Pierre-François Aubameyang

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Pierre Aubame
Personnel
Surname Pierre-François Aubameyang
birthday May 29, 1965
place of birth BitamGabon
size 178 cm
position Defense , midfield
Juniors
Years station
1982-1984 USM Malakoff
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1984-1985 Stade Laval B.
1985-1991 Stade Laval 131 (4)
1991-1994 AC Le Havre 95 (1)
1994-1995 Toulouse FC 24 (0)
1995 FC 105 Libreville
1995-1996 Atlético Junior 1 (0)
1996-1997 US Triestina 18 (3)
1997-1998 OGC Nice 28 (1)
2001-2002 FC Rouen 29 (4)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1985-1998 Gabon 74+ (4)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2006-2010 Gabon (assistant coach)
2010-2011 Gabon B
2011-2013 Gabon U-21
2011-2014 FC Sapins
2014– Gabon (assistant coach)
1 Only league games are given.

Pierre-François Aubameyang (born May 29, 1965 in Bitam as Pierre-François Aubame-Eyang ), formerly known as Pierre Aubame or Pierre Aubame Yaya , is a former Gabonese soccer player and today's French soccer coach , scout and consultant .

Life

Aubame was born Pierre-François Aubame-Eyang on May 29, 1965 in the Gabonese village of Bitam . He moved to France early in his childhood . In his youth he played for several smaller clubs before moving to the Paris suburb USM Malakoff at the age of 17 , where he scored five goals in 33 games and was Paris youth champion in 1983. His coach Yves Fercoq was so impressed by his talent that he suggested his friend and coach of the French first division club Stade Laval , Michel Le Milinaire , to sign him, which he did after a convincing trial session. After a year with Laval's reserve team, Aubame rose to the first team, where he soon made his debut. After his first assignment in Division 1 , the coach of the Gabonese national soccer team Alain de Martigny noticed him, and Aubame completed his first assignment on December 7, 1985 against the Republic of the Congo as part of the UDEAC Cup, which could be won in the end. In the years that followed, Aubame gradually became a regular at Stade Laval and in the Gabonese national team, where he won the UDEAC Cup for the second time in 1988. That is why he is now considered one of the pioneers of African football in Europe.

In the late 1980s, the defensive midfielder sustained an injury during running training that paralyzed him for several months. Various treatments did not work, and it was only after seeing a chiropractor that his paralysis was cured. In the meantime, his club was relegated to the second division. In 1991 he moved to AC Le Havre in the first division after two years in Division 2 , in which he narrowly missed promotion twice . Here Aubame was able to prevail immediately as a regular player and completed 95 games in three years in which he was able to score a goal. In 1994 they qualified with the national team for the first time for the African Championship , where they were eliminated in the preliminary round. In the same year, the now repurposed defender moved to FC Toulouse in Division 2, where he played 24 games.

In the summer of 1995 he decided to move to his home country for FC 105 Libreville , where he won the Gabonese Cup, the only title he won as a club player. In December of the same year, the Gabonese left his homeland and moved to Colombia with his Spanish wife, with whom he now has three children, and signed with the traditional club Atlético Junior there . With them, Aubame reached the quarter-finals of the Copa Libertadores 1996 , where they failed at the later finalist América de Cali ; in the league he only made one use. The second time Gabon took part in the 1996 African Cup of Nations , he was appointed captain of the rejuvenated national team. With Gabon, Aubame Yaya, as he is respectfully known in his home country, reached the quarter-finals, where they only lost on penalties to the eventual finalists Tunisia . Reaching the quarter-finals represents the greatest success in the history of the Gabonese national team. A year after joining Atlético Junior, the family left Colombia in December 1996, and Aubame was hired by the Italian club US Triestina , where he played 18 games. After six months he ended his engagement in Italy and returned to France after two years .

For the 1997/98 season, the defender moved to the reigning French cup winner OGC Nice in the second division of France. Here he was able to assert himself as a regular player and also completed his only three European Cup appearances in the 1st and 2nd round of the European Cup Winners' Cup . Nevertheless, he left the club at the beginning of the 1998/99 season and was without a club in the following three years. Aubame completed his last of at least 74 appearances in the Gabonese national team on October 7, 1998 in the Africa Cup of Nations qualifier against Mauritius . In 2001 he joined the fourth division FC Rouen , where he was able to record another 29 appearances and four goals and at the end of the season rose to the National Championships . He then ended his career at the age of 37.

After the end of his career he was hired as a talent scout at the top Italian club AC Milan , where his son Catilina played. Among other things, he successfully scouted France's future Footballer of the Year , Yoann Gourcuff , and also guided his son and later African Footballer of the Year , Pierre-Emerick , to the club. From 2006 to 2010 he was Gabon's assistant coach under Alain Giresse . After his dismissal in February 2010, Aubame was appointed coach of the Gabonese league selection , with which he qualified for the African Nations Cup in 2011 , where they failed in the preliminary round. Then he coached the U-21 national team in his country until 2013 and, at the same time, the Gabonese club FC Sapins . He then ended his engagement and subsequently acted as an advisor to his sons. Since 2014 he has been assistant coach of the Gabonese senior team under Jorge Costa again .

successes

National team

society

USM Malakoff (1982-1984)

  • Paris Youth Champion (1): 1982/83

FC 105 Libreville (1995)

  • Gabonese Cup Winner (1): 1995

FC Rouen (2001-2002)

Others

Aubame acquired French citizenship during his football career and was supposed to give up a name of his double surname Aubame-Eyang, but instead he combined the two and created the surname Aubameyang , which he and his children now carried.

He is married to a Spaniard and is the father of Catilina , Willy and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang . The latter is the captain and record scorer in his home country Gabon and one of the most successful African football players in Bundesliga history .

Aubame regularly takes part in games of the traditional Paris FC team.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WIpC5DjPM8k
  2. a b c http://football-together.total.com/en/actualites/great-story-pierre-aubame
  3. http://akebefoot.free.fr/pantheres/aubame.htm
  4. http://www.zedcom.bf/actualite/op362/sport.htm
  5. http://www.football365.fr/aubameyang-letoo-gabonais-1256915.html
  6. http://les-pantheres-gabon.soforums.com/t31-Pierre-Obameyang-designe-entraineur-des-Pantheres-espoirs.htm
  7. http://afriquefoot.rfi.fr/20110203-chan-2011-pierre-aubame-le-gabon-voient-plus-loin-le-soudan
  8. https://burkina24.com/2014/10/16/burkina-gabon-1-1-pierre-francois-aubame-eyang-entraineur-adjoint-du-gabon-ce-match-nul-est-comme-une -victoire-pour-nous /
  9. http://www.leparisien.fr/sports/ile-de-france/football-quand-pierre-emerick-aubameyang-joue-avec-le-paris-fc-25-06-2017-7085835.php