Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

2016–17 Ligue 1

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
79th season of top-tier French football
Football league season
Ligue 1
Season2016–17
Dates12 August 2016 – 20 May 2017
ChampionsMonaco
8th Ligue 1 title
8thFrench title
RelegatedLorient
Nancy
Bastia
Champions LeagueMonaco
Paris Saint-Germain
Nice
Europa LeagueLyon
Marseille
Bordeaux
Matches380
Goals991 (2.61 per match)
Top goalscorerEdinson Cavani
(35 goals)[1]
Biggest home winMonaco 6–0Nancy
(5 November 2016)
Biggest away winMetz 0–7Monaco
(7 October 2016)
Highest scoringMonaco 6–2Montpellier
(21 October 2016)
Longest winning run12 matches
Monaco[2]
Longest unbeaten run20 matches
Monaco[2]
Longest winless run13 matches
Bastia[2]
Longest losing run5 matches
Angers
Lorient
Montpellier[2]
Highest attendance65,252
Marseille 1–5Paris Saint-Germain[3]
(26 February 2017)
Lowest attendance4,319
Monaco 2–1Caen[3]
(21 December 2016)
Total attendance7,806,638[3]
Average attendance21,099[3]

The2016–17 Ligue 1 season was the 79th season since its establishment.Paris Saint-Germain were the defending champions. The fixtures were announced on 1 June 2016.[4] The season began on 12 August 2016 and ended on 20 May 2017.

On 17 May 2017, Monaco secured the title after 37 matches, their first since the1999–2000 season, the first under the Ligue 1 name and their eighth French title in total.[5][6]

Teams

[edit]

There were 20 clubs in the league, with three promoted teams fromLigue 2 replacing the three teams that were relegated fromLigue 1 following the2015–16 season. All clubs that secured Ligue 1 status for the season were subject to approval by theDNCG before becoming eligible to participate.

Stadia and locations

[edit]
Location of teams in2016–17 Ligue 1
ClubLocationVenueCapacity
AngersAngersStade Raymond Kopa17,835
BastiaBastiaStade Armand Cesari16,480
BordeauxBordeauxMatmut Atlantique42,115
CaenCaenStade Michel d'Ornano20,453
DijonDijonStade Gaston Gérard16,098
GuingampGuingampStade du Roudourou18,126
LilleVilleneuve-d'AscqStade Pierre-Mauroy50,186
LorientLorientStade du Moustoir18,890
LyonDécines-CharpieuParc OL59,186
MarseilleMarseilleStade Vélodrome67,381
MetzMetzStade Saint-Symphorien25,636
MonacoMonacoMonacoStade Louis II18,500
MontpellierMontpellierStade de la Mosson32,939
NancyTomblaineStade Marcel Picot20,087
NantesNantesStade de la Beaujoire38,285
NiceNiceAllianz Riviera35,624
Paris Saint-GermainParisParc des Princes48,712
RennesRennesRoazhon Park29,376
Saint-ÉtienneSaint-ÉtienneStade Geoffroy-Guichard42,000
ToulouseToulouseStadium Municipal35,470







Personnel and kits

[edit]
TeamManagerCaptainKit ManufacturerShirt sponsors (front)Shirt sponsors (back)Shirt sponsors (sleeve)Shorts sponsorsSocks sponsors
AngersFranceStéphane MoulinSenegalCheikh N'DoyeKappaScania (H)/Bodet (A)/Rénoval vérandas (in league cup matches), L'Atoll Angers, Brioche Pasquier,AngersLa BoucherieAlgimoussSystème UNone
BastiaPortugalRui AlmeidaFranceYannick CahuzacKappaOscaro,Collectivité Territoriale de Corse,Corsica Ferries, Vito Corse, Athys LtdPagoQwant,Haute-CorseChe Rebel Spirit Energy Drink, No PublikNone
BordeauxFranceJocelyn GourvennecCzech RepublicJaroslav PlašilPumaMon Cartable Connecté/Hôpital des Enfants du CHU de Bordeaux/Groupe Sweetcom (H)/MonAlbumPhoto.fr (A)/PSI (in league cup matches), Sports WeatherMonAlbumPhoto.fr (H)/Groupe Sweetcom (A)Heart ProtektWinamax, Pitaya ThaiNone
CaenFrancePatrice GarandeFranceJulien FéretUmbroMaisons France Confort (H)/ Campagne de France (A & 3), Künkel, Petit ForestierGroupe IDECAlticapNoneNone
DijonFranceOlivier Dall'OglioFranceCédric VarraultLottoGroupe Roger Martin (H)/Suez (A), Incendie Protection Sécurité, DVFDORAS (H)/Transalp Renouvellement (A)Leader Interim, Auteur des Williams, Coup d'PouceEngie,DalkiaCaisse d'Épargne
GuingampNew CaledoniaAntoine KombouaréFranceJimmy BriandPatrickServagroupe (H)/Aroma Celte (A), Société ADS,Breizh ColaRapidoprêtNoneBRIEUC biscuiterie, caramelerie, confiturerieNone
LilleFranceFranck Passi (caretaker)FranceRio MavubaNew BalancePartoucheVacansoleilBoulangerNo PublikNone
LorientFranceBernard CasoniFranceBenjamin LecomteAdidasB&B Hotels (H)/Jean Floc'h (A), Jean Floc'h (H)/B&B Hotels (A),Breizh ColaSalaün HolidaysRia Money TransferVirage ConseilNone
LyonFranceBruno GénésioFranceMaxime GonalonsAdidasHyundai/Veolia (in UEFA matches),Groupama, MDA ElectroménagerALILA PromoteurCegid/24Option.comIntermarchéNone
MarseilleFranceRudi GarciaFranceBafétimbi GomisAdidasIntersport (H & A)/Mutuelles du Soleil (3)BoulangerMutuelles du SoleilWinamaxNone
MetzFrancePhilippe HinschbergerFranceKévin LejeuneNikeTchad: Oasis du Sahel/Force Glass/Groupe Rega,Moselle, Théobald Automobiles, Inter-Conseil IntérimTchad: Oasis du Sahel/Force GlassBigbenE.Leclerc MoselleNone
MonacoPortugalLeonardo JardimColombiaRadamel FalcaoNikeFedcomNoneTriangle IntérimOrezzaNone
MontpellierFranceJean-Louis GassetBrazilVitorino HiltonNikeSud de France, Dyneff Gaz,Montpellier Métropole, Mutuelles du SoleilSOS MalusFAUN-EnvironnementSystème U,O'Tacos, MyproteinNone
NancyUruguayPablo CorreaMoroccoYoussouf HadjiNikeGroupe Sweetcom, Groupe dlsi, Lorraine Repro (H)/MDA Electroménager (A)Casino JOAWati BCaisse d'ÉpargneNone
NantesPortugalSérgio ConceiçãoFranceRémy RiouUmbroSynergie, Manitou, ProginovAnvoliaFlaminoWinamax, etixxNone
NiceSwitzerlandLucien FavreBrazilDanteMacronMutuelles du Soleil,Ville de Nice,Métropole Nice Côte d'AzurPizzorno EnvironnementAirton FranceWinamaxNone
Paris Saint-GermainSpainUnai EmeryBrazilThiago SilvaNikeFly EmiratesOoredooQNBNoneNone
RennesFranceChristian GourcuffPortugalPedro MendesPumaSamsic, Del Arte, Armor-Lux, Association ELABlot Immobilierrennes.frBretagne StructuresNone
Saint-ÉtienneFranceChristophe GaltierFranceLoïc PerrinLe Coq SportifEoviMcd Mutuelle,LoireBewellConnectMARKALDesjoyaux PiscinesNone
ToulouseFrancePascal DuprazDenmarkMartin BraithwaiteJomaTriangle Intérim, Natur House, LP PromotionNewrestPrévoir AssurancesSo ToulouseNone

Managerial changes

[edit]
TeamOutgoing managerManner of departureDate of vacancyPosition in tableIncoming managerDate of appointment
NantesArmeniaMichel Der ZakarianEnd of contract17 May 2016[7]Pre-seasonFranceRené Girard17 May 2016[8]
RennesFranceRolland Courbis17 May 2016FranceChristian Gourcuff17 May 2016[9]
NiceFranceClaude PuelMutual consent24 May 2016[10]SwitzerlandLucien Favre24 May 2016[11]
GuingampFranceJocelyn GourvennecSigned byBordeaux27 May 2016[12]New CaledoniaAntoine Kombouaré30 May 2016[13]
BordeauxFranceUlrich RaméEnd of contract27 May 2016FranceJocelyn Gourvennec27 May 2016[12]
Paris Saint-GermainFranceLaurent BlancResigned27 June 2016[14]SpainUnai Emery28 June 2016[15]
MarseilleFranceFranck PassiEnd of interim20 October 2016[16]12thFranceRudi Garcia20 October 2016[16]
LorientFranceSylvain RipollResigned23 October 201620thFranceBernard Casoni8 November 2016[17]
LilleFranceFrédéric Antonetti22 November 201619thFrancePatrick Collot (caretaker)22 November 2016[18]
NantesFranceRené Girard1 December 201619thPortugalSérgio Conceição8 December 2016[19]
MontpellierFranceFrédéric HantzSacked30 January 201715thFranceJean-Louis Gasset30 January 2017[20]
LilleFrancePatrick CollotEnd of interim14 February 201717thFranceFranck Passi (caretaker)14 February 2017[21]
BastiaFranceFrançois CiccoliniSacked27 February 201719thPortugalRui Almeida27 February 2017[22]

League table

[edit]
PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification or relegation
1Monaco(C)38305310731+7695Qualification for theChampions League group stage
2Paris Saint-Germain3827658327+5687
3Nice38221246336+2778Qualification for theChampions League third qualifying round
4Lyon38214137748+2967Qualification for theEuropa League group stage[a]
5Marseille381711105741+1662Qualification for theEuropa League third qualifying round[a]
6Bordeaux38151495343+1059
7Nantes38149154054−1451
8Saint-Étienne381214124142−150
9Rennes381214123642−650
10Guingamp38148164653−750
11Lille38137184047−746
12Angers38137184049−946
13Toulouse381014143741−444
14Metz381110173972−3343
15Montpellier38109194866−1839
16Dijon38813174658−1237
17Caen38107213665−2937
18Lorient(R)38106224470−2636Qualification for therelegation play-offs
19Nancy(R)3898212952−2335Relegation toLigue 2
20Bastia(D, R)38810202954−2534Relegation toNational 3[b]
Source:Ligue 1,Soccerway
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) Head-to-head goal difference; 5) Fairplay ranking.[25]
(C) Champions;(D) Disqualified;(R) Relegated
Notes:
  1. ^abSince the winners of the2016–17 Coupe de France and the2016–17 Coupe de la Ligue,Paris Saint-Germain, qualified for European competition based on league position, the spot awarded to the Coupe de France winners (Europa League group stage) was passed to the fourth-placed team and the spot awarded to the Coupe de la Ligue winners (Europa League third qualifying round) was passed to the sixth-placed team. The fifth-placed team received the spot in Europa League third qualifying round originally designated to the fourth-placed team.
  2. ^After being relegated to Ligue 2, Bastia was initially further relegated to National due to financial difficulties.[23] On 10 August 2017, the FFF announced that Bastia was denied entry to National. The club therefore took the place of its reserve team in Championnat National 3.[24]

Results

[edit]
Home \ AwayANGBASBORCAEDIJGUILILLOROLOMMETASMMHSNALFCNNICPSGRENSTETFC
Angers3–01–12–13–13–01–02–21–21–12–10–12–01–00–20–10–20–01–30–0
Bastia1–21–11–10–01–00–12–00–3[a]1–22–01–11–10–02–21–10–11–00–02–1
Bordeaux0–12–00–03–23–00–12–11–11–13–00–45–11–11–00–00–31–13–21–0
Caen2–32–00–43–31–10–13–23–21–53–00–30–21–00–21–00–60–10–21–0
Dijon3–21–20–02–03–30–01–04–21–20–01–13–32–00–10–11–33–00–12–0
Guingamp1–05–01–10–14–01–01–02–12–11–01–21–11–02–00–12–11–10–22–1
Lille1–22–12–34–21–03–00–10–10–00–21–42–11–03–01–20–11–11–11–2
Lorient1–10–31–11–02–33–11–01–01–45–10–32–20–21–20–11–22–12–11–1
Lyon2–02–11–32–04–21–31–21–43–15–01–25–14–03–23–31–21–02–04–0
Marseille3–01–00–01–01–12–02–02–00–01–01–45–13–02–12–11–52–04–00–0
Metz2–01–00–32–22–12–23–23–30–31–00–72–02–11–12–42–31–10–01–1
Monaco2–15–02–12–12–12–24–04–01–34–05–06–26–04–03–03–13–02–03–1
Montpellier1–02–14–03–21–11–10–32–01–33–10–11–20–02–31–13–01–12–10–1
Nancy2–01–00–22–01–00–21–22–30–30–04–00–30–31–10–11–23–03–10–0
Nantes2–11–00–11–03–14–10–01–00–63–20–30–11–00–21–10–21–20–01–1
Nice0–21–12–12–22–13–11–12–12–03–20–04–02–13–14–13–11–01–03–0
Paris SG2–05–02–01–13–04–02–15–02–10–03–01–12–01–02–02–24–01–10–0
Rennes1–11–21–12–01–11–02–01–01–13–21–02–31–02–01–12–20–12–01–0
Saint-Étienne2–11–02–20–11–11–03–14–02–00–02–21–13–10–01–10–10–51–10–0
Toulouse4–04–14–10–10–02–11–13–21–20–01–23–11–01–10–11–12–00–00–3
Source:Ligue 1
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.
For upcoming matches, an "a" indicates there is an article about the rivalry between the two participants.
Notes:
  1. ^Match awarded 3–0 to Lyon due to the match being abandoned at half-time, with no score, when Bastia fans stormed the pitch and attacked the Lyon players.[26]

Relegation play-offs

[edit]

The 2016–17 season saw the return ofrelegation play-offs between the 18th placed Ligue 1 team,Lorient, and the 3rd placedLigue 2 team,Troyes, on a two-legged confrontation.

Troyes2–1Lorient
Report
Attendance: 14,081[27]
Referee:Ruddy Buquet

Lorient0–0Troyes
Report
Attendance: 16,000[28]

Troyes won 2–1 on aggregate and were promoted to2017–18 Ligue 1; Lorient were relegated to2017–18 Ligue 2.

Season statistics

[edit]

Top goalscorers

[edit]
RankPlayerClubGoals[1]
1UruguayEdinson CavaniParis Saint-Germain35
2FranceAlexandre LacazetteLyon28
3ColombiaRadamel FalcaoMonaco21
4FranceBafétimbi GomisMarseille20
5ItalyMario BalotelliNice15
FranceKylian MbappéMonaco
CroatiaIvan SantiniCaen
FranceFlorian ThauvinMarseille
9FranceNicolas de PrévilleLille14
BeninSteve MouniéMontpellier

Hat-tricks

[edit]
Main article:List of Ligue 1 hat-tricks
PlayerClubAgainstResultDate
FranceAlexandre LacazetteLyonNancy3–0 (A)14 August 2016
TurkeyMevlüt ErdinçMetzNantes3–0 (A)11 September 2016
UruguayEdinson Cavani4Paris Saint-GermainCaen6–0 (A)16 September 2016
ChadCasimir NingaMontpellierDijon3–3 (A)1 October 2016
FranceAlassane PléaNiceMetz4–2 (A)24 October 2016
ColombiaRadamel FalcaoMonacoBordeaux4–0 (A)10 December 2016
SwedenOla ToivonenToulouseLorient3–2 (H)10 December 2016
FranceBafétimbi GomisMarseilleMontpellier5–1 (H)27 January 2017
FranceKylian MbappéMonacoMetz5–0 (H)11 February 2017
FranceFlorian ThauvinMarseilleCaen5–1 (A)30 April 2017
FranceNicolas de PrévilleLilleNantes3–0 (H)20 May 2017
Note

4Player scored 4 goals

Clean sheets

[edit]
RankPlayerClubClean
sheets[29]
1FranceYohann PeléMarseille18
2CroatiaDanijel SubašićMonaco17
3GermanyKevin TrappParis Saint-Germain15
4FranceBenoît CostilRennes12
PortugalAnthony LopesLyon
6FranceYoan CardinaleNice11
FranceStéphane RuffierSaint-Étienne
8FranceAlban LafontToulouse10
9FranceCédric CarrassoBordeaux9
FranceThomas DidillonMetz

Awards

[edit]
See also:Trophées UNFP du football
Award[30]WinnerClub
Player of the SeasonUruguayEdinson CavaniParis Saint-Germain
Young Player of the SeasonFranceKylian MbappéMonaco
Goalkeeper of the SeasonCroatiaDanijel SubašićMonaco
Goal of the SeasonNetherlandsMemphis DepayLyon
Manager of the SeasonPortugalLeonardo JardimMonaco
Team of the Year[30]
GoalkeeperCroatiaDanijel Subašić (Monaco)
DefendersFranceDjibril Sidibé (Monaco)PolandKamil Glik (Monaco)BrazilThiago Silva (Paris Saint-Germain)FranceFerland Mendy (Lyon)
MidfieldersIvory CoastJean Michaël Seri (Nice)ItalyMarco Verratti (Paris Saint-Germain)PortugalBernardo Silva (Monaco)
ForwardsFranceKylian Mbappé (Monaco)UruguayEdinson Cavani (Paris Saint-Germain)FranceAlexandre Lacazette (Lyon)

Attendances

[edit]

These are the average attendances of the teams.

PosTeamTotalHighLowAverageChange
1Paris Saint-Germain861,02047,92945,317n/a
2Marseille758,06165,25239,898n/a
3Lyon744,24857,05039,171n/a
4Lille560,25740,48529,487n/a
5Saint-Étienne490,26337,02925,803n/a
6Bordeaux460,12741,26524,217n/a
7Nantes439,88632,85823,152n/a
8Nice436,03533,19022,949n/a
9Rennes431,08229,05422,689n/a
10Nancy332,80120,08717,516n/a
11Toulouse324,29429,42517,068n/a
12Caen300,11920,05415,796n/a
13Metz291,50821,00915,343n/a
14Guingamp281,00318,03314,790n/a
15Montpellier234,76322,21712,356n/a
16Angers227,12115,90911,954n/a
17Lorient224,80215,88411,832n/a
18Dijon192,43313,41610,128n/a
19Monaco180,48516,0499,499n/a
20Bastia178,68213,1359,405n/a
League total0000n/a

Source:worldfootball.net

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"French Ligue 1 Statistics". Ligue1.com. Retrieved26 December 2022.
  2. ^abcd"French Ligue 1 2016-2017 Longest Sequences Table - Statto.com". statto.com.Archived from the original on 22 December 2016. Retrieved21 December 2016.
  3. ^abcd"French Ligue 1 Statistics – ESPN FC". espnfc.com. Retrieved21 December 2016.
  4. ^"The LFP has ratified the Ligue 1 calendar for season 2016–17 – check out the key dates!".www.ligue1.com. 1 June 2016. Retrieved1 June 2016.
  5. ^"Prince Albert II, boss Leonardo Jardim hail Monaco's Ligue 1 title".ESPN. 17 May 2017. Retrieved18 May 2017.
  6. ^"Monaco 2 St Etienne 0".BBC Sport. 17 May 2017. Retrieved18 May 2017.
  7. ^"Nantes : Michel Der Zakarian a annoncé son départ en fin de saison".lequipe.fr. 24 April 2016. Retrieved11 May 2016.
  8. ^"René Girard, entraîneur du FC Nantes".fcnantes.com (in French). 11 May 2016. Retrieved11 May 2016.
  9. ^"Christian Gourcuff, nouvel entraîneur du Stade Rennais F.C. !".staderennais.com (in French). 17 May 2016. Retrieved17 May 2016.
  10. ^"Communiqué du club et de Claude Puel".ogcnice.com. 24 May 2016. Retrieved24 May 2016.
  11. ^"Favre nouvel entraîneur de l'OGC Nice".ogcnice.com (in French). 24 May 2016. Archived fromthe original on 27 May 2016. Retrieved24 May 2016.
  12. ^ab"Accord trouvé entre Guingamp et Bordeaux pour la mutation de Jocelyn Gourvennec".L'Equipe.fr. 27 May 2016. Retrieved27 May 2016.
  13. ^"Antoine Kombouaré, nouvel entraîneur d'En Avant de Guingamp".eaguingamp.com. 30 May 2016. Retrieved30 May 2016.
  14. ^"Paris St-Germain: Laurent Blanc leaves position as manager".BBC Sport. 27 June 2016.
  15. ^"Paris St-Germain: Former Sevilla boss Unai Emery appointed on two-year deal".BBC Sport. 28 June 2016.
  16. ^ab"Marseille: Rudi Garcia named new coach of Ligue 1 club".BBC Sport. 20 October 2016.
  17. ^"Bernard Casoni becomes new manager of struggling Ligue 1 side Lorient". ESPN. 9 November 2016.
  18. ^"Manager departs Ligue 1 strugglers Lille". Pulse Nigeria. 23 November 2016.
  19. ^"Nantes name Sergio Conceicao as new coach after Rene Girard exit". ESPN. 8 December 2016.
  20. ^"Ligue 1 : Montpellier évince son entraîneur, Frédéric Hantz". Le Monde. 30 January 2017.
  21. ^"Lille name Franck Passi interim boss amid Marcelo Bielsa reports". ESPN. 15 February 2017.
  22. ^"Bastia : François Ciccolini viré, Rui Almeida le remplace (officiel)" (in French). lequipe.fr. 27 February 2017.
  23. ^"FIN D'UN LONG FEUILLETON, BASTIA EN NATIONAL 1 ET LE PARIS FC REPÊCHÉ EN L2" (in French).
  24. ^"Le groupe de repreneurs jette l'éponge, Bastia évoluera en National 3" (in French). eurosport.fr. 10 August 2017.
  25. ^"League Table". Ligue1.com. Retrieved12 August 2016.
  26. ^"Ligue1.com – Bastia forfeit abandoned OL clash".Ligue 1. 5 May 2017. Retrieved6 May 2017.
  27. ^"Troyes vs. Lorient".Soccerway. 25 May 2017. Retrieved28 May 2017.
  28. ^"Lorient vs. Troyes".Soccerway. 28 May 2017. Retrieved28 May 2017.
  29. ^"Statistical Leaders – 2016".FOX Sports. Retrieved13 July 2017.
  30. ^ab"Palmarès".Trophées UNFP du Football (in French). Retrieved6 August 2019.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toLigue 1 season 2016-2017.
Division 1
(1932–2002)
Ligue 1
(2002–present)
Domestic leagues
Women's domestic leagues
Domestic cups
Women's domestic cups
Club seasons
Ligue 1
Ligue 2
D1 Féminine
201617 in European men's football (UEFA)
Domestic leagues
Domestic cups
League cups
Supercups
UEFA competitions
International competitions
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2016–17_Ligue_1&oldid=1316504104"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp