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RC Strasbourg Alsace

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Association football club in France
Not to be confused withAS Strasbourg orASPV Strasbourg.
This article is about the men's football team. For the women's football team, seeRC Strasbourg Alsace (women).

Football club
RC Strasbourg
Full nameRacing Club de Strasbourg Alsace
NicknamesLe Racing
Le RCS
Les Bleu et Blanc (The Blue and Whites)[1]
Founded
  • 1906 (119 years ago) (1906)
    (asFC Neudorf)
  • 1919 (106 years ago) (1919)
    (asRacing Club de Strasbourg)
GroundStade de la Meinau
Capacity26,109
OwnerBlueCo
PresidentMarc Keller
Head coachLiam Rosenior
LeagueLigue 1
2024–25Ligue 1, 7th of 18
Websitercstrasbourgalsace.fr
Current season

Racing Club de Strasbourg Alsace, commonly known asRC Strasbourg (Alemannic German:RC Stroßburg,German:RC Straßburg;RCS) or simply justRacing, is aFrench professional association football club founded in 1906 and based in the city ofStrasbourg,Alsace. It became a professional club in 1933, and is currently playing inLigue 1, the top tier ofFrench football, having won the2016–17 Ligue 2 championship. This comes after the club was demoted to the fifth tier of French football at the conclusion of the2010–11 Championnat National season after going into financial liquidation. Renamed RC Strasbourg Alsace, they won the CFA championship in 2012–13, and became Championnat National champions in 2015–16.Stade de la Meinau has been the club's stadium since 1914.

RC Strasbourg Alsace home stadium Stade de la Meinau since 1914.

RC Strasbourg is one of six clubs to have won all three major French trophies: Division 1, nowLigue 1, in1979; theCoupe de France in1951,1966 and2001; and theCoupe de la Ligue in 1964,1997,2005 and2019. It is also among the six teams to have played more than 2,000 games in France's top flight (spanning 56 seasons)[2] and has taken part in 52 European games since 1961.[3] By contrast, it has also experienced relegation at least once a decade since the early 1950s. It has changed its manager 52 times in 75 years of professional play.

The destiny of the RC Strasbourg has always been wedded to thehistory of Alsace. Like the region, the club has changed nationality three times and has a troubled history. The club was founded when the city (and the region of Alsace-Lorraine) was part of theGerman Empire, and the club insisted on its Alsatian and popular roots from the beginning, in opposition to the first Strasbourg-based clubs which came from the German-born bourgeoisie. When Alsace was returned to France after theFirst World War, the club changed its name from 1. FC Neudorf to the current Racing Club de Strasbourg, in imitation ofPierre de Coubertin'sRacing Club de France, a clear gesture offrancophilia. RC Strasbourg players lived through theSecond World War as most Alsatians did: evacuated in 1939, annexed in 1940 and striving to avoid Nazification and incorporation in theWehrmacht between 1942 and 1944. When Alsace was definitively returned to France after the war, Strasbourg's identity switched towardsJacobinism with, for example, emotional wins in the cup in 1951 and 1966 amidst Franco-Alsatian controversies.

History

[edit]
See also:List of RC Strasbourg Alsace seasons
A Strasbourg lineup in 1919.

Founded in 1906 asFußballclub Neudorf, Racing Club de Strasbourg Alsace's history has been marked by constant periods of instability, firstly due to political issues (for the first forty years of its existence, the club played alternately in the French and German championships because of the dispute between the two countries overAlsace), and secondly due to corporate issues. In spite of this, the team was able to carve out a place for itself in the golden roll of theFrench league by winning a number of trophies, the most important of which was the championship in the1978–79 season.

Fußballclub Neudorf

[edit]
Hämmerle's Garten, Strasbourg's first field, around which theMeinau stadium would later be built.

In the early 1900s, the English export of soccer to foreign countries also reached the deepest parts of theGerman Empire (which had already established a national league called theVerbandsliga in 1902), including theReichslandAlsace-Lorraine. One of the cities most involved in this process was the capital city ofStrasbourg (which already had a football club calledStraßburger Fußball Club since 1890),[4] where several football clubs saw the light of day, includingFußballclub Neudorf, founded by a group of students from the Neudorf district,[4][5] located south of the city. The team, which was financially supported by the students' teacher,[5][6] made its debut in a match againstFC Germania[4] from the Schluthfeld district, in which it withdrew after conceding seven goals in the first forty-five minutes of play.[5]

Over the next three years, the team, renamedFußballclub Cäsar Neudorf[4] and given a corporate organizational chart to cope with the inexperience of the players,[4][7] continued to produce unconvincing results, attracting criticism and threatening to split several times.[7] Thanks to the arrival of Louis Becker as president,[7] in 1909 Neudorf was able to gain membership in theVerband Süddeutscher Fußball-Vereine, the football association in the southern part of the German Empire, which was part of the third tier of German football.[8] Neudorf began a gradual improvement in results: thanks to a highly offensive style of play, the team achieved large victories (including a 28–0 victory over Erstein, the second largest margin of victory in the history of German football),[9] which led to a double promotion within two years.[5][8] In 1914, a few weeks before promotion to the first division, Neudorf acquired its first playing field, theHämmerlé's Garten, on which theMeinau Stadium was built.[10] In the same year, all sports activities were interrupted due to the outbreak of theFirst World War.

The debut in French football

[edit]
1937 French Cup Final betweenSochaux and Strasbourg.

With the annexation ofAlsace andLorraine to France at the end of the war, it was decided to change the name of the club, which, in homage toRacing Club de France,[10] becameRacing Club de Strasbourg. In the decade following the end of hostilities, Strasbourg played in the Alsace regional championship (winning it in 1923, 1924 and 1927) and, from the 1920–21 season,[11] in theFrench Cup. In the latter competition, the team never made it past the round of 16, but in the 1925–26 season, it pulled off an upset[12] by eliminatingRed Star,[13] a team that at the time held the record for most national cups won. It was also during this period that the first wooden stands were built on the field, which later became the Meinau Stadium.[14]

In 1932, Strasbourg's management rejected a proposal to turn the team professional[15] that had just been approved by theFootball Federation. Attempts to change management's decision (including a proposal to merge with Strasbourg Red Star)[15] yielded a positive result a year later when, after a vote of 126 for, 2 against and 2 abstentions,[14] the team was finally allowed to become professional and debut in thesecond division.

After winning the playoffs against rivalsMulhouse andSaint-Étienne, the Alsatians battled withSochaux for the title in their debut in the top flight. Initially, Strasbourg had the upper hand, finishing first in the first half of the season,[16][17] but lost the head-to-head match on the road[16] to Sochaux, who went on to win the title despite losing the final match.[16][17] In the following championships, the team, boosted by German strikerOskar Rohr, confirmed its status as a mid-table team, while in the1936–37 Coupe de France, Strasbourg reached thefinal: again, Sochaux prevailed, winning 2–1 in a comeback.[18]

Re-annexation to the German Reich

[edit]
During the German occupation ofAlsace inWorld War II, Strasbourg played in theGauliga Elsaß.

At the beginning of World War II, with the occupation of France by theThird Reich army, the team was reconstituted as an amateur club by some players who had fled to the south of the country.[19] After winning the regional championship, the team was introduced into the German football system,[19] taking the nameRasensportclub Straßburg and playing in theGauliga Elsaß.[20]

From then until the liberation ofAlsace, Strasbourg would play in four editions of theGauliga, finishing second three times in a row (losing the title toMulhouse in a playoff in the first year)[20][21][22] and participating in the1941–42 edition of the German Cup, where they were eliminated by Mulhouse in the first round.[23] Notable during this period was the heated rivalry withRed Star Strasbourg, renamedSS Strasbourg after their affiliation with the regime'spolitical police.[24]

The postwar period

[edit]

At the end of hostilities, with the return ofAlsace to the political control of France, Strasbourg was reintegrated into the same football system in which it had participated before the outbreak of the war. After finishing twelfth in the league at the end of the war, Strasbourg came close to adouble in the1946–47 season, finishing among the contenders for the championship[25] and competing for theFrench Cup until the final,[19] where they were defeated byLille.[26]

In the following seasons, Strasbourg went through a period of mixed results: in the1948–49 championship, the team, relegated on the field, avoided relegation thanks toColmar's abandonment of its professional status.[14] Two seasons later, the team won its first official trophy by winning the1950–51 edition of the French Cup: this was possible thanks to a victory in the final againstValenciennes,[27] which sparked celebrations throughout Alsace,[28] culminating in the team being welcomed by 50,000 fans.[29]

Winning this trophy did not bring stability to the team's results, as they dropped to the second division three times during the 1950s (1952,1957, and1960), only to return to the top flight immediately afterwards. The only notable result of the decade came in the1954–55 season, when Strasbourg, led byErnst Stojaspal,[19] contended for the top spots in the standings,[30] finishing fourth overall, and were eliminated byLille in the French Cup semifinals.[31]

The debut in Europe

[edit]

In the early 1960s, Strasbourg had the chance to make their debut on the European stage, playing in the1961–62 edition of theFairs Cup, where they were eliminated in the first round byMTK Hungária. Thanks to subsidies from the municipality,[32] Strasbourg experienced a period of improved results, culminating in the1964–65 season, during which the team fought for the title: in second place, one point behindNantes with four games to play,[33] the Alsatians drew the head-to-head match and then succumbed in the final, finishing fifth.[33][34] In the same season, the team had an excellent performance in the Fairs Cup, reaching the quarterfinals (after eliminating the likes ofAC Milan andBarcelona, the latter equalizing in the dying seconds of the second leg[35] and being eliminated after a 0–0 draw in thereplay), where they were eliminated byManchester United,[36] who had already guaranteed qualification to the semifinals from the first leg (thanks to a 5–0 away win).

The following season, Strasbourg reached the final of the French Cup for the fourth time in the club's history, defeatingToulouse after equalizing with a minute remaining and then winning in extra time.[37] In the final, the Alsatians faced newly crowned French champions Nantes, whom they defeated 1–0.[38][39] In the same season, Strasbourg also participated in the Fairs Cup, where they met AC Milan in the first round. After losing 1–0 at theSan Siro, the Alsatians won the return leg 2–1,[40] forcing a play-off, which Milan won on a draw after the match ended 1–1.[41]

In the following seasons, Strasbourg's results in competitions were unremarkable (except for a fifth-place finish in the1969–70 season), so much so that the club's management decided to merge the club with the amateur teamPierrots Vauban,[42] renaming itRacing Pierrots Strasbourg Meinau.[43] However, the results were unsatisfactory: in the first season under the new name (1970-71), the team was relegated toDivision 2, only to return to the top flight the following year. A second relegation in the1975–76 season led to a split in the club with the re-founding ofPierrots Vauban[34] and the restoration of theRacing Club de Strasbourg name.[43]

Championship title

[edit]
The starting lineup of the1978–79 French champions Strasbourg.

After regaining promotion by winning the second division after a playoff with the top team in Group A (Monaco), Strasbourg started the1977-78 season with a virtually unchanged lineup from the previous year,[44] with the addition ofJacques Novi,Francis Piasecki (both fromParis Saint-Germain),[45] andRaymond Domenech.Gilbert Gress, a former Strasbourg center forward in the 1960s who would become the most representative coach in the club's history,[46][47] was also brought in to lead the team. Under Gress, the team adopted a tactic based on collective play,[48][49] based on the4-3-3 formation, which included the use ofGemmrich, Tanter andVergnes as attackers.[50] After a slow start, Strasbourg gradually regained positions and placed themselves among the contenders for a place in theUEFA zone, which then consisted of only two teams.[51] A late collapse byOlympique Marseille allowed the Alsatians to move into third place with three days to go: a 3–2 win atLaval on the final day[52] secured them the final spot to qualify for their third European competition.[50]

Riding the wave of this success, Strasbourg prepared for the next season without making too many changes to the squad, only buyingRoger Jouve fromNice and replacing Vergnes[50][53] with the youngerWagner. The team started the championship in better form than the previous year, taking the lead on the fifth day[54] and maintaining it throughout the season, although a defeat againstSaint-Étienne in the return leg had favored theVerts' approach.[54] A brace by Wagner and a goal by Ehrlacher[55] in the final match againstLyon (on June 1, 1979) sparked celebrations throughoutAlsace,[49] which culminated the following day when the team was welcomed by 200,000 fans at Strasbourg station.[49]

The decline

[edit]

Immediately after winning the national title, the team's leadership was taken over by the politicianAndré Bord, repeatedly elected Secretary of State for the Ministry of the Interior and the Ministry for Veterans in the governments installed between 1966 and 1978[56] and former president of the team's multisport section.[57] The new president almost immediately came into conflict with Gress by organizing a transfer window that brought to Strasbourg outstanding players such as the national playerFrançois Bracci and the top scorerCarlos Bianchi, who, however, did not meet the tactical requirements of the coach.[48] This climate of conflict at the top of the club, known as theAffaire Gress-Bord,[58] also affected the performance of the team, which, with a center forward incompatible with Gress's tactics based on the collective,[48] failed to defend the title and, as compensation, reached the quarterfinals of theEuropean Cup, where they were eliminated byAjax.

The tensions between Gress and Bord reached a climax at the beginning of the1980–81 season: after a very bad start in the championship, the fans, siding with Gress,[47][48] began to harshly challenge the club,[46][48] demanding the resignation of Bord,[48][58] who, supported also by prominent politicians such asJacques Chirac,[47] remained at the helm of the club and fired the coach.[6][47] This event marked the end of Strasbourg's golden era,[58] which saw the loss of almost all the players who had contributed to the 1979 championship[58] within a few years, replaced by important names (Didier Six,Jean-François Larios,Éric Pécout andOlivier Rouyer) who were never able to live up to expectations.[58] This was also reflected in the team's results, which stagnated in the lower mid-table positions during the first half of the 1980s until the1985–86 season, which ended with Strasbourg's relegation toDivision 2 and the resignation of Bord,[57] who leftDaniel Hechter[58] a team in the midst of corporate chaos, which remained entangled in the lower parts of the second division[59] and then finished in ninth place. The team's new president, formerly the leading man ofParis Saint-Germain in the 1970s,[60] had plans to rebuild a winning team,[58] but his ambitions clashed with a disastrous economic situation that reached such a level in 1990 (a debt of 90 millionfrancs was discovered)[61] that he was forced to resign under pressure from the city's mayor.[61]

The return to Europe

[edit]
Gilbert Gress. A prominent figure in the history of Strasbourg, he made his debut as a footballer with the team and finished his career there. He then went on to coach Strasbourg in three different spells (the last of which was in 2009), leading the team to its first national title.

The team, which had reached the top flight the previous two years only to drop back to the second division,[62] was entrusted to industrialist Jacky Kientz.[63] Failure to win promotion in the 1990–91 season prompted the management to recall Gress to the bench: relying on young prospects such asFrank Leboeuf andMartin Djetou,[63] the coach led the team back to Division 1 after a close battle withBordeaux[63] and a 4–0 victory overStade Rennais in the promotion/relegation playoff.[64] Back in the top flight, Strasbourg made their debut by finishing close to theUEFA qualification spots.[65] At the end of the following season, in which the team avoided relegation, there was a change at the top of the club, with Roland Weller taking over as president.[63] Despite offers to extend his contract, Gress, who had come into conflict with some players during the championship over his training methods, decided to leave the team, causing discontent among the fans.[47]

Aleksandr Mostovoi, a key player for Strasbourg, where he played from 1994 to 1996.

Such events did not initially destabilize the team's performance, which, entrusted to former playerDaniel Jeandupeux, was in third place at the beginning of the 1994–95 season.[63][66] A decline over the winter favored the replacement of Jeandupeux with former playerJacky Duguépéroux,[63] who led the team to theFrench Cup final (lost 1–0 toParis Saint-Germain) and tenth place in the league, which qualified the team for the newly createdIntertoto Cup. By winning the competition, Strasbourg gained access to the UEFA Cup, returning to the European stage after a sixteen-year absence: their progress in the competition was interrupted byAC Milan in the round of 16.[63][64] In the following two seasons, despite the departures of key players[63] compensated by the introduction of youth players into the first team (includingOlivier Dacourt, who made his debut as a striker),[67] the team continued to achieve results that helped them qualify for European competitions, This culminated in the1996–97 season, when the team finished ninth in the league after spending much of the season in mid-table positions,[63][68] but qualified directly for the UEFA Cup thanks to winning theLeague Cup, which they did after narrowly defeatingBordeaux in the final.

That season also saw another change at the top of the club, which was taken over on March 21, 1997 by the IMG group, headed by former tennis playerPatrick Proisy:[63] the new ownership sparked a wave of optimism among the team's supporters, but they played a championship far below expectations and struggled to avoid relegation until the last day.[69] The same season will also be remembered for the team's journey in theUEFA Cup: after eliminatingRangers, Strasbourg facedLiverpool in the second round, winning 3–0 at home to effectively secure qualification, as the 2–0 defeat atAnfield did not affect the aggregate score. The Alsatians' adventure came to an end in the third round againstInter Milan, who bounced back from a first-leg defeat.[64]

The departure of Duguépéroux, who was in conflict with the management, opened a new dark period for the team, which had some bad seasons with unimpressive results both in the league and in the national cups.[69] The worst moment seemed to materialize in the2000–01 season, at the end of which the team was relegated to Division 2, having finished last without ever being able to fight to avoid relegation.[16] However, the negative result was compensated by winning the third French Cup, which came after defeatingAmiens in the final: the match, which ended 0–0 after extra time, was decided by penalty kicks, with the Alsatians winning 5–4.[70] Thanks to this result, Strasbourg, who had been coached byIvan Hašek during the summer, qualified for theUEFA Cup, from which they were eliminated in the first round byStandard Liège. This allowed the team to focus on the league, where they made a comeback to finish second[69] and return to the newly formed Ligue 1.

Management changes, crisis and decline

[edit]
Jean-Pierre Papin, coach of the team in the2006–07 season.

The2002–03 season, which ended with the team avoiding relegation, saw a change in the club's top management, which had already been shaken by legal vicissitudes regarding the use of the club's name:[69] the IMG group was replaced by a group of entrepreneurs led by German businessmanEgon Gindorf.[64][69] With the legal problems resolved,[71] Strasbourg (withAntoine Kombouaré andJacky Duguépéroux on the bench) battled through two mid-table seasons, culminating in the2004–05 season with victory in the second League Cup againstCaen (2–1).[64][71] After qualifying for theUEFA Cup again, Strasbourg seemed to be on their way to a second golden period, butPhilippe Ginestet's ascension to the club's presidency caused dissension in the management, which also affected the team's performance in the2005–06 season, which ended in early relegation, with the first win not coming until the third-last day of the first half of the season. This negative result was offset by Strasbourg's performance in the UEFA Cup, where they were eliminated byRoma in the round of 16.[71]

Léonard Specht. A former member of the 1979 French title-winning squad, he took over as club president in June 2009, only to resign two months later because of the club's poor start to the season.

After winning promotion toLigue 1 at the end of the2006–07 season thanks toJean-Pierre Papin (who knew how to get the most out of a team made up of players from lower leagues),[71] Strasbourg started the2007–08 season withJean-Marc Furlan on the bench. The team seemed to be struggling on a par with the other relegation contenders, navigating mid-table positions until midway through the season,[72] but from March onward, they suffered a steep decline that saw them drop positions until they finished second-last.[73] In this context, a 2–1 defeat againstLyon, thanks to a goal scored byFabio Grosso, who was heavily insulted by Furlan at the end of the game, is noteworthy;[74] despite the controversy[75] and the result, the club confirmed Furlan at the helm of the team that failed to gain promotion to Ligue 1 in the2008–09 season, losing toBoulogne on the final day of the season.[16]

At the end of the season, there was a reshuffle at the top of the club, bringing in former playerLéonard Specht who, after trying to signGernot Rohr,[76] hired Gress, who then returned to lead the team for the third time. However, the beginning of the2009–10 season was marked by a confusing situation at the top of the club, with Gress (opposed by Ginestet[77][78] who remained in the company as majority shareholder)[76][79] being replaced after two defeats in the first two matches.[80][81] Due to this result, Spécht also resigned, which favored the return of Ginestet as president,[79] who calledPascal Janin, formerly Gress's assistant, to the bench.[81] In November 2009, negotiations began for the transfer of Strasbourg's ownership to the English company FC Football Capital Limited,[82] which took control of the club on December 5 with Julien Fournier as president. The vicissitudes at the corporate level were reflected in the team's results:[83] six points clear of the relegation zone with six days to go, Strasbourg collapsed with only two points, and were overtaken by the other relegation contenders on the final day, dropping to thethird division.[16][84]

At the end of the2010–11 Third Division season, Strasbourg finished fourth and missed out on promotion to Ligue 2, but the club went bankrupt and had to restart from the fifth division, theChampionnat de France Amateur 2 Group C.[85]

Promotion from the fifth division to Ligue 1, European campaign

[edit]
Il Racing Club di Strasburgo celebra il titolo di campione francese della Ligue 2 e la sua ascesa in Ligue 1 a Kléber nel 2017
Racing Club of Strasbourg celebrates French Ligue 2 title and promotion to Ligue 1 atKléber in 2017

In 2011–12, the team immediately returned to theChampionnat de France Amateur, the fourth division, winning Group C of the Championnat de France Amateur 2 with 100 points. In 2012, the team changed its name toRacing Club de Strasbourg Alsace and also changed its logo.[86] After winning the fourth division championship in 2012–13, the club returned to theChampionnat National, the third division, within two years.[87] For the 2014–15 season,Jacky Duguépéroux took over afterFrançois Keller had managed the club for three years. In 2015–16, Strasbourg won the National and returned to Ligue 2 after six years.[88] In2016–17, they completed the climb, winning the second division as a newly promoted team and landing in the top flight.[89] In the2017–18 Ligue 1, the team finished in 15th place, saving themselves on the penultimate day thanks to a win atDécines-Charpieu againstOlympique Lyonnais in a comeback with a free kick goal byDimitri Liénard in the final minutes.[90] In2018–19, the team won theFrench League Cup for the third time, defeatingGuingamp 4–1 on penalties in the final.[91]

On 22 June 2023,BlueCo reached an agreement to become shareholders of Strasbourg.[92] In the2024–25 season, Strasbourg secured a seventh-place finish in the league, earning qualification for theUEFA Conference League.[93]

On 28 August 2025, Strasbourg qualified for theConference League League phase for the first time in their history for this season after defeatBrondby IF 2–3 on away games second leg.

Colours and crest

[edit]

While the colours of the town are red and white, Racing has always played in a combination of blue and white. The exact origin of this choice of colours is unknown. Over the years, the most common uniform has been composed of a medium blue jersey, white shorts and medium blue socks. During the last ten years, however, the team has regularly switched between medium blue, dark blue, sky blue and white as the main colour of its home jersey.[94] Since 2007, the Flag of Alsace is featured on the back of the club's shirt.Hummel is the current kit designer. Previously (1973–2000; 2004–2007), Racing was equipped byAdidas, which has its French seat inLandersheim, betweenStrasbourg andSaverne.ASICS also supplied the club (2000–03).

The current team crest has been in use – with interruptions – since 1976 and is generally considered as the most legitimate one.[95] It includes a stylisedstork (symbol ofAlsace), a red diagonal stripe from the city's coat of arms and a depiction of theCathedral along with the club's initials: RCS. Between 1997 and 2006, the club used another logo, introduced byPatrick Proisy. This crest was then considered to be more "modern" and was supposed to depict at the same time the cathedral and a stork. The resemblance, however, was far from being obvious to everyone and the design was quickly derogatively nicknamed "Pac-Man" due to some common traits with the famous video game. In 2006, the new management of the club, acceding to a supporter demand, re-installed the 1976 crest.[96]

Stadium

[edit]

Racing have been playing at theStade de la Meinau in southern Strasbourg since 1914. The stadium hosted the1938 World Cup andEuro 1984. Its maximum capacity was downsized from 45,000 to 29,000 during the 1990s to meet new safety standards.

Supporters and rivalries

[edit]

Historically, Racing has its roots in southern Strasbourg in the working-class Neudorf, Meinau and Polygone neighbourhoods. In the 1930s, the team was the only one in the area to jump to professional play and, with the help of good results during that decade, it built support all around the town. In Strasbourg like in the rest of France, there is only one pro football club in every city and hence no in-town rivalry, a fact that heavily contrasts with the situation in Great Britain, Italy or Spain. Nowadays, as the only professional football club inAlsace, Racing attracts a large fan base that covers both theBas-Rhin andHaut-Rhindépartements as well as the eastern part of theMoselle. The fan-base outside of this area is essentially limited to people that, for a reason or another, have a personal link with Alsace. The club also has ties to the other side of theRhine, especially through a supporter friendship withKarlsruher SC[97] and regular friendly matches during the summer.

On average, the attendance inLigue 1 has been around 20,000 for a stadium capacity of 29,000.[98] Supporters groups include the "Ultra Boys 90", the "Kop Ciel et Blanc" and the "Club central des supporters".[99] Most of the supporter groups and the most vocal fans in general have elected location in theKop at the "Quart de Virage Nord-Ouest" (North-West quarter corner). Strasbourg supporters have the reputation to be faithful yet critical. Former captainCorentin Martins has once asserted that the Strasbourg public is "demanding, but fair".[100] Racing is always an emotional topic inAlsace. It is often said that some may love it or hate it, or even both at the same time, but that it leaves no one indifferent.[101]

Racing Strasbourg's main rival isMetz. The clubs compete is what is generally referred as the "Derby de l'Est" ("the Easternderby") in France, a rather inappropriate term since the two cities are 150 kilometres apart. There is however a significant degree of inter-regional rivalry between Alsace and Lorraine, leading to some acrimony between the fans on both sides. The two clubs met each other in the quarter-finals of the1995 UEFA Intertoto Cup in what was the first ever match between two French teams in a European competition.[102] Strasbourg won the game 2–0.[103] WhenMulhouse was professional, the two sides also nourished a rivalry that persists as far as youth teams are concerned.

Ownership and chairmanship

[edit]

Overview

[edit]

Racing's history has always been closely intertwined with local business and politics. In the 1930s, the club's jump to professionalism was sustained by car manufacturerEmile Mathis who had his factory just in front of thestade de la Meinau.[104][105] RCS quickly entered a rivalry withSochaux, a team that was backed by Mathis' competitorPeugeot. After WW2, Mathis ceased activity and the club had to find other sponsors including theCrédit Mutuel – a large banking institution that has its roots in Alsace and appeared on the club's shirt throughout most of the 1960s and 1970s – as well as the town's municipality. In 1980,André Bord, a prominent localGaullist politician and former minister during theCharles de Gaulle andGeorges Pompidou presidencies, became chairman. Bord could boast his connections in business, political and artistic elites and vowed to make Racing a big name in French football. However, he quickly entered a confrontation with charismatic manager Gilbert Gress that culminated in September 1980 when the announcement of Gress' departure provoked crowd anger and riots scenes during a game againstNantes.[106] The inability for the influential president and the talented manager to get along with each other and the 1980 trauma may explain why Racing was unable to perform lastingly at the top level after the 1979 title.

In 1986, Bord left the professional section and introduced fashion designerDaniel Hechter as his successor. Hechter had previously been banned from pro football following his involvement in theParis Saint-Germain secret funds scandal but was nevertheless able to re-take a president job at Strasbourg thanks to a sentence reduction. It was the first attempt to bring an outsider to the local context at the club's head, but the experiment ended in failure in 1990 as the club neared bankruptcy.[107] Racing was at that time salvaged by theStrasbourg municipality which took a 49% share of the club but had to relinquish it a few years later as thePasqua legislation restricted public support to professional sport.[108] In 1997, two projects were competing to buy the municipal share and effectively take control of the club. The first was led by then-president Roland Weller, a local businessman. The second bid was made by AmericanIMG-McCormack Group through its French branch headed byPatrick Proisy. At that time, IMG was trying to develop its activities in European football and had failed the previous year in its effort to buyMarseille.[109] The American group presented an ambitious project with an entirely new youth academy as well as plans for a renovated stadium, eventually winning the competition for Racing's ownership for a price of 1.5 million euros.[110][111] The club became a "Société Anonyme à Objet Sportif" and then a "Société Anonyme Sportive Professionnelle", a status very similar to thegeneral corporate status, albeit with restrictions like the impossibility to enter the stock market and the obligation to keep ties with the original association.[112] Proisy became the chairman of the board with full control over the professional section but not the omni-sport structure that still possessed the club's name and its affiliation to theFrench Football Federation (FFF). This was evidenced in 2002 when Proisy and Bord, still a chairman of the omni-sport, entered a dispute that led to the inability for the pro players to wear the name "Racing club de Strasbourg" on their jerseys for some time.[113]

Proisy's reign at Strasbourg was fraught with misunderstandings, frustration and poor results on the pitch. The Alsatian public especially resented Proisy's unwillingness to settle in Strasbourg, instead controlling the club's destiny from IMG's offices in Paris.[107][114] Racing's troubles as well as the town's refusal to finance an extension of thestade de la Meinau to host the1998 FIFA World Cup provoked heated debate during the 2001 municipal election and eventually became part of the elements that drove to the defeat ofCatherine Trautmann. In 2003, the club was bought back by a pool of local investors including Egon Gindorf, who became chairman, Patrick Adler, Pierre Schmidt and Philippe Ginestet, who all had been club sponsors during the IMG era. The new ownership bought the club for a symbolical euro[115] to an IMG group eager to cut its losses after the death of Mark McCormack[116] but had to cover a 3 million euro deficit to close the 2002–03 budget.[115] It is estimated that Racing lost 15 million euros during the IMG era, mainly due to a dubious recruitment policy.

In 2004, Gindorf experienced personal and financial difficulties and was willing to scale down his involvement at Racing. It was understood that Philippe Ginestet would become the new chairman at the end of the 2004–05 season. However, this move was opposed by Keller who, in June 2005, clearly announced that he would not work with Ginestet. Keller had in fact been acting as the club's head since 2002 but was only a minor shareholder. He nevertheless was able to mobilise his iconic status with supporters to, at first, block Ginestet's accession to chairmanship, provoking a deadlock that lasted throughout 2005 as the club was looking for an investor. In the fall of 2005, it was announced that Alain Afflelou, owner of the biggest optician in France and a former president ofBordeaux, would be the new owner, but he was eventually out-bid by Ginestet, who took control of the club midway through the 2005–06 season, forcing Keller's departure a few months later. Ginestet held a majority share during four years, which he sold in the end of 2009 for a price of €1.6 million.[117] After some speculation, the new owner was identified as Alain Fontenla, a French investment broker based in London. In 2010, Fontenla owned 85%, along with Carousel Finance (15%) a holding named "Racing investissements", which itself owned a majority share (70%) of EuroRacing, the main shareholder (78%) of the club. The other major shareholder of the club was Lohr SA, an industrial group centred on transportation activities.[118]

On 22 June 2023,BlueCo, the consortium which purchasedPremier League clubChelsea in May 2022, acquired a majority stake in the club.[119][120]

Presidential history

[edit]

Below is a list of Strasbourg's 15 presidents since the start of the professional era in 1933.[121] The president has not always been the real owner of the club. For example, between 1990 and 1997, the municipality was the major shareholder, but it chose to delegate the chairmanships to independent local entrepreneurs.

The 2009–10 season saw a record of five successive presidents. Early into the season,Léonard Specht stepped down from his position, after the sacking of Glibert Gress, whom he had appointed as manager.[122] Philippe Ginestet then re-took the presidency, but left the club when the takeover by the new owners was completed in December. The new owners chose to name Julien Fournier as the new Chief executive[123] but, after some turmoil, Fournier quickly entered a dispute with the new major shareholder, Alain Fontenla. Fournier's contract was terminated in February and he was replaced by Luc Dayan on an interim basis.[124] Only a month later, formerSochaux chairman Jean-Claude Plessis came to replace Dayan.[125]

 
NameYears
Joseph Heintz1933–52
Willy Scheuer1952–62
Joseph Heintz1962–68
Alfred Wenger1968–72
Philippe Fass1972–75
Alain Léopold1975–79
André Bord1979–85
Jean Wuillaume1985–86
Daniel Hechter1986–90
Jacky Kientz1990–92
Jean Wendling1992–94
Rolland Weller1994–97
NameYears
Patrick Proisy1997–03
Egon Gindorf2003–05
Philippe Ginestet2005–09
Léonard Specht2009
Philippe Ginestet2009
Julien Fournier2009–10
Luc Dayan2010
Jean-Claude Plessis2010
Jafar Hilali2010–11
Thomas Fritz2011
Frederic Sitterle2011–12
Marc Keller2012–present

Players

[edit]

Current squad

[edit]
As of 1 September 2025[126]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
1GK SWEKarl-Johan Johnsson
2DF IRLAndrew Omobamidele
3DF ENGBen Chilwell
4DF GUISaïdou Sow
5DF CIVAbakar Sylla
6DF FRAIsmaël Doukouré
7FW BELDiego Moreira
8MF POLMaxi Oyedele
9FW ARGJoaquín Panichelli
10FW NEDEmanuel Emegha(captain)
11FW SWESebastian Nanasi
16FW ECUKendry Páez(on loan fromChelsea)
17MF FRAMathis Amougou
19MF PARJulio Enciso
20FW CIVMartial Godo
22DF CIVGuéla Doué
No.Pos.NationPlayer
23DF SENMamadou Sarr(on loan fromChelsea)
24DF DENLucas Høgsberg
27FW ENGSam Amo-Ameyaw
29MF MARSamir El Mourabet
32DF ARGValentín Barco
34DF FRASacha Lung
39GK BELMike Penders(on loan fromChelsea)
41MF FRARabby Nzingoula
42FW CIVAbdoul Ouattara
44DF FRASoumaïla Coulibaly
50GK FRAStefan Bajic
60GK FRAGabriel Kerckaert
77DF UKREduard Sobol
80MF FRAFélix Lemaréchal
83MF PORRafael Luís(on loan fromBenfica)

Out on loan

[edit]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
DF GUIAmadou Cissé(atLe Mans until 30 June 2026)
DF FRAYoni Gomis(atBeveren until 30 June 2026)
MF SENPape Diong(atDunkerque until 30 June 2026)
MF SENPape Demba Diop(at1. FC Nürnberg until 30 June 2026)
MF FRAJunior Mwanga(atNantes until 30 June 2026)
No.Pos.NationPlayer
FW SRBMiloš Luković(atLas Palmas until 30 June 2026)
FW FRASékou Mara(atAuxerre until 30 June 2026)
FW FRARayane Messi(atPau until 30 June 2026)
FW COLÓscar Perea(atAVS until 30 June 2026)

Former players

[edit]
See also:List of RC Strasbourg Alsace players
Morgan Schneiderlin played for France in the 2014 World Cup and has appeared forSouthampton more than 250 times since leaving Strasbourg.
Paraguayan goalkeeperJosé Luis Chilavert won the 2001 Coupe de France with Strasbourg, scoring the winning penalty.[127] He had some judiciary issues with the club after his departure, which were settled.

RCS does not have an official hall of fame or an all-time XI. Various selections have been made by press and supporters but none has achieved universal respect. 21 players have been capped for France while playing for Strasbourg. The most notable one isOscar Heisserer who played a record 18 times with the national team while at Strasbourg and was the first Alsatian and first and only RCS player to wear the armband for France.[128]Dominique Dropsy,Léonard Specht andGérard Hausser also earned more than 10 caps whileMarc Molitor is one of the rare examples of a player being capped for the national team while playing in the Division 2.[129] Unsurprisingly, it is during the 1978–1979 title season that Racing had the most players included in the national squad. On 7 October 1978 were a record four RCS players (Dominique Dropsy,Roger Jouve,Francis Piasecki,Albert Gemmrich) on the field for aEuro 1980 qualifying game againstLuxembourg.[130] This figure was repeated a month later for a friendly againstSpain (Dropsy, Piasecki, Gemmrich andLéonard Specht).[131]Frank Leboeuf andMarc Keller were the last RCS players to earn a cap during the 1995–1996 season. Leboeuf is one of the two former RCS in the French team that wonWorld Cup, the other one beingYouri Djorkaeff.

Players to have once played for Strasbourg to have recently played for France includeOlivier Dacourt andRichard Dutruel, (both in 2004). Furthermore, formerFrance international midfielderMorgan Schneiderlin is a product of RC Strasbourg's Youth set-up, spending 14 years with the club before moving toSouthampton after just five first-team appearances for Strasbourg. Schneiderlin then moved toManchester United on 14 July 2015 before a move toEverton in January 2017.[132][133]

With regional feelings still strong in Alsace, the performances of local players logically attract special attention. Seven out of the ten players with the most appearances for Racing are from Alsace:René Hauss (who holds the record),Léonard Specht,René Deutschmann,Edmond Haan,Gérard Hausser,Jean Schuth andRaymond Kaelbel. Since 1979, there is also a peculiar tradition that every Racing team to win a trophy or reach a final featured aBreton as captain, manager or both.Jacky Duguépéroux captained the 1979 team and won theCoupe de la Ligue in 1997 and 2005 as a manager. The 2001Coupe de France winning team for itself includedYvon Pouliquen as manager andCorentin Martins as captain. Pouliquen also was the captain for the 1995 final.

Apart from French internationals and Alsatians, there is a strong tradition to have foreign players fromCentral and Eastern Europe at Strasbourg. The successful Racing team of the 1930s regularly includedAustrians both as players and coaches, a tradition that was continued whenErnst Stojaspal played at la Meinau in the 1950s. OtherMitteleuropa players fondly remembered includeElek Schwartz,Ivica Osim,Ivan Hašek,Alexander Vencel orDanijel Ljuboja while RussianAleksandr Mostovoi is the last world-class star to play for Racing to this date. Also, one of the greatest goalkeepers of all times, the ParaguayanJosé Luis Chilavert who, known for being three times selectedIFFHS World's Best Goalkeeper and his free-kick abilities, won the 2001 Coupe de France with the club.

Managers

[edit]
Main article:List of RC Strasbourg Alsace managers

Strasbourg has had 47 managers in the professional era, with the holder of the office changing 57 times. This is a record in French football only surpassed byMarseille.Gilbert Gress holds the record for the longest-serving manager at the club, both for a single spell (39 months between. 1977–80, 152 matches) and overall (75 months in three spells, 275 matches).Paul Frantz holds the record for the most spells at Racing with four (73 months overall, 227 matches).Jacky Duguépéroux is the only manager to win two trophies with the club.

Current coaching staff

[edit]
PositionName
Head CoachLiam Rosenior
Assistant head coachJustin Walker
First-team coachKalifa Cissé
Goalkeeping coachSébastien Gimenez
Fitness coachDany Eberhardt
Youth coachMartin Djetou
Guillaume Lacour
Video analystHachim Ali M'Bae

Honours

[edit]

League

[edit]

Cups

[edit]

Europe

[edit]

Records

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  142. ^"Les deux visages du sorcier blanc",L'Equipe Magazine, n°1276, 9 décembre 2006, p. 106
  143. ^"MCSinfo". Mcsinfo.u-strasbg.fr. Archived fromthe original on 15 June 2009. Retrieved19 November 2008.
  144. ^Renaud Lecadre, "Dérives au RC de Strasbourg", Libération, 21 February 2007

Bibliography

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  • Pierre Perny,Racing 100 ans, 2006, 350 p.
  • Ronald Hirlé,Il était une fois le Racing, Toute l'histoire du club omnisport Strasbourgeois, 1991, 176 p.
  • 100 ans de football en Alsace (tome 2) [100 years of soccer in Alsace (tome 2)] (in French). Strasbourg: LAFA. 2002.ISBN 2-911219-13-9.
  • Wahl, Alfred (1989).Les archives du football [Soccer archives] (in French). Paris: Gallimard.ISBN 2-07-071603-1.
  • Bitzer, Dirk; Wilting, Bernd (2003).Stürmen für Deutschland: Die Geschichte des deutschen Fußballs von 1933 bis 1954 [Storming for Germany: The History of German Football from 1933 to 1954] (in German). Campus Verlag GmbH.ISBN 978-3-593-37191-7.
  • Descamps, Pierre-Marie; Ejnès, Gérard; Hennaux, Jacques (2007).Coupe de France: La folle épopée [Coupe de France: An epic journey] (in French). L'Équipe.ISBN 978-2-915535-62-4.
  • Gauthey, Gilles (1961).Le football professionnel français [French professional soccer] (in French). Paris: Chez l'Auteur.
  • Il était une fois le Racing, toute l'histoire du club omnisport strasbourgeois [Once upon a time, Racing, the history of Strasbourg's sports club] (in French). Ronald Hirlé, Berger-Levrault. 1991.
  • Fuchs, Claude; Kieny, Gérard; Muller, Alphonse (2002).Les quatre vérités de Roland Weller [Roland Weller's four truths] (in French). Editions Coprur.ISBN 2-84208-103-X.

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