Marielle Breton

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Marielle Breton (born October 26, 1965 in Boulogne-Billancourt ) is a former French football player .

Club career

Marielle Breton began playing club football when she was 15 or 16 years old at ASC Vélizy , an amateur club from the western periphery of Paris . Probably at 17 she joined JS Poissy , where she was soon used in the first women's eleven. There was no top league in France before 1992; the championship was played in a mixture of group play and knockout mode, and for participation in the national final round, the women's teams had to qualify beforehand at the regional level. Poissy managed to do this every year until 1987, but Breton and her team never got beyond the first round there. Only in the 1987/88 season they even reached the semi-finals, in which they then but theFCF Hénin-Beaumont had to bow. The attacking midfielder , who had already played in the national dress (see below) , then moved to Saint-Brieuc CS , and in the 1988/89 season Marielle Breton was with the club from Brittany together with her teammates - including such well-known names as Ghislaine Baron , Isabelle Le Boulch and Françoise Jézéquel  - successful after a final won against ASJ Soyaux on penalties and could be happy about winning the French championship title. Nevertheless, she returned to JS Poissy after only a year and was accompanied in this step by Élisabeth Bougeard ; these two were at the end of the season 1989/90 again in the championship finals, in which Poissy, however, had to bow to the VGA Saint-Maur .

The reasons for Breton's subsequent return to Saint-Brieuc, with which she reached her third - again lost - final in 1991/92 , cannot be determined at the moment; Nor can the question of how long it stayed there this time, because the current data situation for this time (2019) is still incomplete. After that, it is also not certain with which club she played the first seasons of the national highest women's football league introduced for the 1992/93 season . But there is some evidence that she played at Poissy again for at least a significant part of that time. In 1995/96, however, she was active for Juvisy FCF , where Marielle Breton won her second national title. Whether she ended her career at this level immediately afterwards cannot be determined with any certainty.

Stations

  • ASC Vélizy (1981-1983)
  • Jeunesse Sportive Féminine Poissy (at least 1983–1988)
  • Saint-Brieuc Chaffoteaux Sports (1988/89)
  • Jeunesse Sportive Féminine Poissy (1990/91)
  • Saint-Brieuc Chaffoteaux Sports (1991–?)
  • probably again at JS Poissy (? -?)
  • Juvisy FCF (at least 1995/96)

In the national team

In February 1987, national coach Francis Coché helped Marielle Breton to make her debut in the French national team on the occasion of a friendly against Spain . Even under Aimé Mignot , who replaced Coché in the same year, she became a constant in the blue dress. Between March 1990 and November 1994 - that is, during the period in which her club membership cannot be determined with certainty - she only had one match for France (in September 1992 against Finland ). Up to her last assignment in June 1996, eleven additional appointments were made. Although she had helped France qualify for the European Championship finals in Sweden and Norway with four appearances in the qualifiers for the 1997 European Championship , Aimé Mignot did not consider her for it any longer.

In total, Marielle Breton has played 24 full international matches for the Bleues and has scored three goals, the first against Bulgaria in November 1987 just eight minutes after she was substituted on for Marie-Angèle Blin . Women from German-speaking countries were their opponents twice, namely in April 1987 Switzerland (French 3-1 victory) and in the following month at the very first official meeting of the French and the Germans in Dillingen / Saar , which the hosts won with 2: 0 decided for themselves.

Palmarès

  • French champion 1989, 1996 (and runner-up 1990, 1992)

Web links

Notes and evidence

  1. see Breton's data sheet given under web links at footofeminin.fr
  2. see the data sheet of the Bulgarian game at fff.fr