2011 Challenge de France Final

2011 Challenge de France Final
Event 2010–11 Challenge de France
Saint-Étienne win 3–2 on penalties.
Date 21 May 2011
Venue Stade de la Pépinière, Poitiers
Referee Stéphanie Frappart (Île-de-France)
Weather 20 °C (68 °F), Cloudy

The 2011 Challenge de France Final was the 10th final of France's female football cup competition. The final took place on 21 May 2011 at the Stade de la Pépinière in Poitiers and was contested between D1 Féminine clubs Saint-Étienne and Montpellier.[1] This was the last final under the Challenge de France name as the competition will be renamed to the Coupe de France Feminine for the 2011–12 season and onwards.[2]

In the match, Saint-Étienne recorded a historic upset defeating Montpellier 3–2 on penalties after the match ended 0–0 in both regular time and extra time. The title is Saint-Étienne's first Challenge de France in the club's history and its first major honour since joining the AS Saint-Étienne in 2008.

News

Team backgrounds

Saint-Étienne made its debut in the ultimate match of the competition. In its run-up to the final, the club faced only one first division club, Le Mans in the quarter-finals, and defeated the club 1–0. Saint-Étienne also did not concede a goal in the competition having shut out all of its opponents. Montpellier made its fifth appearance in the final of the Challenge de France, which is only second to Lyon, which has appeared in seven. Of its five appearances, Montpellier have won the Challenge de France three times; tied for the most titles ever won in the competition with Lyon. The club won its first titles in back-to-back seasons from 2006–2007 when it defeated Lyon two consecutive years on penalties. Montpellier won its last title in 2009. The club defeated Le Mans 3–1 in the final. The three-time champions only conceded one goal in the competition having outscored its opponents 22–1.

Road to the final

Saint-Étienne Round Montpellier
Opponent H/A Result 2010–11 Challenge de France Opponent H/A Result
Caluire A 5–0 Second Round[3] Villeneuve-lès-Maguelone A 3–0
Flacé Mâcon H 2–0 Round of 32 Arpajon H 9–0
Saint-Simont A 1–0 Round of 16 Toulouse A 1–0
Le Mans H 1–0 Quarterfinals La Roche-sur-Yon H 6–0
Dijon A 5–0 Semi-finals Juvisy A 3–1

Match

Match details

21 May
18:00 CEST
Saint-Étienne 0 0 Montpellier
Report
  Penalties  
3 – 2
Stade de la Pépinière, Poitiers
Referee: Stéphanie Frappart (Île-de-France)
Saint-Étienne
Montpellier
SAINT-ÉTIENNE:
GK 1France Méline Gérard
RB 2France Ludivine Coulomb
CB 4France Morgane Courteille
CB 5France Astrid Chazal (c)
LB 3France Ophélie Brevet
CM 6France Aude Moreau
CM 7France Charlotte Gauvin  42'
RM 10France Amélie Barbetta
LM 9France Déborah Taghavi  63'
AM 11France Kheira Hamraoui  76'
FW 8France Camille Catala
Substitutes:
GK 16France Julie Perrodin
FW 12France Maeva Clemaron  76'
DF 13France Juliette Benne
DF 14France Amandine Soulard
MF 15Algeria Sofia Bengueddoudj  63'
Manager:
France Hervé Didier
MONTPELLIER:
GK 1France Céline Deville
RB 9France Marion Torrent  82'
CB 4France Ophélie Meilleroux
CB 3France Kelly Gadéa
LB 8France Cynthia Viana
CM 6France Charlotte Bilbault
CM 7Japan Rumi Utsugi
RW11France Ludivine Diguelman  62'
LW 10France Viviane Asseyi  71'
FW 5France Hoda Lattaf (c)  82'
FW 2France Marie-Laure Delie
Substitutes:
GK 16France Laëtitia Philippe
MF 12Algeria Nora Hamou Maamar
MF 13France Stéphanie De Revière
DF 14France Marine Pervier  63'
FW 15France Elodie Ramos  71'
Manager:
France Sarah M'Barek

MATCH OFFICIALS

  • Assistant referees:
  • Fourth official: Nathalie Le Breton (Centre-Ouest)
  • Chief Observer: Jean-Luc Rouinsard
  • Chief Delegate: Marc Giraud

MAN OF THE MATCH

    MATCH RULES

    • 90 minutes.
    • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
    • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level.
    • Seven named substitutes.
    • Maximum of three substitutions.

    References

    1. "Saint-Etienne et Montpellier en finale" (in French). French Football Federation. 1 May 2011. Retrieved 2 May 2011.
    2. "Accréditations pour la finale, les modalités" (in French). French Football Federation. 11 May 2011. Retrieved 11 May 2011.
    3. Clubs competing in the Division 1 Féminine entered the competition in the second round

    External links

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/30/2011. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.