Anne-Laure Casseleux

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Anne-Laure Casseleux (born January 13, 1984 in Tarare ) is a former French football player.

Club career

As a child and adolescent, Anne-Laure Casseleux played for two amateur clubs from Amplepuis and Liergues in her home region, the Beaujolais , west of Villefranche-sur-Saône . At 15 she went to SC Caluire Saint-Clair , who competed in the first division of France in the 1999/2000 season. However, she only played competitive games at this level two years later when she played all three games of the final championship round for her new club, FC Lyon . Also in the summer of 2002, she was with Lyons womanhood in the final of the French cup competition , which FC lost against FC Toulouse with 1: 2.

Subsequently, the 1.65 m tall defender , usually used on the right wing, found admission to the French junior performance center Center technique national Fernand-Sastre and was also part of the team of its first division eleven CNFE Clairefontaine . In 2003 she moved to ASJ Soyaux , which also promoted her international career (see below) . In the south-west of France she played 39 of the 44 games in Division 1 in the following two years . From there she won the women's soccer club Juvisy FCF in 2005 , and in her first season with the “ Franciliennes ” Casseleux won the French championship and thus her first title in the adult division. As a result, she also made her first appearances in the European Women's Cup . Repeated injuries - especially from 2008 - repeatedly impaired their playful development. Her repeated attempts at comeback were just as frequently interrupted by renewed health problems. Because of these numerous injuries, Anne-Laure Casseleux ended her career at the age of 27 after a last European appearance in the 2010/11 season - when her Juvisy FCF even advanced to the quarter-finals.

Stations

  • Stade Amplepuis and Étoile Sportive Liergues (1993–1999)
  • Sporting Club Caluire Saint-Clair (1999-2001)
  • FC Lyon (2001/02)
  • CNFE Clairefontaine (2002/03)
  • ASJ Soyaux (2003-2005)
  • Juvisy FCF (2005-2011)

In the national team

Anne-Laure Casseleux was already part of the French national team as a teenager. She took part in the U-19 European Championship in Sweden in 2002 and was substituted on in the final, which was finally lost 3-1 against Germany's A-youth, at the beginning of the second half. At the U-19 European Championship , which was played in the GDR a year later , she played all five games of the French, stood on the pitch from the first to the last minute of the game and celebrated after a 2-0 final win against Norway winning the European title. She was part of an eleven with a number of players who also ensured that France's women could establish themselves permanently in the world rankings in the following years, such as Sarah Bouhaddi , Laure Lepailleur , Ophélie Meilleroux , Amélie Coquet , Gaëtane Thiney , Élise Bussaglia and Élodie Thomis .

Then national coach Élisabeth Loisel Anne-Laure Casseleux made her debut in a friendly against Japan in mid-September 2003 and spontaneously took the 19-year-old into the French World Cup squad , which then traveled to the USA . The full-back was also used in France's second group game against South Korea , which the Bleues won 1-0. This was the second of her total of 28 A-internationals (twelve in her time at Soyaux and 16 at Juvisy) in which she failed to score. She also took part in the Women's European Championship in 2005 , where she only played the first group game (3-1 victory over Italy ), but was part of the French regular formation until autumn 2006.
Then her injury problems also had an impact in this circle, so that Casseleux only came to three senior international matches around the turn of the year 2007/2008 under Loisel's successor Bruno Bini , who had already been her coach when she won the European Championship in 2003, the last one in March 2008.

Anne-Laure Casseleux only played twice against national teams from German-speaking countries in her four-and-a-half years as A-International, each against Austria on the occasion of qualifying for the 2007 World Cup , when France won 3-1 and 2-1, but runners-up in the group still missed the final round.

Palmarès

  • French champion: 2006 (and runner-up in 2008, 2010)
  • French cup finalist: 2002
  • U-19 European Champion 2003
  • 28 international matches

Web links

  • Datasheet on the website of the French Football Association
  • Datasheet at footofeminin.fr

Notes and evidence

  1. see the article "Que sont devenues les Championnes d'Europe U19 de 2003?" From August 2013 at footofeminin.fr