Racing Club de Strasbourg Alsace (Alsatian: Füeßbàllmànnschàft Vu Stroßburri), commonly known as RC Strasbourg or Racing Straßburg, is a French professional...
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RC Lens (redirect from Racing Club de Lens)
Racing Club de Lens (French pronunciation: [ʁasiŋ klœb də lɑ̃s]), commonly referred to as RC Lens or simply as Lens, is a French professional football...
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Calais RUFC (redirect from Calais Racing Union F.C.)
342-seater Stade de l'Épopée. Calais Racing Union was liquidated in September 2017. The club was founded in 1902 as Racing Club de Calais. RC Calais had excellent...
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This is a list of RC Strasbourg Alsace's managers from 1928, with their records from 1934, the first year the club played in Ligue 1. This list contains...
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squad, see RC Strasbourg Alsace#Current squad. This is a list of notable footballers who have played for RC Strasbourg from when the club turned professional...
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season, the club won the Coupe de France defeating Racing Paris 2–1 in the final. After the season, manager Henri Roessler departed the club and longtime...
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2012 Racing Club de France 1983, 1984, 1985 Dauphins de Sète Lille Marseille Montpellier Olympic Nice Noisy-le-Sec Pays d'Aix Reims Strasbourg Choisy-le-Roi...
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Olympique Lyonnais (redirect from Football Club de Lyon)
the multisports club Lyon Olympique Universitaire, which was originally formed in 1896 as Racing Club de Lyon. In 1899, Olympique de Lyon formed a football...
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Football Club des Girondins de Bordeaux (French pronunciation: [ʒiʁɔ̃dɛ̃ də bɔʁdo]), commonly referred to as Girondins de Bordeaux (Occitan: Girondins de Bordèu)...
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Arsène Wenger (category Footballers from Strasbourg)
1977 RC Strasbourg Division 1: 1978–79 Coupe d'Alsace: 1980 Monaco Division 1: 1987–88 Coupe de France: 1990–91 Nagoya Grampus Emperor's Cup: 1995 Japanese...
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Stade Brestois 29 (redirect from Armoricaine de Brest)
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...
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Ligue 1 (section Performance by club)
Paris, Cannes, Club Français, Excelsior AC Roubaix, Fives, Hyères, Marseille, Metz, Mulhouse, Nice, Nîmes, Alès, Lille, Racing Club de France, Red Star...
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FC Sochaux-Montbéliard (redirect from Football Club de Sochaux-Montbéliard)
and Maxime Lehmann, Sochaux won its first Coupe de France title. The club faced league rivals Strasbourg in the final and defeated the Alsatians 2–1 courtesy...
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French Grand Prix (redirect from Grand Prix de France)
evolution of racing. The power of the original organiser, the Automobile Club de France, established France as the home of motor racing organisation....
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Luis Fernandez (category Racing Club de France Football players)
Lagardère's team Racing Club de Paris. However, in spite of a team that was strong on paper, the club and Fernandez did not succeed, and he left Racing after three...
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Patrick Vieira (category RC Strasbourg Alsace managers)
Premier League side Crystal Palace between 2021 and 2023, and Ligue 1 club RC Strasbourg between 2023 and 2024. Patrick Paul Vieira was born on 23 June 1976...
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Antoine Kombouaré (category Racing Club de France Football players)
runner-up: 1992–93[citation needed] Coupe de France: 1992–93, 1994–95 Coupe de la Ligue: 1994–95 Sion Swiss Cup: 1995–96[citation needed] Valenciennes Ligue...
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Limoges CSP (redirect from Cercle Saint-Pierre de Limoges)
national championship, by beating Strasbourg IG 0–3 in the French League Finals. Alex Acker was named Finals MVP. The club thus qualified for the 2014–15...
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Stade Malherbe Caen (redirect from Stade Malherbe de Caen)
essentially by repeated feats in Coupe de France in the 1950s : French champion Stade de Reims (2–1) and top teams Racing Club de France (3–2) and RC Lens were...
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Ivan Hašek (category RC Strasbourg Alsace players)
represented AC Sparta Prague (two spells), RC Strasbourg, Sanfrecce Hiroshima and JEF United Ichihara. With the French club, he played two seasons apiece in Ligue...
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Chelsea F.C. (redirect from Chelsea Football Club)
originally used the paler eton blue, which was taken from the racing colours of then club president, Earl Cadogan, and was worn with white shorts and dark...
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Bernard Lama (category Racing Besançon players)
1993–94[citation needed] Coupe de France: 1992–93, 1994–95 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup: 1995–96[citation needed] Trophée des Champions: 1995 France FIFA World Cup:...
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Philippe Thys (footballer) (category Racing Club de France Football players)
youth coach from 1997 to 1998 at his former club Toulon. He then became a scout, working for Strasbourg from 2001 to 2006 and Monaco from 2006 to 2010...
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Réginald Ray (category Footballers from Pas-de-Calais)
Ligue 2 avec 22 clubs refusée par la FFF" (in French). foot-national.com. 27 May 2020. "Réginald Ray joins the staff of Racing". Strasbourg. 25 June 2024...
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Henryk Kasperczak (category Racing Club de France Football managers)
AS Saint-Étienne, Racing Strasbourg, Racing Club de Paris, Montpellier HSC and Lille OSC. His biggest success was winning Coupe de France with FC Metz...
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Championnat National (redirect from Championnat de France de football National)
semi-professional clubs or amateur clubs. The matches in the league attract on average between 2,500 and 6,000 spectators per match. There are 18 clubs in the Championnat...
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LNH Division 1 (redirect from Ligue Nationale de Handball D1)
by 16 teams. Montpellier Handball is the most successful club with 14 titles, and the club which won the most consecutive titles is Paris Saint-Germain...
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List of driver deaths in motorsport (redirect from List of racing drivers who died in racing crashes)
and spectators, have been killed in crashes related to the sport of auto racing, in races, in qualifying, in practice or in private testing sessions. Deaths...
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LNB Élite (category Ligue Nationale de Basketball)
series 1993: Best-of-5 1994: Best-of-3 1995–1996: Best-of-5 1997–2004: Best-of-3 2005–2012: Single match (at Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy in Paris)...
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(Juventus): player 1946–1961; board member 1962–1971; club president 1971–1990; CEO 1991–1994; club honorary president 2006–2021 (his death). George Bray...
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