Olympique Lyonnais–AS Saint-Étienne rivalry

(Redirected from Derby Rhône-Alpes)

The Olympique Lyonnais–AS Saint-Étienne rivalry, is a football rivalry between French clubs Olympique Lyonnais and AS Saint-Étienne, with matches between them referred to as the Derby Rhône-Alpes, Derby Rhônealpin or simply Le Derby.[2] Both clubs are located in the region of Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes. The term Derby du Rhône is sometimes used by French media,[3] despite the city of Saint-Étienne not being located along the Rhône River nor in the Rhône département.

Derby Saint-Étienne - Lyon
Other namesLe Derby
LocationRhône-Alpes, France
TeamsLyon & Saint-Étienne
First meeting28 October 1951
Latest meetingLyon 1–0 Saint-Étienne
Ligue 1
(21 January 2022)
Statistics
Most winsLyon (46)
Most player appearancesSerge Chiesa (28)
Top scorerHervé Revelli
Fleury Di Nallo
(14 each)[1]
Largest victoryLyon 1–7 Saint-Étienne
(5 October 1969)

Background edit

The two clubs first met in 1951 and, due to the clubs' close proximity, being separated by only 50 kilometres (31 mi), a hotly contested rivalry developed.[4] The derby is cited as one of the high-points of the Ligue 1 season and, like other major rivalries, extends outside of the pitch. The rivalry is locally considered a symbolic challenge between the two cities, as the city of Lyon is considered white collar while its counterpart Saint-Étienne is viewed by the locals as more blue collar.[2]

During the 20th century, Saint-Étienne was the most successful club in French football winning ten league titles between 1957 and 1981, a record that still stands today. During that span, the club also won six Coupe de France titles and performed well at European level.[2] However, the club's performance declined in the 1980s and it even suffered a relegation to the second division in 1984, causing its stranglehold on the national and regional consciousness to weaken. Lyon began a similar ascension into French football at the beginning of the new millennium when the club won their first-ever Ligue 1 championship in 2002. The initial title started a national record-setting streak of seven successive titles.

Currently, both clubs are among the best-supported in Ligue 1, and each has participated in European competition in recent years.

Head-to-head record edit

As of match played 21 January 2022
Competition Matches Winners Goals scored
Lyon Draw Saint-Étienne Lyon Saint-Étienne
League Ligue 1 111 41 32 39 135 139
Ligue 2 4 1 1 2 3 7
Coupe de France 5 3 1[5] 1 9 3
Coupe Charles Drago 1 0 0 1 0 4
Trophée des Champions 1 0 0 1 0 3
Coupe de la Ligue 1 1 0 0 2 1
Total 123 46 34 44 149 157

Switching clubs edit

Due to the clubs' ongoing rivalry, few players have played for both Lyon and Saint-Étienne. Since the two clubs first contested each other in 1951, only 27 players have played for both Lyon and Saint-Étienne and only 13 players have transferred directly from Lyon to Saint-Étienne and vice versa. The first player to "commit" the offense was Antoine Rodriguez in 1951, when after having a nine-year spell at Saint-Étienne, he moved to Lyon, where he spent only one season. Other notable players who made the switch were Aimé Jacquet who, after having a successful 13-year career with Saint-Étienne, departed the club for Lyon, where he spent three seasons. Jacquet later went on to manage Lyon and coached the team to the 1973 Coupe de France Final. Similarly, striker Bernard Lacombe established himself as one of Lyon's all-time leading goalscorers before leaving the club for Saint-Étienne in 1978 where he was often booed and jeered, which led to the player departing the club for Bordeaux after one season. The other players who transferred directly between clubs are François Lemasson, Alain Moizan, André Calligaris, Romarin Billong, Jean-Luc Sassus, Christopher Deguerville, Grégory Coupet, Franck Priou, Lamine Diatta and Bafétimbi Gomis. Steed Malbranque, a product of Lyon youth system and a former Lyon first-team regular, signed for Saint-Étienne from Sunderland, but then resigned after one month, allegedly calling quit to his career. He surprisingly signed for Lyon a few months later.

OL, then ASSE edit

 
David Hellebuyck started his career at Lyon before making over 100 appearances with Saint-Étienne.
Name Pos Lyon Saint-Étienne
Career Apps Goals Career Apps Goals
  Bernard Lacombe FW 1969–78 230 128 1978–79 32 14
  Alain Moizan MF 1980–82 1982–84
  Franck Priou MF 1980–88 1988–90
  Laurent Fournier MF 1986–88 53 15 1995 10 3
  Romarin Billong DF 1988–95 111 5 1995–2000 102 5
  Patrice Ferri DF 1992–93 1995–96
  Jean-Luc Sassus DF 1994–97 1997–98
  David Hellebuyck MF 1996–2000 3 0 2001–06 167 14
  Laurent Morestin DF 1997–98 3 0 2003–04 24 0
  Patrice Carteron DF 1997–2000 101 6 2001–05 100 16
  Lamine Diatta DF 2004–06 40 0 2006–08 27 1
  Sylvain Monsoreau DF 2005–06 19 0 2008–12 30 0
  Steed Malbranque MF 1997–01 110 10 2011–12 1 0
  Mathieu Bodmer MF 2007–10 91 8 2013 16 2
  François Clerc DF 2005–09 78 1 2012–15 85 3
  Jérémy Clément MF 2004–06 54 1 2011–17 192 1
  Timothée Kolodziejczak DF 2008–12 14 0 2018–22 122 7
  Lenny Pintor FW 2018–22 2 0 2022–23 22 1

ASSE, then OL edit

 
Bafétimbi Gomis joined Lyon from Saint-Étienne in 2009.
Name Pos Saint-Étienne Lyon
Career Apps Goals Career Apps Goals
  Michel Cristobal DF 1945–49 1950–52
  Antoine Rodriguez DF 1942–51 1951–52
  Andre Calligaris DF 1957–60 1960–61
  Aimé Jacquet MF 1960–73 176 12 1973–76 26 2
  André Guy FW 1962–65 82 52 1967–71 116 66
  José Broissart MF 1969–73 1976–80
  Jean-François Larios MF 1973–83 167 36 1984–85 27 1
  Olivier Roussey MF 1977–78 1979–80
  Patrice Ferri DF 1981–88 1992–93
  François Lemasson GK 1986–87 5 0 1987–90 101 0
  Christopher Deguerville DF 1987–95 1995–97
  Grégory Coupet GK 1993–97 88 0 1997–2008 518 0
  Frédéric Piquionne FW 2004–07 97 27 2008–09 26 4
  Pape Diakhaté DF 2010 18 1 2010–11 3 0
  Bafétimbi Gomis FW 2003–09 162 49 2009–14 244 95
  Steed Malbranque MF 2011–12 1 0 2012–14 129 9
  Mouhamadou Dabo DF 2005-10 123 1 2011–15 91 1

References edit

  1. ^ "The Men of the Derby". Olympique Lyonnais. 22 September 2010. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  2. ^ a b c "Power struggle on the Rhone". Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 19 December 2009. Archived from the original on 3 August 2009. Retrieved 3 August 2010.
  3. ^ "Ligue1.com - Briand wins derby du Rhône at last for OL". www.ligue1.com. Archived from the original on 18 November 2013.
  4. ^ "OM-PSG D-2: The match that divides a nation". Ligue de Football Professionnel. 23 October 2009. Retrieved 3 August 2010. [dead link]
  5. ^ Penalty win for Lyon but officially counts as a draw

External links edit