Maurice Banide

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Banide as a player

Maurice Banide (born May 19, 1905 in Montpellier , † May 20, 1995 ) was a French football player and coach .

Club career

The 180 centimeter tall midfielder Banide belonged to the eleven of the capital club AS Française Paris from 1925 and then played for another Parisian club before moving to the Alsatian AS Strasbourg in the 1928/29 season. With this he entered the national cup, albeit without much success. In 1930 he went to regional rival FC Mulhouse , which was a nationally renowned club. He was part of a team that won the Coupe Sochaux in 1932 and was included in Division 1 , created in the same year as the nationwide first division under professional conditions . However, he turned his back on the club at this time and signed with the Club Français Paris , which was also qualified , with which he returned to the capital.

At Club Français Banide was able to fight for a regular place, but had to accept relegation to the second division in 1933. The second highest division was introduced at the national level in 1933, one year after the top division, making Banide one of the pioneers of both leagues. With his move to Racing Paris in 1934 he managed to return to first class. At Racing he fought for a regular place and was part of a team that not only became champions in 1936, but also made it to the national cup final in 1936 . At the final he was on the pitch and was able to celebrate winning the trophy thanks to a 1-0 win against FCO Charleville . In the following two seasons, neither of the two titles could be won again. During the 1938/39 season, Banide lost his regular place and had no more part in the cup victory, which his teammates secured with a 3-1 final victory over Olympique Lille . In 1939, at the age of 34, he ended his active career in the amateur field after 125 first division games with five goals and 24 second division games with two goals and years earlier.

National team

Banide was appointed to the French squad for the 1928 Olympic football tournament in Amsterdam, but was not used. He made his debut for the French national team about six months later, when the then 23-year-old was on the pitch in a 3-0 win over Hungary on February 24, 1929. He was immediately successful as a goalscorer by scoring the opening goal in the 23rd minute; this was also his only goal in the national dress. Other appointments followed regularly, but ultimately he was not part of the team for the 1930 World Cup . This was followed by a more than three-year break before he played again for France on December 6, 1933 in a 4-1 defeat by England, although he had slipped into the second division at club level. On January 12, 1936, he completed his ninth and last international match in a 6-1 defeat against the Netherlands. His career in the national team had lasted almost seven years.

Coaching career

In 1948 the former professional took over the coaching position at the fourth division Chamois Niort , which he was able to help advance to the third division just a year later. After his engagement in Niort, which ended in 1950, he coached AS Poissy in the 1950s .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Maurice Banide , national-football-teams.com
  2. Maurice Banide , pari-et-gagne.com
  3. France »Olympic Games 1928 , weltfussball.de
  4. Joueur - Maurice BANIDE , fff.fr
  5. Fiche de Maurice Banide ( Memento of the original from April 16, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , chamoisfc79.fr @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.chamoisfc79.fr
  6. présentation de l'as poissy , allezparis.canalblog.com