Paris FC (women)

Paris FC is a French women's football club based in Viry-Châtillon, a suburb of Paris. The club is the female section of Ligue 2 men's club Paris FC. The club was founded in 1971 and currently play in the Division 1 Féminine, the first division of women's football in France. The club has played in the first division since 1987.[1]

Paris FC
Full nameParis Football Club Féminines
Founded1971 as ES Juvisy-sur-Orge
1985 as FCF Juvisy Essonne
2017 as Paris FC
GroundStade Robert Bobin, Bondoufle
Capacity18,850
PresidentMarie-Christine Terroni
ManagerSandrine Soubeyrand
LeagueDivision 1 Féminine
2022–23Division 1 Féminine, 3rd of 12
WebsiteClub website

Paris FC was founded in 1971 as Étoile Sportive de Juvisy-sur-Orge, the women's football section of local club ES Juvisy, based in Juvisy-sur-Orge. After 14 years, the section split from the club, formed its own club under the name Football Club Féminin Juvisy Essonne and moved to the commune of Viry-Châtillon. Despite moving from Juvisy-sur-Orge, the women's club retained the name FCF Juvisy amid financial backing and support from the commune and the General Council of Essonne.[2][3] In the 1991–92 season, Juvisy won its first ever Division 1 Féminine championship. Between the years 1994–2003, the club won four league titles and later won a Challenge de France title in 2005 making Juvisy one of the most successful clubs in women's French football. Juvisy was a regular participant in the UEFA Women's Cup and, in the 2010–11 season, made its first appearance in the re-branded UEFA Women's Champions League. On 6 July 2017, FCF Juvisy was sold to Paris FC as its female section and moved from an amateur structure to a full-time professional setup.[4]

The club is managed by Sandrine Soubeyrand and captained by French international Gaëtane Thiney. Soubeyrand is the all-time leader in caps by a French international and has made more than 200 appearances for Juvisy. One of the club's other notable players include Marinette Pichon. Pichon was the women's national team all-time leading goalscorer.[1]

Record in UEFA competitions

All results (away, home and aggregate) list Juvisy's goal tally first.

SeasonRoundClubAwayHomeAggregateScorers
2003–2004 Second qualifying round UCD6–1Bourdille-Mendes 2, Tonazzi 2, Perraudeau
Wrocław3–0Soubeyrand 2, Guilbert
Kolbotn (Host)1–2Perraudeau
2006–2007 First qualifying round Klaksvík6–0Pichon 2, Gwenaëlle Butel, Lacroix, Moresco, Tonazzi
Espanyol Barcelona0–1
Hibernian Edinburgh (Host)6–0Tonazzi 3, Pichon 2, Lacroix
2010–2011 Qualifying round Târgu Mureș5–1Tonazzi 3, Lebailly, Trimoreau
Levadia Tallinn12–0Machart 4, Lebailly 2, Pourtalet 2, Bourdille-Mendes, Fernandes, Soubeyrand, Thiney
Breiðablik Kópavogur (Host)3–3Bourdille-Mendes, Coquet, Machart
Round of 32 Breiðablik Kópavogur3–0 f6–09–0Soubeyrand, Thiney 2, Tonazzi 2, Machart 3, Coquet
Round of 16 Torres Sassari2–1 f2–2 a.e.t.4–3Tonazzi 3, Coquet
Quarter-final Turbine Potsdam2–60–3 f2–9Tonazzi, Thiney
2012–2013 Round of 32 FC Zürich1–1 f1–02–1Thiney 2
Round of 16 Stabæk Bærum0–0 f2–12–1Cayman, Soubeyrand
Quarter-final Kopparbergs/Göteborg3–11–0 f4–1Machart, Catala 2, Cayman
Semi-final Olympique Lyon0–3 f1–61–9Diani
2022–23 Qualifying round 1 SF Servette3–0Matéo 2
Qualifying round 1 F Roma0–0 a.e.t. (4–5p)
2023–24 Qualifying round 1 SF Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih4–0Dufour 3, Korošec
Qualifying round 1 F Arsenal3–3 a.e.t. (4–2p)Bourdieu 2, Fleury
Qualifying round 2 VfL Wolfsburg2–03–3 f5–3Dufour 2, Fleury, Thiney, Bourdieu
Group stage Real Madrid1–02–1 fDufour 2, Gréboval, Thiney 2,
Chelsea1–4 f
BK Häcken1–2 f

f First leg.

Rivalries

The Parisians share a strong rivalry with Paris Saint-Germain. Known as the Parisian Derby, the two teams compete for recognition as the capital's top team. Prior to the rise of PSG into an elite club in the 2010s, Paris FC were the biggest team in the land and usually had the upper hand against their city rivals. In fact, PFC were the last side to win the league title, aside from Lyon in 2006, before PSG claimed their first crown in 2021.[5][6][7][8] Nowadays, PSG dominate the derby thanks to the huge gulf created between them by the investment of their Qatari owners, while Paris FC are trying to establish themselves as France's third team.[5][6][7]

Players

Current squad

As of 18 February 2024[9]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF  FRA Célina Ould Hocine
3 DF  FRA Lou Bogaert
4 MF  SVN Kaja Korošec
5 MF  AUS Sarah Hunter
7 FW  FRA Louise Fleury
8 MF  FRA Daphne Corboz
9 FW  FRA Mathilde Bourdieu
10 FW  FRA Clara Matéo
11 MF  FRA Julie Dufour
15 FW  FRA Margaux Le Mouël
16 GK  NGA Chiamaka Nnadozie
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 MF  FRA Gaëtane Thiney
18 DF  FRA Melween N'Dongala
19 DF  FRA Théa Greboval
20 FW  FRA Louna Ribadeira
21 DF  RUS Alsu Abdullina (on loan from Chelsea)
22 FW  FRA Kessya Bussy
23 DF  FRA Teninsoun Sissoko
27 DF  FRA Julie Soyer
30 GK  FRA Inès Marques
40 GK  FRA Alizée Flagellat

Out on Loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player

Former notable players

Current staff

As of 18 February 2024[10]
Position Name
Head coach Sandrine Soubeyrand
Assistant coach Kévin Boquet
Goalkeeper coach Paul Bertandeau
Team Manager Camille Stassin
Assistant Team Manager Lucas Alves
Doctor Etienne James-Belin
Physiotherapists Thomas Picard
Quentin Laigle
Osteopath Daniel Bontems
Strength and Conditioning Coach Maxence Pieulhet
Video Analyst Alexandre Komorowski


Honours

Domestic

European

Invitation

National competition record

Season Division Place Coupe de France Top scorer/s
1980–81 2 (Gr. A) 0?
1981–82 2 (Gr. A) 0?
1982–83 1 (Gr. C) 03rd
1983–84 1 (Gr. C) 02nd
1984–85 1 (Gr. C) 05th
1985–86 1 02nd
1986–87 1 (Gr. F) 04th
1987–88 1 (Gr. A) 04th
1988–89 1 (Gr. A) 03rd
1989–90 1 03rd
1990–91 1 03rd
1991–92 1 01st
1992–93 1 02nd
1993–94 1 01st
1994–95 1 03rd
1995–96 1 01st
1996–97 1 01st
1997–98 1 02nd
1998–99 1 03rd
1999–00 1 02nd
2000–01 1 02nd
2001–02 1 02nd Semifinals (14) Tonazzi
2002–03 1 01st Semifinals (16) Mugneret, Provost, Tonazzi
2003–04 1 03rd Quarterfinals (14) Tonazzi
2004–05 1 02nd Champion (38) Pichon
2005–06 1 01st Semifinals (36) Pichon
2006–07 1 03rd Round of 16 (16) Tonazzi
2007–08 1 02nd Semifinals (22) Tonazzi
2008–09 1 03rd Semifinals (15) Tonazzi
2009–10 1 02nd Semifinals (12) Tonazzi
2010–11 1 04th Semifinals (20) Tonazzi
2011–12 1 02nd Round of 16 (14) Thiney
2012–13 1 03rd Round of 16 (13) Thiney
2013–14 1 03rd Semifinals (25) Thiney

References

  1. "Historique". FCF Juvisy. Football Club Feminin de Juvisy sur Orge. Retrieved 12 July 2010.
  2. "Les joueuses de Juvisy veulent leur revanche". Conseil général de l'Essonne. Essonne.fr. 11 February 2010. Archived from the original on 28 December 2011. Retrieved 11 October 2011.
  3. "Football Club Feminin de Juvisy" (PDF). FCF Juvisy. Football Club Feminin de Juvisy sur Orge. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 July 2011. Retrieved 12 July 2010.
  4. "Le FCF Juvisy Essonne et le Paris FC ne font plus qu'un !". FCF Juvisy. 6 July 2017. Archived from the original on 10 July 2017. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  5. "PSG – Paris FC feminine: "Pleasure allows longevity", assures Thiney". Archysport. 4 December 2020. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  6. "Féminines – Le PSG triomphe de Juvisy à l'occasion du derby francilien". ParisFans. 5 December 2015. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  7. "D1 Féminine: pourquoi le Paris FC n'y arrive pas ?". Le Parisien. 14 December 2019. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  8. "PSG Féminines win French league for first time, ending Lyon's run of 14 titles". The Guardian. 4 June 2021. Retrieved 7 June 2021.
  9. "EQUIPE D1 FÉMININE". Paris FC. 18 February 2024. Retrieved 18 February 2024.
  10. "EQUIPE D1 FÉMININE". Paris FC. 18 February 2024. Retrieved 18 February 2024.
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