Pauline Peyraud-Magnin

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Pauline Peyraud-Magnin (2018)

Pauline Peyraud-Magnin (born March 17, 1992 in Lyon ) is a French soccer player . The goalkeeper was appointed to the national team relatively late in her career .

Club career

Pauline Peyraud-Magnin began playing club football at the age of eleven, initially in midfield , at SC Caluire Saint-Clair and then at Union Sportive from Montanay - both cities are located in the greater area around her native Lyon. In 2005 she moved to the junior performance center of Olympique Lyon , and there she came from the 2007/08 season in the women's reserve team, which competed in the third division, to competitive appearances. The 1.73 m tall goalkeeper only played her first two games for Olympique's first division women in the 2012/13 season , when she was used away by coach Patrice Lair on the third from last and last match day . Even if she was able to keep her box clean in the two games at Arras FCF and AF Rodez , she only came to three more games in Division 1 in the following season , because Lyon was also in this position with internationals Sarah Bouhaddi and Celine Deville strongly staffed.

That is why Peyraud-Magnin left her region of origin after two championship titles and joined the first division promoted FF Issy from Île-de-France in 2014 . At Issy she was number one, but her team rose after a year immediately from the second division , which is why she moved to AS Saint-Étienne and thus back to her home region. She was also the regular goalkeeper at ASSE, and together with her team she secured a place in the middle of the league table, but after just twelve months she moved from there to the Mediterranean coast , where she again competed for a newcomer at Olympique Marseille and once again for the was the undisputed number one goal. This season 2016/17 OM finished in a surprisingly good fourth place - and just as surprisingly, the goalkeeper left this club after only one year to return to Olympique Lyon, where after the departure of Méline Gérard, the second position was vacated behind Sarah Bouhaddi had become. As a result, Pauline Peyraud-Magnin had only played another league - plus a Champions League - (in the round of 16 against BIIK Kazygurt from Kazakhstan ) and four games in the national cup by summer 2018 . After all, she - and not Bouhaddi - guarded the Lyon goal in this competition in the final against Paris Saint-Germain FC ; however, she had to let the only goal of the game pass by Marie-Antoinette Katoto and ended up with nothing with her teammates.

Immediately afterwards, she left Lyon after the Arsenal Ladies from London had offered her a contract, the duration and conditions of which they had agreed not to disclose. The reason for this change was to get significantly more working time than with your training club. After a short period of acclimatization and convalescence , she prevailed there from the end of 2018 against her main rival, the 2017 Dutch European champion , Sari van Veenendaal , and was mostly in Arsenal's starting line-up - until an injury she sustained during her international debut for France (see the section below below) it threw back something. Nevertheless, she was able to celebrate winning the FA Super League title at the end of her first season on the island (2018/19) .

Stations

  • SC Caluire Saint-Clair (2003/04)
  • US Montanay (2004/05)
  • Olympique Lyon (2005-2014)
  • FF Issy (2014/15)
  • AS Saint-Étienne (2015/16)
  • Olympique Marseille (2016/17)
  • Olympique Lyon (2017/18)
  • Arsenal Women FC (since 2018)

National player

Pauline Peyraud-Magnin has played from 2008 to the French vintage selection teams, starting for which they came in the 2008/09 season with the U-17 to six inserts and on the B-Youth Championship in Swiss Nyon took part, in their Team took third place. Surprisingly - without having previously played for the U-19s - she even belonged to France's juniors in the following season, for whom she played a game and was also part of the French squad at the 2010 U-20 World Cup . At this tournament in Germany , however, she was not used because the Bleuettes Laëtitia Philippe was preferred in all three matches . Only then was Peyraud-Magnin placed in six games in the U-19.

In 2016 she won the title with the French under coach Élisabeth Loisel at the military world championship , which was held in Brittany . This was followed by four matches in January 2017 and at the Turkish Women's Cup in March 2018, in which she was in the goal of the French B national team. In the spring of 2017, she was invited to a course for the women's A-Elf for the first time and, on the occasion of the European Championship 2017, was one of five potential successors in the expanded squad of coach Olivier Echouafni . But only at the age of 27 did she play an international match in this group: Echouafni's successor Corinne Diacre started Pauline Peyraud-Magnin against Japan on April 4, 2019 . On her debut, however, the goalkeeper was replaced with an injury after just 20 minutes. Nevertheless, Diacre appointed her to the French squad for the 2019 World Cup four weeks later , in which, however, she again has a competitor, Sarah Bouhaddi, who is the undisputed number one at the coach. However, she was able to play one of the last two preparatory games for this tournament for the full length of the game, as well as her third and fourth appearance after the World Cup. (As of March 7, 2020)

Palmarès

  • French champion: 2013, 2014, 2018
  • French cup finalist: 2018
  • European Cup Winner: 2018 (not used in the final)
  • English champion: 2019
  • 2016 military world champion

Web links

Notes and evidence

  1. a b Article “ Lyon, Arsenal, National Team ” from October 9, 2018 at footdelles.com
  2. Match report from Peyraud-Magnin's first European Cup appearance on November 15, 2017 at footofeminin.fr
  3. Match report of the cup final from June 2, 2018 at footofeminin.fr
  4. Interview with Pauline Peyraud-Magnin from July 12, 2018 at coeursdefoot.fr
  5. Match report of the final of the Military World Cup (France against Brazil) from June 5, 2016 at ouest-france.fr
  6. Article “ A dream comes true ” from April 13, 2017 at footdelles.com
  7. Article “ The horror was greater than the damage ” from April 5, 2019 at lequipe.fr