Philippe Bonnardel

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Red Star Football Club Saint-Ouen 1920.jpg

Philippe Bonnardel (born July 28, 1899 in Paris , † February 17, 1953 ) was a French football player .

Club career

The "Phi-phi" called, rather skinny outrunner was considered an "early discovered talent of high game intelligence". There are divergent information about his first stations: according to one source, he is said to have played at two clubs from the Paris area (in Joinville-le-Pont and at L'Amicale ), according to another at AS Alfortville , before joining the Gallia Club Paris changed. During this time he also played his first international matches (see below) . From mid-1920 Philippe Bonnardel was in the first team of Red Star AC , with which he won three titles in the following years. In France in the 1920s there was still no nationwide, uniform championship or even a professional league operation ; instead, the cup competition for the Coupe de France quickly developed into a full-fledged replacement, in which Bonnardel reached the final three times in a row with Red Star and finished as the winner each time. In 1921 Olympique Paris was defeated 2-1, in 1922 Red Star won against Stade Rennais UC 2-0 and in 1923 4-2 against FC Cette . In addition to "Phi-phi", his teammates Pierre Chayriguès , Maurice Meyer , Lucien Gamblin , Paul Nicolas and Marcel Naudin celebrated the record of three cup wins in a row, which was unmatched into the 21st century.

Probably in 1925, Philippe Bonnardel moved to US Quevilly ; there he soon became the team captain. In May 1927 his team stood after Siegen a. a. over local rivals FC Rouen , US Suisse Paris and Stade Raphaëlois - against the latter only after a replay - surprisingly again in the cup final. Against the defending champion Olympique Marseille , the big outsider had no chance and lost 3-0. His last club was the CASG Paris ; From when and for how long Bonnardel played for him, as well as facts about what he subsequently did professionally cannot be determined. All that is known is that he died in 1953, not yet 54 years old.

Stations

  • Joinville-le-Pont (?) And L'Amicale (?)
  • Association Sportive d'Alfortville
  • Gallia Club de Paris (until 1920)
  • Red Star Amical Club (1920-1925)
  • Union Sportive Quevillaise (1925 – at least 1927)
  • Club Athlétique des Sports Généraux Paris

In the national team

Between February 1920 and March 1927 Philippe Bonnardel was used in 23 full international matches for France ; In his last encounter, he led the national team onto the field as team captain. The French, who were already competing in blue shirts at that time, were anything but a great footballing power in those years; However, the runner was involved in a victory for the Bleus , which is one of the early great moments in France to the present day: the 2: 1 on Napoléon's centenary of death (May 5, 1921) over England . As usual, it was only an English amateur selection, but also frequent defeats against the conceded teams from the continent.

In 1924 he took part in the Olympic football tournament in his hometown , in which France was literally shown in the quarter-finals of Uruguay . Philippe Bonnardel has played against national teams from German-speaking countries several times in his career: three times (1920, 1923 and 1924) against Switzerland , once (1925) against Austria and four times (1921, 1923 and 1924 in two games) against Belgium .

Palmarès

  • French champion: Nothing
  • French cup winner: 1921, 1922, 1923 (and finalist 1927)
  • 23 full international matches (no hit) for France, including 2 during his time at Gallia Club, 20 at Red Star, 1 at Quevilly
  • Olympian in 1924

literature

  • 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
  • Pierre Delaunay / Jacques de Ryswick / Jean Cornu: 100 ans de football en France. Atlas, Paris 1982, 1983² ISBN 2-7312-0108-8
  • L'Équipe / Gérard Ejnès: La belle histoire. L'équipe de France de football. L'Équipe, Issy-les-Moulineaux 2004 ISBN 2-951-96053-0
  • L'Équipe / Gérard Ejnès: Coupe de France. La folle épopée. L'Équipe, Issy-les-Moulineaux 2007 ISBN 978-2-915-53562-4
  • François de Montvalon / Frédéric Lombard / Joël Simon: Red Star. Histoires d'un siècle. Club du Red Star, Paris 1999 ISBN 2-95125-620-5

Remarks

  1. Chaumier, p. 50
  2. according to http://www.fff.fr/servfff/historique/historique.php?cherche_joueur=BONNARDEL&submit=go or after de Montvalon / Lombard / Simon, p. 272
  3. Delaunay / de Ryswick / Cornu, p. 88
  4. L'Équipe / Ejnès, Coupe, pp. 337–339.
  5. Also three times in a row (1946-1948) eight footballers from Lille OSC won the Coupe de France ( Jean Baratte , Roger Carré , Joseph Jadrejak , Jean Lechantre , Jean-Marie Prévost , Marceau Somerlinck , Boleslaw Tempowski and Roger Vandooren ).
  6. The unreliability of the website of the French association can be seen in the fact that he is said to have played for Red Star until 1928, and only then for Quevilly.
  7. L'Équipe / Ejnès, Coupe, p. 343
  8. Chaumier, p. 50
  9. L'Équipe / Ejnès, Belle histoire, pp. 30/31
  10. L'Équipe / Ejnès, Belle histoire, pp. 297 and 299; a photo of Bonnardel in a game scene against Uruguay can be found in Delaunay / de Ryswick / Cornu, p. 103
  11. L'Équipe / Ejnès, Belle histoire, pp. 382/383

Web links