Lille OSC
Lille Olympique Sporting Club, commonly called LOSC, also referred to as LOSC Lille, Lille OSC or simply Lille, is a French professional association football club based in Lille in Hauts-de-France. The club was founded in 1944 as a result of a merger and plays in Ligue 1, the first division of French football. Lille has played its home matches since 2012 at Stade Pierre-Mauroy in nearby Villeneuve d'Ascq, which replaced the club's previous home of Stade Lille-Metropole in the same community.
Lille was founded as a result of a merger between Olympique Lillois and SC Fives. Both clubs were founding members of the French Division 1 and Lillois was the league's inaugural champions. Under the Lille emblem, the club has won three league titles and six Coupe de France titles. Lille's most successful period was the decade from 1946 to 1956 when the team was led by managers George Berry and André Cheuva.
Lille has a long-standing rivalry with nearby club RC Lens, with whom they contest the Derby du Nord. The club is owned and presided over by Gérard Lopez, an entrepreneur-investor and an active Luxembourgish-Spanish businessman who invests in the sports industry.
History
1944–1955: The first decade
Before the Second World War, the city of Lille had two clubs in Ligue 1; Olympique Lillois and Sporting Club Fivois. Weakened by the war, the two clubs decided to merge in the autumn of 1944, giving birth to Lille Olympique Sporting Club. Within its first decade of existence, the new club won two league titles and reached the second place for four consecutive seasons. In the Coupe de France the club accumulated five wins in seven finals, including five successive finals. The final of the Latin Cup was also reached.1956–1980: Lille loses its way
Lille were relegated for the first time in 1956. The club became a mid-table side and in the late 1960s, after a long period of anonymity, and weighed down by a lack of facilities and resources, Lille abandoned its professional status. It was feared that the club might disappear. However, some young leaders, such as Max Pommerolle, came and gave new impetus to the club. Nevertheless, the results remained erratic and the only titles that ignited the fans' passions were won in the Second Division.1980–2000: Laying the foundations for future success
In July 1980, Lille was the first French club to opt for the status of a mixed economy company, of which the city of Lille became the majority shareholder. The team of presidents Amyot, Deschot and Dewailly all struggled to compete with the top teams in the country. Jacques Amyot's resignation in 1990 led to three more difficult years for the club which compromised its very existence. It took Bernard Lecomte's arrival in 1993 to set the club finances on the road to recovery. After a final relegation in 1997, the team trained by Bosnian coach Vahid Halilhodžić was soon promoted back to the elite, in the same year the French Football League was privatised.2000–present: A steady climb to the top
In just its first season back in the top flight 2000–01 French Division 1, Lille qualified for Europe for the first time in the club's history, booking its place in the 2000–01 Champions League. On the back of the club's new status, Lille entered into a decisive new era under the guidance of chairman and chief executive officer Michel Seydoux and coach Claude Puel. The club left the historical Stade Grimonprez-Jooris to join the Stadium Lille Métropole and became a regular on the European scene. Amongst its most emphatic results was the 1–0 victory over Manchester United at the Stade de France in 2005, the 2–0 triumph over Milan in San Siro in 2006 and the 1–0 home win over Liverpool in 2010. A steady development off the pitch, coupled with the sporting progression under the expert hand of coach Rudi Garcia, took Lille back to the summit of the French game with the League and Cup double in 2011. In 2012, LOSC confirmed its place at the top table of the domestic game with another qualification for Europe's most prestigious club competition, the Champions League in 2012–13. With the club finishing just outside the UCL places that season, Garcia left to join Roma, while former Montpellier coach René Girard was appointed the new Lille manager. After two years in charge of the club, Girard left his role as the head coach by mutual consent. He was joined by assistants Gerard Bernadet and Nicolas Girard in making the exit. In May 2015, the Ivory Coast national team head coach Hervé Renard was appointed as the new manager. On 11 November 2015, Renard was terminated as manager and was replaced by Frederic Antonetti. On 23 November 2016, a year after being appointed, Lille terminated Antonetti's contract with the club lying second last in the table. In March 2017, Lille appointed Marcelo Bielsa as new manager of the club. In November 2017, Bielsa was suspended by Lille following an unauthorized trip to Chile with the club lying second from bottom on the table again and only managing 3 wins from the first 14 games of the season.On 23 December 2017, Bielsa was terminated by Lille and replaced with former Saint-Etienne manager Christophe Galtier. After a difficult 2017–2018 season, Lille managed to avoid relegation to Ligue 2 by defeating Toulouse 3–2 in the second last game of the campaign.
In the 2018–19 Ligue 1 season, Lille secured the second place to qualify for the 2019–20 UEFA Champions League group stage, they returned to the competition after a seven-year absence.
Stadiums
was inaugurated in 2012. Originally named the Centre Olympique de Lille Est, the club's sporting venue is spread over five hectares and features three natural grass football pitches and one synthetic pitch, as well as a number of buildings including a medical centre and gymnasium. These attributes had seen the club house part of the LOSC Youth Academy here, before all the club's operations were moved to the Domaine de Luchin in Camphin-en-Pé.Club rivalries
The Derby du Nord is a football match contested between Lille and RC Lens. The derby name refers only to their geographical location in France since Lille is the only club of the two actually situated in the department of Nord. Lens are situated in the western department of Pas-de-Calais. The name can also refer to matches involving Lille and Valenciennes as both clubs are located within Nord, however, the match historically refers to matches involving Lille and Lens. As a result, the Lille–Valenciennes match is sometimes referred to as Le Petit Derby du Nord. The two clubs first met in 1937 when Lille were playing under the Olympique Lillois emblem. Due to each club's close proximity towards each other being separated by only and sociological differences between each club's supporters, a fierce rivalry developed. The Derby du Nord is underpinned by social and economic differences, since the city of Lens is known as an old, working-class, industrial city and Lille as a middle-class, modern, internationally oriented one. Nowadays the matches, which can spark intense feelings on both sides, have gained prominence as they may determine berths in continental competitions.Players
Current squad
Out on loan
Reserve team
Records
Most appearances
Top scorers
Management and staff
Lille Olympique Sporting Club – LOSC Lille- President: Gérard Lopez
- Deputy CEO: :ca:Marc Ingla i Mas|Marc Ingla
- Academy Director: Jean-Michel Van Damme
- Football Director: Franck Béria
- Scouting Football Adviser: :fr:Luis Campos |Luis Campos
- Coach: Christophe Galtier
Coaching history
Dates | Name |
1944–46 | Georges Berry |
1946–58 | André Cheuva |
1958–59 | Jacques Delepaut |
1959–61 | Jules Vandooren |
1961–62 | Jean Baratte |
1962 | Jean-Charles Van Gool |
1962–63 | Guy Poitevin |
1963–66 | Jules Bigot |
1966 | Jean-Charles Van Gool |
1966–69 | Daniel Langrand |
1969–70 | Joseph Jadrejak |
1970–73 | René Gardien |
1973–76 | Georges Peyroche |
1976–77 | Charles Samoy |
1977–82 | José Arribas |
1982–84 | Arnaud Dos Santos |
1984–89 | Georges Heylens |
1989–92 | Jacques Santini |
Dates | Name |
1991 | Milan Đuričić Jacques Santini |
1992–93 | Bruno Metsu |
1993 | Henryk Kasperczak |
1993–94 | Pierre Mankowski |
1994–95 | Jean Fernandez |
1995–97 | Jean-Michel Cavalli |
1997 | Hervé Gauthier Charles Samoy |
1997–98 | Thierry Froger |
1998–2001 | Vahid Halilhodžić |
2001–2002 | Bruno Baronchelli |
2002 | Vahid Halilhodžić |
2002–08 | Claude Puel |
2008–13 | Rudi Garcia |
2013–15 | René Girard |
2015 | Hervé Renard |
2015 | Patrick Collot |
2015–16 | Frédéric Antonetti |
2016–17 | Patrick Collot |
Dates | Name |
2017 | Franck Passi |
2017 | Marcelo Bielsa |
2017 | João Sacramento |
2017– | Christophe Galtier |
Honours
Domestic
- Ligue 1
- *Champions : 1945–46, 1953–54, 2010–11
- *Runners-up : 1947–48, 1948–49, 1949–50, 1950–51, 2004–05, 2018–19
- Ligue 2
- *Champions : 1963–64, 1973–74, 1977–78, 1999–2000
- Coupe de France
- *Champions : 1945–46, 1946–47, 1947–48, 1952–53, 1954–55, 2010–11
- *Runners-up : 1944–45, 1948–49
- Coupe de la Ligue
- *Runners-up : 2015–16
- Coupe Gambardella
- *Champions : 1960
- *Runners-up : 1955, 2000
- Coupe Charles Drago
- *Runners-up : 1954, 1956
Europe
- UEFA Intertoto Cup
- *Winner : 2004
- Latin Cup
- *Runners-up : 1951