Loïc Amisse

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Loïc Amisse (2015)

Loïc Amisse (born August 9, 1954 in Nantes ) is a former French football player and current coach .

Player career

In the club

The 1.66 m small left-footed player played for the sporting flagship of his Breton homeland, FC Nantes, for almost his entire career . 1973 for the first time by coach Jean Vincent in the league team used it developed from the 1974-75 season, he was largely spared by injuries for a half decades the undisputed key players on the left wing position . Loïc Amisse was fast, agile and explosive, and very efficient both as a flanker and as a goal scorer. In the 4-3-3 system under Vincent's successor Jean-Claude Suaudeau , he also developed defensive qualities in opposing attacks.

With the Canaris - the players of FC Nantes have been called "canaries" since the 1960s because of their yellow dress - Amisse won three championship titles , for the first time in 1977, and was also vice-champion in Division 1 six times . He was also in two finals for the national cup , where he left the Prinzenparkstadion in 1979 as a winner (4: 1 n. V. against AJ Auxerre ), but in 1983 as a loser (2: 3 against Paris Saint-Germain ), but stayed there each without its own hit. He took part in the Olympic football tournament in 1976 and also became a national player in 1977. In the European Cup competitions he made 31 appearances and eight goals. In the 1979/80 European Cup Winners' Cup , he advanced to the semi-finals with Nantes, where the later cup winners, Valencia CF, ended further title dreams after 2-1 and 0-4.

In the 1989/90 season, Amisse only made 14 appearances in Division 1. He then moved to SCO Angers in 1990 ; Although this played in the top group of the second division , but the 4th place in Group B was not enough for promotion. In the summer of 1991, the striker ended his playing career.

Stations

  • Amicale Laïque des Dervallières (in childhood)
  • Football Club de Nantes (from the end of the 1960s, as a professional 1973–1990)
  • Angers Sporting Club de l'Ouest (1990/91, in D2)

In the national team

Loïc Amisse already played in the French amateur national team, with which he took part in the Olympic football tournament in Montréal in 1976 and was defeated in the quarter-finals by the later gold medalist GDR . Between February 1977 and March 1983 he was appointed to 12 international matches in the French national team; he also got 2 hits. His first appearance in this circle resulted in a 1-0 victory over Germany . Although he had played ten games with the Bleus by November 1980 - the last of them again against West Germany (1: 4 in Hanover ) - national coach Michel Hidalgo did not consider him for the squad at the 1978 World Cup because of the wingers Six and Rocheteau considered stronger. It took almost two and a half years before Amisse was used again - and only for two games - in the Equipe tricolore , so that he was not taken to the 1982 World Cup . It also contributed to the fact that, unlike in the yellow club dress, he only occasionally showed his skills in the blue jersey.

Palmarès as a player

As a trainer

After his last player position in Angers , Amisse returned to “his” FC Nantes . In its renowned youth center (center de formation) , from which he himself emerged in the early 1970s, he looked after various youth teams of the club in the following decade, then also the men's reserve team in the top amateur class, the CFA . In the summer of 2003 he succeeded Ángel Marcos as coach of the first division team, with whom he advanced to the final of the league cup in 2004 . In December 2004 the club - to which he had belonged for 35 years - prematurely dismissed him due to poor results and pressure from some players and replaced him with Serge Le Dizet . Amisse then worked as a coach at an amateur club in Orvault on the outskirts of Nantes . However, since summer 2010 he has been back at Canaris , whose second team he looks after in the fifth division : “Returning home was not easy; but I only hesitated for a moment. Training young people and teaching them values ​​is an interesting and important challenge. "

Loïc Amisse is married; his son-in-law, professional footballer Hassan Ahamada , played for FC Nantes for five years (until 2005).

literature

  • Georges Cadiou: Les grands noms du football breton. Alan Sutton, Saint-Cyr-sur-Loire 2006 ISBN 2-84910-424-8
  • Denis Chaumier: Les Bleus. Tous les joueurs de l'équipe de France de 1904 à nos jours. Larousse, o. O. 2004 ISBN 2-03-505420-6

Remarks

  1. ^ Cadiou, p. 156
  2. Michel Hidalgo: Le temps des bleus. Mémoires. Jacob-Duvernet, Paris 2007 ISBN 978-2-84724-146-4 , pp. 83-86.
  3. Chaumier, p. 16
  4. L'Équipe / Gérard Ejnès: 50 ans de Coupes d'Europe. L'Équipe, Issy-les-Moulineaux 2005 ISBN 2-951-96059-X , p. 287
  5. Cadiou, p. 156; even 87 hits after Stéphane Boisson / Raoul Vian: Il était une fois le Championnat de France de Football. Tous les joueurs de la première division de 1948/49 à 2003/04. Neofoot, Saint-Thibault o. J.
  6. France Football of July 14, 2009, p. 23
  7. France Football of August 24, 2010, p. 45

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