Toulouse FC (women)

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Toulouse
Full nameToulouse Football Club Féminines
Founded1980
Ground, Toulouse
Capacity1,000
ChairmanOlivier Sadran
ManagerMathieu Vrilliard
League
2010–11Division 1, 11th (relegated)
WebsiteClub website

Toulouse FC Féminines is a French football representing Toulouse FC. It currently competes in the . Founded in 1980 as Toulouse OAC, the team became a section of Toulouse FC in 2001, at its peak.

Toulouse OAC settled in the top positions of the French First Division in the second half of the 90s and soon became a powerhouse, winning four championships in a row between 1999 and 2002. It was the first team to achieve this since the league's unification in 1992.[1] The latter was their most successful season, as they also won the national Cup and reached the semifinals of the UEFA Women's Cup after topping its group and beating Arsenal FC.[2] The following year Toulouse was defeated by eventual champions Umeå IK in the quarterfinals.[3]

However, Toulouse gradually declined in the following years and was relegated in 2011. As of the end of the year Toulouse tops the category's Group C.[4]

Honours[]

Titles[]

National competition record[]

Season Division Place Coupe de France Top scorer
1984–85 (Gr. A) 03rd
1988–89 2 (Gr. B) 07th
1989–90 2 (Gr. A) 06th
1990–91 2 (Gr. B) 08th
1991–92 2 (Gr. B) 04th
1992–93 1 10th
1993–94 2 01st
1994–95 1 02nd
1995–96 1 03rd
1996–97 1 02nd
1997–98 1 03rd
1998–99 1 01st
1999–00 1 01st
2000–01 1 01st
2001–02 1 01st Champion (14)
2002–03 1 04th Quarterfinals (13)
2003–04 1 04th ? Traïkia (14)
2004–05 1 05th Round of 16 Traïkia (9)
Season Division Place Coupe de France Top scorer
2005–06 1 04th Semifinals Traïkia (12)
2006–07 1 08th Round of 16 , (8)
2007–08 1 08th Round of 32 (8)
2008–09 1 09th Round of 16 (12)
2009–10 1 08th Round of 32 (6)
2010–11 1 11th Round of 16 , , Dessalle (3)
2011–12 2 (Gr. C) 01st Round of 16
2012–13 1

Record in UEFA competitions[]

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

Season Round Club Away Home Aggregate Scorers
2001–2002 Second qualifying round Ukraine Legenda Chernihiv 1–0 1 o.g.
Croatia Osijek 6–0 3, , Kramo 2
Scotland Ayr United (Host) 2–2 Samptiaux,
Quarter-final England Arsenal 1–1 a 2–1 a.e.t. 3–2 Rouquet, , Kramo
Semi-final Germany Frankfurt 0–0 1–2 a 1–2 Rouquet
2002–2003 Second qualifying round Hungary Femina Budapest 1–0 Maugeais
Italy Lazio Rome (Host) 1–1 Traïkia
Israel Maccabi Haifa 9–0 Traïkia 4, Briche 4, Maugeais
Quarter-final Sweden Umeå 0–2 a 0–0 0–2

a First leg.

Players[]

Current squad[]

As of 4 August 2019 Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK France FRA
GK France FRA
GK France FRA
DF France FRA
DF France FRA
DF France FRA
DF France FRA
DF France FRA
DF France FRA
DF France FRA
MF France FRA
MF France FRA
MF France FRA
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF France FRA
MF France FRA
MF France FRA
MF France FRA
MF France FRA
MF France FRA
FW France FRA
FW France FRA
FW France FRA
FW France FRA
FW France FRA
FW South Africa RSA

References[]


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