Brittany national football team
Nickname(s) | The Black Devils | ||
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Association | Breton Football Association (BFA) | ||
Head coach | Raymond Domenech | ||
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First international | |||
Brittany 1 – 0 Luxembourg Rennes, 12 March 1922 | |||
Biggest win | |||
Brittany 3 – 1 Congo Saint-Brieuc, 20 May 2008 | |||
Biggest defeat | |||
Brittany 1 – 5 Norway Rennes, 1 November 1923 |
The Brittany football select is the professional football team of Brittany, France. It is administered by the Breton Football Association (BFA). It is neither affiliated to FIFA nor UEFA but is characterised as one of the six Celtic nations. Its games are held under the auspices of the French Football Federation and FIFA Regulations[1] Amateur football in Brittany is administered by both the Ligue de Bretagne and the Ligue Atlantique, which are regional associations within the French FA.
Squad selection
Brittany plays unofficial internationals. BFA has a pool of around 100 players in the first three professional divisions to choose from, some of them with proven international football experience. Brittany's Stéphane Guivarc'h won the 1998 World Cup with France.
Brittany notably held Cameroon to a 1–1 draw before the 1998 World Cup finals, featuring Paul Le Guen. Six games had to be called off between 1999 and 2005 because of the then French FA administration, which contradicted its own rules. Fortunately, the head of the French FA administration changed and BFA finally recovered in order to fully resume its activities in 2008. Its latest game was played versus Mali (1–0) on 28 May 2013.
Celtic Cup Ambitions
BFA offered other Celtic nations to join in a Celtic Nations Championship between 1985 and 1987. On 9 September 1985, BFA Secretary Fañch Gaume, visiting Cardiff on the eve of a World Cup qualifier between Wales and Scotland, sounded both the FA of Wales and the Scottish FA about participation to a Celtic Nations Cup. Informal conversations were followed up by correspondence and further personal exchanges, whenever the opportunity presented itself before international games.
While Wales showed a genuine interest, the offer finally fell on barren ground with Scotland. Rejection letters from the SFA for non-entry stated the difficulties to find suitable dates but, as the Sports Editor of "The Glasgow Herald" Jim Reynolds presented it: "It is just two years since England and Scotland broke up the British International Championship by calling a halt to regular games featuring Northern Ireland and Wales. So, the chances of a Celtic Championship involving Scotland must be remote." [2]
Brittany recently renewed its claims to organise and take part in the new Celtic Nations Cup [3] with the Republic of Ireland, Scotland and Wales by 2015 at the earliest or 2017.
Internationals
Date | Venue | Home Team | Away Team | Score |
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12 March 1922 | Rennes | Brittany | Luxembourg | 1–0 |
11 February 1923 | Esch-sur-Alzette | Luxembourg | Brittany | 1–4 |
1 November 1923 | Rennes | Brittany | Norway | 1–5 |
23 March 1924 | Rennes | Brittany | Luxembourg | 1–1 |
22 February 1925 | Luxembourg | Luxembourg | Brittany | 1–1 |
10 April 1938 | Brest | Brittany | Germany XI | called-off |
23 April 1939 | Brest | Brittany | Luxembourg | 3–1 |
30 December 1988 | Brest | Brittany | United States | 6 – 2 (indoor) |
21 May 1998 | Rennes | Brittany | Cameroon | 1–1 |
25 May 1999 | Nantes | Brittany | Republic of Ireland | called-off ° |
30 May 2000 | Nantes | Brittany | Romania | called-off ° |
20 March 2001 | Angers | Brittany | Cuba | called-off ° |
22 May 2001 | Lorient | Brittany | Morocco | called-off ° |
31 August 2001 | Lorient | Brittany | Latvia | called-off ° |
June 2003 | - | Brittany | New Zealand | called-off ° |
20 May 2008 | Saint-Brieuc | Brittany | Congo | 3–1 |
19 May 2010 | Ajaccio | Corsica | Brittany | 2–0 |
21 May 2010 | Bastia | Brittany | Togo | 2–1 |
2 June 2011 | Saint-Nazaire | Brittany | Equatorial Guinea | 0–1 |
28 May 2013 | Nantes | Brittany | Mali | 1–0 |
20 May 2014 | Vannes | Brittany | Central African Republic | called-off |
22 May 2016 | Lomé | Togo | Brittany | cancelled |
° game agreed but not played because of then French FA administration (1999–2005).
Capped Players
Opponents: Cm (Cameroon), Cg (Republic of Congo), Cs (Corsica), Gq (Equatorial Guinea), Oi (Nantes 'Ouest Indoor' Tournament), Tg (Togo), Us (USA).
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Last-minute defections through injury or illness:
- 1998: Sylvain Ripoll, Ronan Salaün
- 2000: Claude Michel
- 2008: Mathieu Bouyer, Romain Danzé, Yoann Gourcuff, Fabien Lemoine
- 2010: Hassan Ahamada, Étienne Didot, Jérémy Menez, Fabien Robert
- 2011: Florent Besnard, Mathieu Bouyer
Managers
- 1988: Jean-Louis Lamour and Marc Rastoll
- 1998: Georges Eo and René Le Lamer
- 2000/2008: Serge Le Dizet
- 2010: Pierre-Yves David
- 2011: Michel Audrain
- 2014: Claude Le Roy
- 2016: Raymond Domenech and Michel Audrain
Latest squad
The following players were called for a match against Equatorial Guinea in Saint-Nazaire, Brittany, France on June 2, 2011.[4]
# | Pos. | Player | Date of birth (age) | Caps | Goals | Club | ||
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GK | Vincent Briant | 9 January 1986 | Sedan | |||||
GK | Mickaël Caradec | 29 April 1982 | Châteauroux | |||||
DF | Florent Besnard | 30 April 1984 | Paris | |||||
DF | Jean-Christophe Cesto | 24 January 1987 | Le Pontet | |||||
DF | Nicolas Gillet | 11 August 1976 | Angers | |||||
DF | Arnaud Le Lan | 22 March 1978 | Lorient | |||||
DF | Jérémy Le Sourne | 25 January 1988 | Lorient | |||||
DF | Romain Poletti | 3 September 1988 | Gazélec Ajaccio | |||||
DF | Pierre Talmont | 2 April 1977 | Laval | |||||
DF | Romain Thomas | 12 June 1988 | Carquefou | |||||
MF | Pierre-Yves Begot | 3 October 1986 | Plabennec | |||||
MF | Ronan Biger | 8 October 1985 | Les Herbiers | |||||
MF | David Bouard | 12 March 1977 | Vannes | |||||
MF | Mathieu Bouyer | 17 January 1987 | Trélissac | |||||
MF | Fabien Debray | 5 October 1981 | Alfortville | |||||
MF | Julien Féret | 5 July 1982 | Nancy | |||||
MF | Ollivier Gueguen | 27 June 1990 | Plabennec | |||||
MF | Maël Illien | 30 August 1990 | Guingamp | |||||
MF | Jérôme Lebouc | 26 December 1979 | Laval | |||||
MF | Guillaume Moullec | 7 March 1980 | Clermont | |||||
MF | Farid Raïs | 7 February 1990 | Plabennec | |||||
FW | Vincent Le Baron | 10 June 1989 | Vannes | |||||
FW | Vincent Le Mat | 22 April 1986 | Orléans | |||||
FW | Yann Kermorgant | 8 November 1981 | 1 | 1 | Reading F.C. |
Eligible players 2015-16
To be included in the Breton squad, according to FIFA national teams rules, it is eligible a player: - born into one of five historical Breton departments. - with parents from Brittany. - with grandparents from Brittany - grown up in Brittany since the age of seven.
The Football Association of Brittany published a list after the appointment of Raymond Domenech as head coach, including the players eligible to represent Brittany in the biennial period of 2015 and 2016:
Goalkeepers:
Defenders:
- Hugo Boumous
- Jean Calvé
- Alexandre Coeff
- Romain Danzé
- Franck Héry
- Corentin Jacob
- Christophe Kerbrat
- Vincent Le Goff
- Florian Le Joncour
- Maxime Le Marchand
- Jérôme Mombris
- Aurélien Montaroup
- Jeremy Morel
- Erwan Quintin
- Lindsay Rose
- Romain Thomas
Midfielders:
- Mathias Autret
- Yann Bodiger
- Gaël Danic
- Étienne Didot
- Julien Féret
- Yoann Gourcuff
- Vincent Gragnic
- Nicolas Janvier
- Raphaël Lecomte
- Fabien Lemoine
- Jérôme Le Moigne
- Flavien Le Postollec
- Damien Le Tallec
- Jérémy Livolant
- Joris Marveaux
- Sylvain Marveaux
- Johann Ramaré
- Antony Robic
- Valentin Rongier
- Frédéric Sammaritano
- Jérémy Toulalan
- Jordan Veretout
Strikers:
- Gaëtan Courtet
- Kevin Gameiro
- Yann Kermorgant
- Yann-Erik de Lanlay
- Valentin Lavigne
- Kévin Lefaix
- Mickaël Le Bihan
- Adam Le Fondre
- Anthony Le Tallec
- Florian Martin
- Jeremy Menez
- Bryan Pelé
- Yohann Rivière
- Julien Toudic
Image gallery
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Brittany, captained by Paul Le Guen, in a match against Cameroon in 1998
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Brittany in a match against Congo at Stade Fred Aubert, Saint-Brieuc, in 2008
Notes and references
- ↑ III.8.3, p. 59).
- ↑ "The Celtic Nations' Union". The Herald (Glasgow). George Outram & Co. 7 November 1986.
- ↑ "Scotland could compete in new Celtic Nations Cup in Brittany". The Herald (Glasgow). Herald & Times Group. 22 October 2011.
- ↑ "La liste des 23 joueurs bretons" (in French). Bretagne-football.org. Retrieved 2012-08-21.