Regine Mismacq

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Régine Mismacq (born October 2, 1965 in Paris ) is a former French football player .

Club career

Régine Mismacq grew up in the Oise department and played for the US Crépy-en-Valois until she was 16 and then for AO Boran-sur-Oise . As early as 1978, when she was 12, she won the young talent competition for girls in the Picardy region . When she and Boran's women took part in the preliminary round of the French championship in 1980/81 - in those early years of organized women's football it was not uncommon for talented youngsters to be used in the fighting team of their club - she left behind those in charge of the VGA Saint -Maursuch a positive impression that the club brought her to Saint-Maur-des-Fossés for the following season .

There the striker , who was more of a preparer than an enforcer due to her ball-technical talent and was therefore increasingly used in midfield in later years , quickly developed into a regular player and was thus significantly involved in Saint-Maur's rise to the dominant womanhood of the 1980s. Beginning in 1983 , Régine Mismacq stood in six consecutive French championship finals, of which she won five with the VGA; only in 1984 Saint-Maur had to admit defeat when ASJ Soyaux prevailed 1-0. Only six days after that defeat, however, Mismacq made her international debut for France (see below) . The attacker never managed to score a final goal from the game, but in her last final (1988) she converted her penalty into the game- winning penalty shootout .

During this time at VGA, Régine Mismacq stood at the side of a large number of well-known and successful teammates such as goalkeeper Sandrine Roux , Sylvie Baracat , Élisabeth Loisel , Marie-Agnès Annequin , Martine Puentes , Nicole Abar and many others, including Dominique Tedeschi (until 1987 and again from 1989 coach of the club - in between, Élisabeth Loisel took her first steps in this profession) was able to put together a team that was difficult to beat. When Saint-Maur reached the final again in 1990, Mismacq was missing in VGA's line-up and so missed their sixth championship.

She then switched to the up-and-coming Juvisy FCF  - and failed with its women a year later in the semi-finals at Saint-Maur. Then she left the capital region and played at Toulouse Olympique Mirail , where the same thing happened again: Mismacq was eliminated with her new team against her previous team in 1992, but this time in the quarter-finals. Nevertheless, OM Toulouse was accepted into the newly established highest women's league, the Championnat National 1 A , in 1992, but was relegated from it at the end of this season and was subsequently unable to return. 1995 Régine Mismacq ended her career in league football.

Stations

  • US Crépy-en-Valois (until 1979)
  • AO Boran-sur-Oise (1979–1981)
  • La Vie au Grand Air Saint-Maur (1981–1990)
  • Juvisy FCF (1990/91)
  • Toulouse Olympique Mirail (1991–1995)

In the national team

In June 1984 national coach Francis Coché Régine Mismacq switched to the French national team for the first time in a game against Belgium's women , and only then again - but this time in the starting lineup - against Sweden a year later , because Coché regularly made Sylvie Bailly in her position gave preference. Their third international match was two and a half years in coming, and that meant a change of coach at the Bleues . As a result, Coché's successor Aimé Mignot regularly used the offensive player, who mainly came from the left, and in a time when women played only a handful of international games a year compared to the 21st century, she achieved a total of 37 A- International matches. In the national women's team she scored nine goals, including her only "double" (in April 1990 in a 7-1 win over the Soviet Union ). She scored three goals in as many games against Poland , two against Bulgaria and one each against the USA and Ivory Coast .

Mismacq never played in the finals of a continental tournament because France only qualified for it in 1997 . In international matches against a national team from the German-speaking area, it was used only once; that was only the second meeting between France and Germany in March 1991, which ended with a 2-0 defeat for the French. Régine Mismacq played her last game in the blue dress in May 1992 against the Finnish women's selection .

Palmarès

  • French champion: 1983, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988
  • 37 senior internationals, 9 goals for France

literature

  • Pascal Grégoire-Boutreau: Au bonheur des filles. Cahiers intempestifs, Saint-Étienne 2003, ISBN 2-911698-25-8
  • Laurence Prudhomme-Poncet: Histoire du football féminin au XXe siècle. L'Harmattan, Paris 2003, ISBN 2-7475-4730-2

Web links

  • Data sheet on the website of the French Football Association FFF
  • Datasheet at footofeminin.fr

Notes and evidence

  1. Grégoire-Boutreau, p. 54, where there is also a later photo of Régine Mismacq juggling a soccer ball.
  2. Grégoire-Boutreau, p. 55