Olympique Lyonnais Reserves and Academy
Full name | Olympique Lyonnais |
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Nickname(s) | Les Gones, Lyon, or OL |
Founded | 1899/1950[1] |
Ground | Stade Gérard Houllier [fr], Décines-Charpieu |
Capacity | 1,524 |
Chairman | United States John Textor |
Manager | France Gueida Fofana (National 3) France Samy Saci (U-19s) France Amaury Barlet (U-17s) |
League | Championnat National 3 Championnat National Under-19 Championnat National Under-17 |
2022–23 (National 2) | National 2 Group C, 14th (relegated) |
The Olympique Lyonnais Reserves & Academy are the reserve team and academy of French club Olympique Lyonnais. The reserves squad play in the Championnat National 3, the fifth division of French football and the second highest division the team is allowed to participate in. Lyon have won the reserves title of the Championnat de France Amateur six times. They have won in 1998, 2001, 2003, 2006, and 2009, and 2010.
Overview
[edit ]The U-19 squad participates in their weekly league, the Championnat National U19, which is a league comprising four groups of fourteen clubs who play each other twice during the regular season. This session is dubbed Phase 1. Following the regular season, the four group winners are randomly selected to face each other in semi-final matches (dubbed Phase 2) to decide who will play each other in the Under-18 Championnat National championship match, usually held in Mayenne. There is also a third-place match, which is usually held just before the championship match. The Under-18 squad also regularly participates in the Coupe Gambardella. They have won the title on 4 occasions. They won the cup in 1971, 1994, 1997 and 2022.
The U-17 side participates in a league, the Championnat National U17, a youth league comprising six groups of twelve clubs who play each other twice during the regular season, dubbed Phase 1. Following the regular season, the six group winners and the two best second place clubs are randomly inserting into two groups of four, where they play each other at neutral venues once over a span of four days. This portion is dubbed Phase 2. The two winners of each group will then face each other in the championship match to determine the champion of the Under-17 Championnat National. The Under-17 squad also participates in regional cup competitions.
The current National 3 manager is Gueida Fofana, who played for Olympique Lyonnais before but had his career cut-short due to injuries. He has been the manager of Lyon's reserves team since 2019. The manager of the Olympique Lyonnais U-19s and U-17s are Samy Saci and Amaury Barlet.[2]
Philosophy
[edit ]According to Faouzi Djedou-Benabid, the scout for Niort and the co-author of Pourquoi le foot français va dans le mur (lit. 'Why French football goes into wall'; 2015), published by Hugo Sport, the training provided in Olympique Lyonnais academy favors the technical learning of football over match results, like FC Barcelona: thus, "Lyon educators do not hesitate to have defenders play in midfield so that 'they can learn to use their feet better". In addition, the formation does not favor any pattern of play, allowing the players to adapt easily to all positions during the game.[3]
As a result of this philosophy, since the 2010s, Lyon youth academy gained reputation all around Europe as being one of the top football academies in the continent, producing several players playing in European top tier competitions.[4] Between 2012 and 2019, Lyon appears successively eight times in top 4 of the International Centre for Sports Studies list of the best football academies in Europe. Lyon was also rated by the French Football Federation as the best football academy in France for six seasons in a row, between 2013 and 2019.[5]
In February 2014, L'Équipe writes that Olympique Lyonnais ranks second in terms of the number of players trained at the club and playing in the "five major European championships" (Germany, England, Spain, France and Italy) tied with Real Madrid, and the first being FC Barcelona.[6] [7] In 2015, France Football rated Lyon youth academy as one of the best in Europe, as it is used to feed the first team, and also having a pool of players with value on the transfer market, without this being in the heart of the club's policy.[8] Indeed, the competition level in Lyon's youth team is very difficult for young players, they will regularly, voluntarily or not, emancipate themselves in other very young clubs. Just as regularly, a certain number of them manage to have a good national or international career such as Ludovic Giuly, Karim Benzema, Alexandre Lacazette, Samuel Umtiti, or Nabil Fekir.
Honours
[edit ]- Championnat de France Amateurs: 7
- Champions: 1998, 2001, 2003, 2006, 2009, 2010, 2011
- Championnat National U17: 4
- Champions: 1994, 2000, 2004, 2014
- Championnat National U19: 3
- Champions: 1993, 2000, 2005
- Coupe Gambardella: 4
- Champions: 1971, 1994, 1997, 2022
- Finalists: 1970, 1992, 2005, 2006, 2015
- Coupe Nationale U16 (with Rhône-Alpes): 2
- Champions: 1960, 1996
- French Division 3: 1
- Champions: 1993
- Montaigu Tournament: 2
- Champions: 2000, 2004
Current squad
[edit ]Reserve squad (Olympique Lyonnais II)
[edit ]As of 7 February 2025[9]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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U19 squad
[edit ]Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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U17 squad
[edit ]Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Staff
[edit ]- As of 1 August 2024
Position | Name |
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General Director | France Fabien Caballero |
Reserves Manager | France Gueïda Fofana |
Reserves Assistant Manager | France Pierre Chavondrier |
Academy Goalkeeper Coach | France Olivier Blondel France Sébastien Gerin |
Academy Fitness Coach | France Nicolas Quinault |
U-19 Manager | France Samy Saci |
U-19 Assistant Manager | France Rémy Kaleche France Florian Luong |
U-19 Fitness Coach | France Antoine Maennel |
U-19 Athletic Coach | France Florian Testard |
U-17 Manager | France Amaury Barlet |
U-17 Assistant Managers | Vacant |
U-17 Fitness Coach | France Mattéo Cathalot |
Preformation Director | France Nicolas Brun |
Sporting Coordinator | France Guy Genet |
Notable alumni
[edit ]Many players from Lyon's youth system have managed to reach the professional level in football, whether at Lyon or at other clubs. As of June 2024, 34 players formed in the Lyon academy had capped for the France national football team.[10] Below is a non-exhaustive list of notable players who trained in the youth or reserve teams of Olympique Lyonnais:
France
- France Loïc Abenzoar
- France Ghislain Anselmini
- France Leeroy Anton
- France Marcel Aubour
- France Jérémy Aymes
- France Kamal Bafounta
- France Farès Bahlouli
- France Mohamed Bahlouli
- France Florent Balmont
- France Bradley Barcola
- France Melvin Bard
- France Cédric Bardon
- France Xavier Barrau
- France Christian Bassila
- France Karim Belhocine
- France Olivier Bellisi
- France Nicolas Belvito
- France Hatem Ben Arfa
- France Mourad Benhamida
- France Farid Benstiti
- France Karim Benzema
- France Bryan Bergougnoux
- Guadeloupe Olivier Bernard
- France Jérémy Berthod
- France Grégory Bettiol
- France Romain Beynié
- France Maxime Blanc
- French Guiana Kayne Bonnevie
- France Gilbert Bonvin
- France Pierre Bouby
- France Jérémie Bréchet
- France Anthony Briançon
- France Maxence Caqueret
- France Alexis Carra
- France Maxime Cassara
- France Alain Caveglia
- France Johann Charpenet
- France Mickael Charvet
- France Yves Chauveau
- France Xavier Chavalerin
- France Rayan Cherki
- France François Clerc
- France Jérémy Clément
- France Timothé Cognat
- France Renaud Cohade
- France Mickaël Colloredo
- France Gilles Constantinian
- France Yoann Court
- France Laurent Courtois
- France Florent Da Silva
- France Andrea Damiani
- France Stéphane Darbion
- France Maxime D'Arpino
- France Fabien Debec
- France Laurent Debrosse
- France Romain Dedola
- France Romain Del Castillo
- France Sylvain Deplace
- France Jean-Christophe Devaux
- France Fleury Di Nallo
- France Yohan Di Tommaso
- France Jean Djorkaeff
- France Raymond Domenech
- Collectivity of Saint Martin Belony Dumas
- France Jean-Philippe Durand
- France Franck Durix
- France Alan Dzabana
- France Yann Ekra
- France Mohamed El Arouch
- France Stephen Ettien
- France Sébastien Faure
- France Julien Faussurier
- France Nabil Fekir
- France Yassin Fekir
- France Jordan Ferri
- France Fabrice Fiorèse
- France Maxence Flachez
- France Sébastien Flochon
- France Laurent Fournier
- France Pascal Fugier
- France Rémi Garde
- France Bruno Génésio
- France Alexis Genet
- France Guy Genet
- France Gaël Genevier
- France Willem Geubbels
- France Ludovic Giuly
- France Yohan Gomez
- France Anthony Gomez Mancini
- France Maxime Gonalons
- France Mathieu Gorgelin
- France Hérold Goulon
- France Sidney Govou
- France Fabrice Grange
- France Clément Grenier
- France Sébastien Grimaldi
- France Malo Gusto
- Martinique Joan Hartock
- France Alexandre Hauw
- France David Hellebuyck
- France Kévin Jacmot
- France Warren Jacmot
- France Joris Jehan
- France Franck Jurietti
- France Joseph Kalulu
- France Pierre Kalulu
- France Timothée Kolodziejczak
- France Billy Koumetio
- France Zakarie Labidi
- France Alexandre Lacazette
- France Bernard Lacombe
- France Guillaume Lacour
- France Stéphane Lalaoui
- France Gérard Lanthier
- France Florent Laville
- France William Le Pogam
- France Sekou Lega
- France Esteban Lepaul
- France David Linarès
- France Cyriaque Louvion
- France Castello Lukeba
- France Steed Malbranque
- France Jérémy Manzorro
- France Yoann Martelat
- France Alexis Martial
- France Anthony Martial
- France Boris Mathis
- France Florent Marty
- France Florian Maurice
- France Jonathan Mendes
- France Amine Messoussa
- France Julian Michel
- France Enzo Molebe
- France Anthony Mounier
- France Théo Ndicka
- France Louis Nganioni
- France Bruno Ngotty
- Martinique Camille Ninel
- Martinique Robert Nouzaret
- Martinique Harry Novillo
- France Florent Ogier
- France Abdoulaye Ouattara
- France Sandy Paillot
- France Julian Palmieri
- France Mathieu Patouillet
- France Mour Paye
- France Pascal Pédemonte
- France Florent Perradin
- France Gaëtan Perrin
- France Jacques Philip
- France Jérémy Pied
- France Lenny Pintor
- France Alassane Pléa
- France Damien Plessis
- France Nicolas Priet
- France Grégoire Puel
- France Paulin Puel
- France Nicolas Puydebois
- France Nicolas Rabuel
- France Daniel Ravier
- France Enzo Reale
- France Loïc Rémy
- France Gwenaël Renaud
- France Remy Riou
- France Claude-Arnaud Rivenet
- France Thomas Robinet
- France Mickaël Rol
- France Mathieu Salamand
- France Junior Sambia
- France Mamadou Sarr
- France Romain Sartre
- France Ernest Schultz
- France Nicolas Seguin
- France Yoan Severin
- France Stéphane Solomenko
- France Yaya Soumaré
- France Julien Stephan
- France Éric Taborda
- France Kevin Tapoko
- France Hermann Tebily
- France Titouan Thomas
- France Corentin Tolisso
- France Johann Truchet
- France Marvin Tshibuabua
- France Samuel Umtiti
- France Cédric Uras
- France Pierrick Valdivia
- France Julien Viale
- France Roland Vieira
- France Hugo Vogel
- France Daniel Xuereb
- France Yoan Zouma
Africa
- Algeria Oussama Amar
- Algeria Houssem Aouar
- Algeria Ishak Belfodil
- Algeria Yassine Benzia
- Algeria Yassine Ben Hamed
- Algeria Abdelkader Ghezzal
- Algeria Rachid Ghezzal
- Algeria Amine Gouiri
- Algeria Yacine Hima
- Algeria Khaled Kharroubi
- Algeria Yannis Lagha
- Algeria Khaled Lemmouchia
- Algeria Karim Maroc
- Algeria Saïd Mehamha
- Algeria Yannis Tafer
- Algeria Hussayn Touati
- Algeria Mehdi Zeffane
- Algeria Nassim Zitouni
- Angola Jordy Gaspar
- Burkina Faso Nassim Innocenti
- Burkina Faso Vincent Ye
- Chad Blaise Tohou
- Republic of the Congo Yann Mabella
- Ivory Coast Sinaly Diomandé
- Ivory Coast Lossémy Karaboué
- Ivory Coast Éric Tié Bi
- Cameroon Raphaël Anaba
- Cameroon Romarin Billong
- Cameroon Joseph-Désiré Job
- Cameroon Olivier Kemen
- Cameroon Philippe N'Dioro
- Cameroon Clinton N'Jie
- Comoros Nasser Chamed
- Comoros Moussa Djoumoi
- Comoros Myziane Maolida
- Comoros Faiz Mattoir
- Central African Republic Cyriaque Mayounga
- Central African Republic Dylan Mboumbouni
- Central African Republic Amos Youga
- Central African Republic Kelly Youga
- Democratic Republic of the Congo Aldo Kalulu
- Democratic Republic of the Congo Gédéon Kalulu
- Democratic Republic of the Congo Yann Kitala
- Democratic Republic of the Congo Samuel Moutoussamy
- Ghana Emmanuel Danso
- Ghana Elisha Owusu
- Guinea Mouctar Diakhaby
- Guinea Sekou Yansané
- Guinea Mohamed Yattara
- Guinea-Bissau Formose Mendy
- Madagascar Fabien Boyer
- Madagascar Thomas Fontaine
- Morocco Jamal Alioui
- Morocco Achraf Laâziri
- Morocco Fahd Moufi
- Morocco Kays Ruiz-Atil
- Mali Issiar Dramé
- Mali Frédéric Kanouté
- Mali Habib Keïta
- Mali Sidy Koné
- Rwanda Bryan Ngwabije
- Senegal Lamine Gassama
- Senegal Abdoulaye Ndiaye
- Senegal Bouna Sarr
- Senegal Mouhamadou-Naby Sarr
- Senegal Demba Touré
- Chad Sylvain Idangar
- Togo Ludovic Assemoassa
- Togo Malcolm Barcola
- Tunisia Anice Badri
- Tunisia Chaïm El Djebali
- Tunisia Habib Oueslati
- Tunisia Hamza Rafia
Rest of World
- United Arab Emirates Hamdan Al Kamali
- Belgium Théo Defourny
- Belgium Héritier Deyonge
- Bosnia and Herzegovina Muamer Aljic
- Brazil Camilo
- Canada Zachary Brault-Guillard
- Switzerland Jérémy Frick
- Switzerland Kilian Pagliuca
- Switzerland Anthony Racioppi
- China Jian Tao
- China Yu Junwei
- China Zhang Xiuwei
- England Reo Griffiths
- Georgia (country) Aleksandre Guruli
- Georgia (country) Georges Mikautadze
- Israel Noam Bonnet
- Italy Francesco Migliore
- South Korea Kim Shin
- Lebanon Philippe Paoli
- Luxembourg Christopher Martins Pereira
- Norway Ulrik Yttergård Jenssen
- Norway Tord Salte
- Poland Bartosz Talar
- Portugal Anthony Lopes
- Thailand Erawan Garnier
- Turkey Cenk Özkaçar
Players in bold are those who capped for their National team.
References
[edit ]- ^ "According to Lyon's official website, it suggests that they consider this their foundation date rather than 1900 – (translation: "1950, date of the club's creation")". OLWeb.fr. Archived from the original on 10 December 2005. Retrieved 23 August 2006.
- ^ "Academy : Notre nouvelle organisation". Olympique Lyonnais. 28 June 2023.
- ^ "Football français : "L'incompétence est à tous les étages"". Le Point. Retrieved 19 February 2023..
- ^ "The Talent Factory: How Lyon Built a Production Line for World-Class Talent". Bleacher Report. Retrieved 19 February 2023.
- ^ "PRESENTATION D'OL ACADEMY". Olympique Lyonnais. Retrieved 19 February 2023.
- ^ "OL : l'Équipe vante le deuxième centre de formation européen". L'Équipe. Retrieved 19 February 2023.
- ^ "Lyon: La fabrique à champions". L'Équipe. Retrieved 19 February 2023.
- ^ "Umtiti, Tolisso, Lacazette : une fierté lyonnaise". Le Libéro. Retrieved 19 February 2023..
- ^ "RÉSERVE EFFECTIF & STAFF". OLWeb.fr. Retrieved 14 January 2021.
- ^ "Aux Pays-Bas, Malo Gusto est devenu le 33e international A français formé à l'OL" (in French). Le Progrès. 14 October 2023.