Ligue 2
Founded | 1933 |
---|---|
Country | France |
Confederation | UEFA |
Number of teams | 20 |
Level on pyramid | 2 |
Promotion to | Ligue 1 |
Relegation to | Championnat National |
Domestic cup(s) | Coupe de France |
League cup(s) | Coupe de la Ligue |
International cup(s) | Europa League (via cups) |
Current champions | Reims (2nd title) (2017–18) |
Most championships | Le Havre, Nancy (5 titles each) |
TV partners | beIN Sports & Canal+ |
Website | Official site |
2018–19 Ligue 2 |
Ligue 2 (French pronunciation: [liɡ dø], League 2), also known as Domino's Ligue 2 due to sponsorship by Domino's Pizza, is a French professional football league. The league serves as the second division of French football and is one of two divisions making up the Ligue de Football Professionnel (LFP), the other being Ligue 1, the country's top football division. Contested by 20 clubs, it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with both Ligue 1 and the third division Championnat National. Seasons run from August to May, with teams playing 38 games each totalling 380 games in the season. Most games are played on Fridays and Mondays, with a few games played during weekday and weekend evenings. Play is regularly suspended the last weekend before Christmas for two weeks before returning in the second week of January.
Ligue 2 was founded a year after the creation of the first division in 1933 under the name Division 2 and has served as the second division of French football ever since. The name lasted until 2002 before switching to its current name. Since the league is a part of the LFP, it allows clubs who are on the brink of professionalism to become so. However, if a club suffers relegation to the Championnat National, its professional status can be revoked temporarily until they return to Ligue 2.
Contents
1 History
2 Competition format
3 Ligue 2 members (2017–18 season)
4 Previous winners
5 Top goalscorers
6 Records
7 Broadcaster
8 References
9 External links
History
The second division of French football was established in 1933, one year after the creation of the all-professional first division. The inaugural season of the competition consisted of the six clubs who were relegated following the 1932–33 National season, as well as many of the clubs who opposed the creation of the first division the previous season. Clubs such as Strasbourg, RC Roubaix, and Amiens SC all played in the second division's debut season despite having prior grievances with the subjective criteria needed to become professional and play in the first division. The first year of the second division consisted of twenty-three clubs and were divided into two groups (Nord and Sud). Fourteen of the clubs were inserted into the Nord section, while the remaining nine were placed in Sud. Following the season, the winner of each group faced each other to determine which club would earn promotion. On 20 May 1934, the winner of the Nord group, Red Star Saint-Ouen, faced Olympique Alès, the winner of the Sud group. Red Star were crowned the league's inaugural champions following a 3–2 victory. Despite losing, Alès was also promoted to the first division and they were followed by Strasbourg and Mulhouse, who each won a pool championship, after the first division agreed to expand its teams to 16.
Season | Winner |
---|---|
1933–34 | Red Star Saint-Ouen |
1934–35 | CS Metz |
1935–36 | Rouen |
1936–37 | Lens |
1937–38 | Le Havre |
1938–39 | Red Star Saint-Ouen |
Due to several clubs merging, folding, or losing their professional status, the federation turned the second division into a 16-team league and adopted the single-table method for the 1934–35 season. Due to the unpredictable nature of French football clubs, the following season, the league increased to 19 clubs and, two years later, increased its allotment to 25 teams with the clubs being divided into four groups. Because of World War II, football was suspended by the French government and the Ligue de Football Professionnel. Following the end of the war, the second division developed stability. Due to the increase in amateur clubs, the league intertwined professional and amateur clubs and allowed the latter to become professional if they met certain benchmarks. In 2002, the league changed its name from Division 2 to Ligue 2.
In November 2014, the presidents of Caen and Nîmes were amongst several arrested on suspicion of match fixing. The arrests followed a 1–1 draw between Caen and Nîmes in May 2014, a result very beneficial for each club.[1][2]
Competition format
There are 20 clubs in Ligue 2. During the course of a season, usually from August to May, each club plays the others twice, once at their home stadium and once at that of their opponents, for a total of 38 games. Teams receive three points for a win and one point for a draw. No points are awarded for a loss. Teams are ranked by total points, then goal difference, and then goals scored. At the end of each season, the club with the most points is crowned champion and promoted to Ligue 1. If points are equal, the goal difference and then goals scored determine the winner. If still equal, teams are deemed to occupy the same position. If there is a tie for the championship or for relegation, a play-off match at a neutral venue decides rank. The second and third-place finisher are also promoted to the first division, while the three lowest placed teams are relegated to the Championnat National and the top three teams from National are promoted in their place. While a decision was originally made that during the season 2015-2016 only the best two teams would be promoted to Ligue 1 and the last two teams would be relegated to the National,[3] that decision was later overturned by an appeal to the Conseil d'État[4] and the French Football Federation.[5][6]
Ligue 2 members (2017–18 season)
Club | Location | Venue | Capacity |
---|---|---|---|
AC Ajaccio | Ajaccio | Stade François Coty | 10,660 |
Auxerre | Auxerre | Stade de l'Abbé-Deschamps | 21,379 |
Bourg-en-Bresse | Bourg-en-Bresse | Stade Marcel-Verchère 1 | 11,400 |
Brest | Brest | Stade Francis-Le Blé | 15,097 |
Châteauroux | Châteauroux | Stade Gaston Petit | 17,173 |
Clermont Foot | Clermont-Ferrand | Stade Gabriel Montpied | 11,980 |
Gazélec Ajaccio | Ajaccio | Stade Ange Casanova | 6,000 |
Le Havre | Le Havre | Stade Océane | 25,000 |
Lens | Lens | Stade Bollaert-Delelis | 38,223 |
Lorient | Lorient | Stade du Moustoir | 18,890 |
Nancy | Tomblaine | Stade Marcel Picot | 20,087 |
Nîmes | Nîmes | Stade des Costières | 18,482 |
Niort | Niort | Stade René Gaillard | 10,886 |
Orléans | Orléans | Stade de la Source | 7,000 |
Paris FC | Paris | Stade Charléty | 20,000 |
Quevilly-Rouen | Le Petit-Quevilly | Stade Robert Diochon | 12,018 |
Reims | Reims | Stade Auguste Delaune | 21,684 |
Sochaux | Montbéliard | Stade Auguste Bonal | 20,000 |
Tours | Tours | Stade de la Vallée du Cher | 16,247 |
Valenciennes | Valenciennes | Stade du Hainaut | 25,172 |
- 1 Bourg-Péronnas original stadium, Stade Municipal de Péronnas, is not homologated to host professional matches. The club are playing their home games at Stade Marcel-Verchère, home stadium of Bourg-en-Bresse professional rugby union team, after the stadium's renovation. Bourg-Péronnas will play its first games at Stade Jean Laville in Gueugnon.[7]
Previous winners
Top goalscorers
Season | Goals | Top Scorer(s) | Club(s) |
---|---|---|---|
1933–34 | 54 goals | Jean Nicolas | FC Rouen |
1934–35 | 30 goals | Jean Nicolas | FC Rouen |
1935–36 | 45 goals | Jean Nicolas | FC Rouen |
1936–37 | 30 goals | Viktor Spechtl | RC Lens |
1937–38 | 29 goals | Hugo Lammana | CA Paris |
1938–39 | 39 goals | Harold Newell & Planques | US Boulogne & Toulouse FC (1937) |
1939–45 | World War II | ||
1945–46 | 27 goals | Campiglia | SCO Angers |
1946–47 | 45 goals | Jozef "Pépé" Humpal | FC Sochaux |
1947–48 | 28 goals | Henri Arnaudeau | Girondins de Bordeaux |
1948–49 | 41 goals | Camille Libar | Girondins de Bordeaux |
1949–50 | 27 goals | Edmund Haan | Nîmes Olympique |
1950–51 | 23 goals | Thadée Cisowski | FC Metz |
1951–52 | 34 goals | Egon Jonsson | Stade Français football |
1952–53 | 27 goals | Bror Mellberg | Toulouse FC (1937) |
1953–54 | 36 goals | Jean Courteaux | RC Paris |
1954–55 | 40 goals | Petrus Van Rhijn | Valenciennes Football Club |
1955–56 | 32 goals | Petrus Van Rhijn | Valenciennes Football Club |
1956–57 | 27 goals | Fernand Devlaeminck | Lille OSC |
1957–58 | 29 goals | Egon Jonsson | FC Nancy |
1958–59 | 31 goals | Petrus Van Rhijn | Stade Français football |
1959–60 | 29 goals | Corbel | FC Rouen |
1960–61 | 28 goals | Casimir Kozakiewicz | RC Strasbourg |
1961–62 | 21 goals | Serge Masnaghetti | Valenciennes Football Club |
1962–63 | 24 goals | Ernesto Gianella | AS Béziers (football) |
1963–64 | 21 goals | Abderrahmane Soukhane | Le Havre AC |
1964–65 | 22 goals | Anton Groschulski | Red Star Saint-Ouen |
1965–66 | 30 goals | Pierre Ferrazzi | Grenoble Foot 38 |
1966–67 | 23 goals | Etienne Sansonetti | SC Bastia |
1967–68 | 26 goals | Jacques Bonnet | Avignon Football 84 |
1968–69 | 55 goals | Gérard Grizetti | AS Angoulême |
1969–70 | 21 goals | Robert Blanc | FC Nancy |
1970–71 | 20 goals 20 goals 20 goals | Nord : Yves Triantafyllos Centre : Robert Blanc Sud : Emmanuel Koum | US Boulogne Limoges Foot 87 AS Monaco |
1971–72 | 20 goals 28 goals 40 goals | Gr. A : Pierre Pleimelding Gr. B : Yegba Maya Joseph Gr. C : Marc Molitor | Troyes AC Valenciennes Football Club RC Strasbourg |
1972–73 | 22 goals 31 goals | Gr. A : Eugeniusz Faber Gr. B : Gérard Tonnel | RC Lens Troyes AC |
1973–74 | 26 goals 24 goals | Gr. A : Erwin Wilczek Gr. B : Nestor Combin | Valenciennes Football Club Red Star Saint-Ouen |
1974–75 | 25 goals 28 goals | Gr. A : Georges Tripp Gr. B : Jean Martinez | Stade Laval AS Nancy |
1975–76 | 22 goals 25 goals | Gr. A : Bozidar Antic Gr. B : Marc Berdoll | SM Caen SCO Angers |
1976–77 | 30 goals 24 goals | Gr. A : Delio Onnis Gr. B : Albert Gemmrich | AS Monaco RC Strasbourg |
1977–78 | 19 goals 23 goals | Gr. A : Giudicelli Gr. B : Jean-Claude Garnier Gr. B : Pierre-Antoine Dossevi | Olympique Alès USL Dunkerque Tours FC |
1978–79 | 24 goals 26 goals | Gr. A : Antoine Trivino Gr. B : Patrice Martet | FC Gueugnon Stade Brestois |
1979–80 | 16 goals 19 goals | Gr. A : Alain Polaniok Gr. A : Bernard Ferrigno Gr. B : Jacky Vergnes Gr. B : Robert Pintenat | Stade de Reims Tours FC Montpellier HSC Toulouse FC |
1980–81 | 32 goals 22 goals | Gr. A : Robert Pintenat Gr. B : Marcel Campagnac | Toulouse FC Sporting Club Abbeville |
1981–82 | 18 goals 25 goals | Gr. A : Marc Pascal Gr. B : Zarko Olaveric Gr. B : Isiaka Ouattara | Olympique de Marseille Le Havre AC FC Mulhouse |
1982–83 | 28 goals 18 goals | Gr. A : Wlodzimierz Lubanski Gr. B : Christian Dalger | Valenciennes Football Club Sporting Toulon Var |
1983–84 | 23 goals 23 goals | Gr. A : Mario Relmy Gr. B : Omar Da Fonseca | Limoges Foot 87 Tours FC |
1984–85 | 27 goals 28 goals | Gr. A : John Eriksen Gr. B : Jorge Dominguez | FC Mulhouse OGC Nice |
1985–86 | 22 goals 29 goals | Gr. A : Jean-Marc Valadier Gr. B : Eugene N'Goy Kabongo | Montpellier HSC RC Paris |
1986–87 | 22 goals 21 goals | Gr. A : Zvonko Kurbos Gr. B : Gaspard N'Gouete | FC Mulhouse SC Bastia |
1987–88 | 18 goals 26 goals | Gr. A : Jean-Pierre Orts Gr. A : Stéphane Paille Gr. B : Patrice Martet | Olympique Lyonnais FC Sochaux FC Rouen |
1988–89 | 22 goals 27 goals | Gr. A : Roberto Cabanas Gr. B : Robby Langers | Stade Brestois US Orléans |
1989–90 | 26 goals 21 goals | Gr. A : Didier Monczuk Gr. B : Jean-Pierre Orts | RC Strasbourg FC Rouen |
1990–91 | 23 goals 19 goals | Gr. A : Didier Monczuk Gr. B : Christophe Lagrange | RC Strasbourg SCO Angers |
1991–92 | 22 goals 21 goals | Gr. A : Jean-Pierre Orts Gr. B : Didier Monczuk | FC Rouen RC Strasbourg |
1992–93 | 21 goals 18 goals | Gr. A : Franck Priou Gr. B : Jean-Pierre Orts | AS Cannes FC Rouen |
1993–94 | 27 goals | Yannick Le Saux | Stade Briochin |
1994–95 | 31 goals | Tony Cascarino | Olympique Marseille |
1995–96 | 30 goals | Tony Cascarino | Olympique Marseille |
1996–97 | 23 goals | Samuel Michel | FC Sochaux |
1997–98 | 20 goals | Reginald Ray | Le Mans Union Club 72 |
1998–99 | 20 goals | Hamed Diallo | Stade Laval |
1999–2000 | 17 goals | Amara Traoré | FC Gueugnon |
2000–01 | 21 goals | Francileudo Santos | FC Sochaux |
2001–02 | 18 goals | Hamed Diallo | Amiens SC |
2002–03 | 20 goals | Cédric Fauré | Toulouse FC |
2003–04 | 17 goals | David Suarez | Amiens SC |
2004–05 | 24 goals | Bakari Koné | FC Lorient |
2005–06 | 16 goals | Jean-Michel Lesage & Steve Savidan | Le Havre AC & Valenciennes Football Club |
2006–07 | 18 goals | Jean-Michel Lesage & Kandia Traore | Le Havre AC & Le Havre AC |
2007–08 | 28 goals | Guillaume Hoarau | Le Havre AC |
2008–09 | 18 goals | Grégory Thil | US Boulogne |
2009–10 | 21 goals | Olivier Giroud | Tours FC |
2010–11 | 23 goals | Sebastián Ribas | Dijon FCO |
2011–12 | 15 goals | Cédric Fauré | Reims |
2012–13 | 23 goals | Mustapha Yatabaré | EA Guingamp |
2013–14 | 23 goals | Andy Delort & Mathieu Duhamel | Tours FC & SM Caen |
2014–15 | 18 goals | Mickaël Le Bihan | Le Havre AC |
2015–16 | 21 goals | Famara Diedhiou | Clermont Foot |
2016–17 | 23 goals | Adama Niane | ESTAC Troyes |
2017–18 | 24 goals | Umut Bozok | Nîmes |
Records
- 11 minutes: the time it took Sebastian Ribas (Dijon FCO, 2010–11 season) to score the fastest hat trick in the history of Ligue 2.
- 5 times: the number of times Le Havre AC won the second division championship.
- Number of points won by a team in a single season, without being able to promote to the Ligue 1:
- 77 points (1994–95 season) or 1.833 points per game (42 games) for Toulouse FC.
- 72 points (1995–96 season, 22 teams involved): or 1.71 points per game for Stade Lavallois.
- 69 points (2006–07 season, 20 teams involved): or 1.82 points per game for Amiens SC.
- 128 goals: The number of goals scored in 40 games ( a single season) by SCO Angers in 40 games, (1968–69 season).
- 55 goals: the number of goals scored in a season by Gerard Grizzetti, forward playing for AS Angoulême (1969).
- 41 seasons: Number of seasons played by the RCFC Besançon and AS Cannes.
- The fastest goal in the history of Ligue 2 was marked on 26 September 2009 by Remi Nantais Maréval against Nîmes Olympique. After eight seconds of play, the ball crossed the goal line of Nicolas Puydebois.
Broadcaster
Broadcaster | Duration |
---|---|
beIN Sport | 2012–13 → 2015–16 |
Eurosport | 2010–11 → 2011–12 |
Eurosport & Numericable | 2008–09 → 2009–10 |
References
^ "Marseille arrests and match-fixing probe rock French football". France 24. Retrieved 1 December 2014..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}
^ "Presidents of two French clubs arrested on match-fixing suspicions". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
^ "Ligue 1 reduces relegation spots from three to two from next season". Espnfc.com. Retrieved 11 November 2017.
^ "Ligue 1 relegation places stay at three, uncertainty continues". Espnfc.com. Retrieved 11 November 2017.
^ "Le référé de la LFP rejeté". Le Figaro.fr (in French). 14 August 2015.
^ "Ligue 1/Ligue 2 : il y aura bien trois rélégations/promotions". Leparisian.fr. 3 February 2016. Retrieved 11 November 2017.
^ "Signature d'une convention avec Gueugnon" (in French). fcbourgperonnas.fr. Archived from the original on 25 June 2015. Retrieved 24 June 2015.
External links
Official Site (in English)
Official Site (in French)
League321.com - French football league tables, records & statistics database.