2010 Coupe de France Final

2010 Coupe de France Final
Event 2009–10 Coupe de France
Date 1 May 2010
Venue Stade de France, Saint-Denis
Referee Lionel Jaffredo (Brittany)
Weather 14 °C (57 °F), Mostly Cloudy

The 2010 Coupe de France Final was the 92nd final of France's most prestigious cup competition. The final took place on 1 May 2010 at the Stade de France in the Parisian suburb of Saint-Denis. The cup was won by Paris Saint-Germain with a 1–0 win against Monaco.[1][2] A Guillaume Hoarau header in extra time was the difference between the teams.[3]

As winners, PSG were guaranteed a UEFA Europa League place for the 2010–11 season, which they claimed after finishing 13th in Ligue 1, outside the Champions League qualification places. The final was televised on France 2, the cup's main broadcaster.

Team background

Monaco's appearance in the Coupe de France final marked their eighth appearance in the competition's ultimate match. Of the appearances, Monaco have won the cup five times, which is tied for fourth in the cup's history. Monaco's last appearance in the final dates all the way back to the 1990–91 season when they defeated Marseille 1–0 with the lone goal coming from Gerald Passi.[4]

Paris Saint-Germain entered the final for the 11th time in the club's history. Their 11 appearances rank second best behind Marseille in French football history. Of the 11 appearances, PSG has tasted cup victory seven times, second to Marseille's ten titles. Their last victory came during the 2005–06 season when they defeated Marseille 2–1 with the goals coming from Bonaventure Kalou and Vikash Dhorasoo. PSG's last finals appearance came during the 2007–08 season. The club suffered heartbreak losing 1–0 in extra time to Lyon.[5]

In total, Monaco and PSG have contested each other 29 times in league play with the former having the advantage winning 16 matches. PSG have accounted for only three wins, while ten were played to a draw. Monaco and PSG have faced each other five times in the Coupe de France.[6] One of their more important meetings in the competition came during the 1984–85 season when the two met in the competition's ultimate match. In the match – played at PSG's home stadium, the Parc des Princes – Monaco recorded a 1–0 victory with the only goal coming from French international Bernard Genghini. The club's most recent meetings came during the 2009–10 Ligue 1 season. The first match was played on 13 September 2009 at the Stade Louis II. The match ended in a 2–0 victory for Monaco, with Park Chu-young and Nenê scoring the goals.[7] On 20 January 2010, the return match was played in Paris. The match ended 1–0 again, in favour of Monaco, with PSG goalkeeper Apoula Edel scoring an own goal for Monaco in the second half.[8]

Road to the Final

Monaco

Round of 64Monaco0–0(aet)
4–3 pen.
Tours
Round of 32Monaco2–1Lyon
Round of 16Bordeaux1–2Monaco
Quarter-finalsMonaco4–3(aet)Sochaux
Semi-finalMonaco1–0(aet)Lens

Paris Saint-Germain

Round of 64Aubervilliers0–5PSG
Round of 32PSG3–1Evian
Round of 16Vesoul0–1PSG
Quarter-finalsAuxerre0–0(aet)
5–6 pen.
PSG
Semi-finalQuevilly0–1PSG

Match background

Ticketing

The Coupe de France final has been played every year at the Stade de France since 1998, following the stadium's completion. The stadium has a capacity of 81,338 spectators. Each club that will participate in the final will receive the same quota of tickets. The tickets were distributed to the public via each club, as well as the each club's league association. Paris Saint-Germain sold their tickets on 17 April at the service area of the Parc des Princes, the club's home stadium. Monaco distributed their tickets to the public four days later on 21 April at the Stade Louis II, the club's home stadium. The Ligue de la Méditerranée de Football, whom Monaco is representing, and the Ligue de Paris Ile-de-France de Football, whom Paris Saint-Germain is representing, only distributed tickets to local clubs within each league.[9] Tickets went on sale to the general public on 26 April.[10] Pricing was defined by category with Category 1 seats, the highest category, being priced at 115 and Category 3, the lowest, going for €55.[9]

Officials

On 15 April, the French Football Federation announced that referee Lionel Jaffredo of Brittany would officiate the 2010 Coupe de France final. His assistants were Frédéric Cano of Centre-Ouest and Christophe Capelli of Aquitaine, with Clément Turpin of Bourgogne serving as the fourth official.[11] Jaffredo refereed three league matches during the season that involved Monaco: a 1–0 defeat to Sochaux, a 1–1 draw with Le Mans and another stalemate with Auxerre. Jaffredo did not referee a match contested by Paris Saint-Germain this season.[12]

Match

Details

1 May 2010
20:45 CET
Monaco 0–1 (a.e.t.) Paris Saint-Germain
Report Hoarau  105'
Stade de France, Saint-Denis
Attendance: 75,000[13]
Referee: Lionel Jaffredo (Brittany)
AS Monaco
Paris Saint-Germain
GK 1 France Stéphane Ruffier
RB 4 France François Modesto
CB 2 Democratic Republic of the Congo Cédric Mongongu  105'
CB 3 France Sébastien Puygrenier
LB 7 Mali Djimi Traoré
CM 6 Brazil Eduardo Costa  110'  111'
CM 5 France Thomas Mangani  55'
AM 8 Argentina Alejandro Alonso (c)  22'
RM 9 Colombia Juan Pablo Pino  86'
LM 11Brazil Nenê  63'
CF 10South Korea Park Chu-young
Substitutes:
GK 18France Yohann Thuram-Ulien
DF 12Brazil Adriano
DF 13France Vincent Muratori
DF 16Cameroon Nicolas N'Koulou  111'
MF 15Nigeria Lukman Haruna  55'
FW 14Niger Moussa Maâzou  86'
FW 18France Yannick Sagbo
Manager:
France Guy Lacombe
GK 1 Armenia Apoula Edel
RB 2 France Christophe Jallet  116'
CB 3 France Mamadou Sakho
CB 6 France Zoumana Camara
LB 5 France Sylvain Armand
DM 4 France Claude Makélélé (c)  59'
CM 8 France Jérémy Clément
RM 10Benin Stéphane Sessègnon
LM 7 France Ludovic Giuly  77'
CF 11Turkey Mevlüt Erdinç  105'
CF 9 France Guillaume Hoarau  110'
Substitutes:
GK 18France Grégory Coupet
DF 12 Brazil Ceará  105'
DF 13Mali Sammy Traoré  116'
FW 14Serbia Mateja Kežman
FW 15France Jean-Eudes Maurice
FW 16 France Péguy Luyindula  77'
MF 17France Granddi Ngoyi
Manager:
France Antoine Kombouaré

Match officials

  • Assistant referees:
    • Christophe Capelli (Aquitaine)
    • Frédéric Cano (Centre)
  • Fourth official: Clément Turpin (Bourgogne)

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

External links

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