AS Monaco FC

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AS Monaco
Logo
Full name Association Sportive de
Monaco Football Club
Nickname(s) Les Rouge et Blanc (the red and white)
Founded 1919
Ground Stade Louis II,
Monaco
(Capacity 18,500)
Chairman Flag of Monaco Michel Pastor
Manager Flag of Brazil Ricardo Gomes
League Ligue 1
2006-2007 Ligue 1, 9th
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

The Association Sportive de Monaco Football Club is a Monegasque football club, founded in 1919. They became a professional club after 1948. Although the club is in Monaco, it has always competed in the French football structure. For this reason, it has always been regarded with a certain suspicion by a segment of the French population. It is one of the most successful clubs in French football, with seven league titles and five French Cup titles. It has also had some successful campaigns in Europe, including a run to the final of the UEFA Champions League, in 2004, but it has not won a European competition.

Monaco were shock finalists in the UEFA Champions League in 2004, impressively beating the likes of Real Madrid and Chelsea along the way there, but they were defeated by FC Porto in the final, losing the match 3-0. This remains Monaco's greatest achievement so far in Europe, but in 2005 Monaco were beaten in the 3rd qualifying round stage by Real Betis. They have since continued recent good form and secured a place in the 1/16th of the UEFA Cup vs. Basel after having won the Group Stage tournament (group including Hamburg, CSKA Sofia, Slavia Prague and Viking Stavanger), after a victorious home/away fixture over Dutch side Willem II.

Contents

At the beginning of the club, AS Monaco was characterized by its lack of identity, and changed its color every year. Colors were used just to be different from other teams. Then, the team played with a red and white striped shirt, from 1950 till 1960, the first important shirt in AS Monaco history.With this striped shirt, the team won its first title, the Coupe de France in 1960.The famous red and white diagonal shirt was designed by princess Grace Kelly herself in 1960 and would immediately bring luck to the team, winning its first French championship during the 1960-1961 season. The logo first appeared for the 1968-1969 season on the shirt.

Stade Louis II
Stade Louis II

AS Monaco's home ground is Stade Louis II, an all-seater with a capacity of 18,500 in the Fontvieille section of Monaco. The stadium, as well as the Fontvieille district, was built entirely on land reclaimed from the Mediterranean Sea. This small but glamorous looking stadium is often used to host the European Supercup at the start of the season, featuring the winner of the Champions League and the winner of the UEFA Cup.


AS Monaco is sometimes derided for its relatively low number of spectators (10,394 average for the 2003/2004 season). However, taking into account the city's population of 30,000 and that it competes with Nice's team (350,000 inhabitants) OGC Nice 20 km nearby (with an average attendance of 11,500 in the same season), Monaco as a city has one of the highest spectator/inhabitant ratios in France.

Season Achievement Notes
European Champions Clubs' Cup
1988-89 Quarter-finals eliminated by Galatasaray SK 0-1 in Monaco, 1-1 in Istanbul
Champions League
1993-94 Semi-finals eliminated by AC Milan 0-3 in Milan
1997-98 Semi-finals eliminated by Juventus FC 1-4 in Turin, 3-2 in Monaco
2003-04 Final defeated by FC Porto 0-3
Cup Winners' Cup
1989-90 Semi-finals eliminated by UC Sampdoria 2-2 in Monaco, 0-2 in Genova
1991-92 Final defeated by Werder Bremen 0-2
UEFA Cup
1996-97 Semi-finals eliminated by FC Internazionale Milano 1-3 in Milan, 1-0 in Monaco


As of July 13, 2007.

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Monaco GK Manuel Vallaurio
2 Flag of France DF Sylvain Monsoreau
3 Flag of France DF Jérémy Berthod
4 Flag of France DF François Modesto (Captain)
5 Flag of Uruguay MF Diego Pérez
7 Flag of Argentina MF Lucas Bernardi
9 Flag of the Czech Republic FW Jan Koller
10 Flag of France MF Jérémy Menez
11 Flag of Brazil MF Nené
12 Flag of Brazil DF Adriano Pereira
13 Flag of France DF Vincent Muratori
14 Flag of France MF Malaury Martin
15 Flag of France DF Olivier Veigneau
No. Position Player
16 Flag of France GK Stéphane Ruffier
17 Flag of France FW Serge Gakpe
18 Flag of France FW Frédéric Piquionne
20 Flag of Colombia FW Juan Pablo Pino
21 Flag of France MF Camel Meriem
22 Flag of Brazil DF Bolívar
23 Flag of Croatia MF Jerko Leko
24 Flag of France DF Cédric Mongongu
25 Flag of Argentina DF Leandro Cufré
26 Flag of Senegal DF Massamba Sambou
27 Flag of France DF Arnaud Lescure
30 Flag of Italy GK Flavio Roma
33 Flag of France MF Djamel Bakar

No. Position Player
28 Flag of Germany DF Torben Joneleit (at Hibernian)
Flag of France MF Thomas Mangani (at AC Ajaccio)
Flag of France FW Alexandre Licata (at SC Bastia)
Flag of France FW Frédéric Nimani (at FC Lorient)
Flag of France FW Lanteri Laurent (at Legano)
11 Flag of France FW Sébastien Grax (at Sochaux)
19 Flag of Uruguay FW Gonzalo Vargas (at Sochaux)

No. Position Player
3 Flag of France DF Jérémy Berthod (from Lyon)
20 Flag of Colombia FW Juan Pablo Pino (from Independiente Medellin)
11 Flag of Brazil MF Nenê (from Celta de Vigo)
12 Flag of Brazil DF Adriano Pereira (from Atalanta)

No. Position Player
Flag of France DF Gael Givet (to Marseille)
Flag of France DF Manuel dos Santos (to Strasbourg)
Flag of Côte d'Ivoire MF Yaya Toure (to FC Barcelona)
Flag of Spain MF Gerard López (to Recreativo de Huelva)
Flag of the Czech Republic MF Jaroslav Plasil (to C.A. Osasuna)
Flag of France MF Nicolas Maurice-Belay (to FC Sochaux)
Flag of France FW David Gigliotti (to AS Saint-Étienne)
Flag of Italy FW Marco Di Vaio (to Genoa)
Flag of France FW Dominic Malonga (to Torino)
Flag of Sierra Leone FW Mohamed Kallon (on trial at Birmingham City)

For a complete list of former AS Monaco players with a Wikipedia article, see here.


France
Argentina
Belgium
Bosnia-Herzegovina
Brazil
Cameroon
Czech Republic
Chad
Croatia
Democratic Republic of Congo
Denmark
England
Germany
Greece
Haiti
Italy
Ivory Coast
Liberia
Mexico
Nigeria
Norway
Portugal
Scotland
Senegal
Serbia
Spain
Sweden
Togo
Uruguay

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