Coupe de France 1926/27

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The competition for the Coupe de France in the 1926/27 season was the tenth playout of the French football cup for men's teams. This year 346 clubs registered.

The defending champion was Olympique Marseille , who won the cup again - and for the third time since 1924  . Marseille drew level with Red Star Paris . Opponents in the final were again - like AS Valentigney in 1926  - a company team, namely the US Quevilly , whose team of players worked almost entirely at the Lozai shipyard in Petit-Quevilly near Rouen . In the previous year, USQ had already made it to the round of 16, in which they were defeated by this year's final opponent with 0: 4.

The cup commission of the regional association FFF set all matches and home rights for the thirty-second and sixteenth-finals, whereby questions of travel distances in large-scale France played a role as well as the quality of the venues and the infrastructure at the respective locations. What was new this year was that only 24 games were played in the thirty-second finals because the eight quarter-finalists of the previous competition were given a bye. This experiment was not subsequently repeated. From the round of 16, the pairings were drawn freely, the games took place in a neutral place. If an encounter ended in a draw after extra time, there was one or more replay matches (in the first two national rounds first on the opponent's place and then alternately, from the round of 16 onwards in a neutral location).

Thirty-second finals

Games on 5th, replay on December 19, 1926

Round of 16

Games on January 2nd and 9th, replay matches on January 27th and 30th, 1927

(a) Bye in the thirty-second finals

Round of 16

Games on February 6, 1927

Quarter finals

Games on 6th, replay on March 27, 1927

Semifinals

Games on the 3rd, replay matches on April 17th and April 24th, 1927

final

Game on May 8, 1927 at the Stade de Colombes in front of 23,800 spectators

Team lineups

Substitutions were not possible at that time; Few clubs in France owned a full-time coach at the time.

Olympique Marseille: Charles Allé - Paul Schnoeck , Louis Jacquier - Ernest Clère Team captain , Jean Cabassu , Aimé Durbec - Jules Dewaquez , Raymond Durand , Jean Boyer , Édouard Crut , Maurice Gallay
Trainer: Victor Gibson

US Quevilly: Walter Puddefoot - Charles Demeilliez , Guillaume Farret - Robert Hecquet , Philippe Bonnardel Team captain , Groult - Norman Deans , Guillard, Lucien Fagris , René Willig , Lucien Verdin

Referee: Paul Quittemel (Paris)

Gates

1-0 Durand (34th)
2-0 Gallay (36th)
3-0 Dewaquez (89th)

Special occurrences

On the occasion of the tenth anniversary of the Coupe de France, after the final whistle of the final, French President Gaston Doumergue presented the trophy to the winner's captain for the first time . Since then, this ceremony has always been carried out by the head of state or, in the rare cases in which this is prevented, another high-ranking politician. The final in 1926/27 saw yet another premiere: for the first time, half a dozen ball boys were positioned along the sidelines , dressed in the colors of the tricolor .

On the side of Marseille, three players were involved in all three cup finals won: Jean Boyer, Édouard Crut and Louis Jacquier; for Jean Cabassu (missing in 1926 ), Ernest Clère, Maurice Gallay and Jules Dewaquez ( not yet in 1924 ) it was the second success. Dewaquez, however, already won his third coupe, Boyer even his fourth: they had previously been in a winning team with Olympique Pantin (Dewaquez, 1918 ) and CASG Paris (Boyer, 1919 ).

literature

  • Hubert Beaudet: La Coupe de France. Ses vainqueurs, ses surprises. Alan Sutton, Saint-Cyr-sur-Loire 2003, ISBN 2-84253-958-3 .
  • L'Équipe, Gérard Ejnès: Coupe de France. La folle épopée. L'Équipe, Issy-les-Moulineaux 2007, ISBN 978-2-915535-62-4 .
  • Alain Pécheral: La grande histoire de l'OM. Des origines à nos jours. Ed. Prolongations, o. O. 2007, ISBN 978-2-916400-07-5 .

Web links

Remarks

  1. L'Équipe, Ejnès, pp. 332/333.
  2. L'Équipe, Ejnès, pp. 316ff.
  3. L'Équipe, Ejnès, p. 333.