which his team won on penalties.[5] Eighteen days later in the last 16, held at Olympique Lyonnais's Stade de Gerland, the team lost 3–0 at home to Giuly's former club AS Monaco FC, for whom Radamel Falcao scored twice.[6] Also in January 2014, former France international and OL mainstay Sidney Govou joined the club.[7]

In May 2019, former Brazil international and OL player Cris was hired as manager,[8] leaving two years later for Championnat National club Le Mans FC.[9] Another of his former teammates, France international Anthony Réveillère, was director of football from 2020 to 2022.[10] The club won promotion to the third-tier Championnat National for the first time as group winners in 2022–23, after defeating Stade Bordelais 3–1 on 3 June 2023.[11]

Honours

Current squad

As of 15 August, 2023 [12]

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

No. Position Player
1 France GK Antoine Philippon
3 France DF Adrien Julloux
5 Comoros DF Kassim M'Dahoma
6 France MF Loïc Dufau
7 France MF Enzo Reale
8 France MF Romain Caumet
9 France FW Thibault Rambaud
10 France MF Thibaut Lemaître
11 France FW Jonathan Mambu
12 France FW Malick Assef
14 Cape Verde FW Alexis Gonçalves Pereira
No. Position Player
16 France GK Erwan Drais
17 France DF Lucas Camelo
18 France DF Mathis Louiserre
19 France DF Hichem Khoutri
20 France MF Chafik Abbas
22 France DF Oumar Camara
23 France DF Nathan Tanard
24 France MF Léo Fichten
26 France FW Loïc Socka Bongué
28 France DF Tom Meynadier
29 France FW Florian Raspentino

References

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External links