General |
Marseille | ||
Full name | Olympique de Marseille | |
---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | Les Phocéens, L'OM, Les Olympiens | |
Short name | Marseille | |
Founded | 1899 | |
Ground | Stade Vélodrome (Capacity: 67,394) | |
Owner | Frank McCourt Margarita Louis-Dreyfus | |
Chairman | Pablo Longoria | |
Head Coach | Jean-Louis Gasset | |
Current League | Ligue 1 | |
2022–23 | Ligue 1, 3rd | |
Website | Club home page | |
Current season |
Olympique de Marseille also known as OM or simply Marseille, is a French professional football club based in Marseille. Founded in 1899, the club plays in Ligue 1 and have spent most of their history in the top tier of French football. The club has won ten official league titles (nine times in Ligue 1), ten Coupes de France and three Coupes de la Ligue. In 1993, coach Raymond Goethals led the team to become the first and only French club to win the UEFA Champions League, defeating AC Milan 1–0 in the final. In 2010, Marseille won its first Ligue 1 title in 18 years under the management of former club captain Didier Deschamps.
Marseille's home ground is the 67,000-capacity Stade Vélodrome in the southern part of the city, where they have played since 1937. The club has a large fan-base, having regularly averaged the highest attendance in French football. Marseille's average home gate for the 2008–09 season was 52,276, the highest in Ligue 1. The stadium underwent renovation in 2011, going from its previous capacity of 60,031 to 42,000. Following completion in August 2014, the final capacity increased to 67,000 ahead of France's hosting of UEFA Euro 2016. In 2015, the club was ranked 23rd globally in terms of annual revenue, generating €130.5 million.
Marseille traditionally play in an all-white kit with sky blue detailing.
Players[]
First-team squad[]
- As of 1 September 2023
|
|
Out on loan[]
|
|
External links[]
Olympique de Marseille Football Club |
Current season •
Club honours •
Coaching staff •
Players •
Stade Vélodrome |
Olympique de Marseille squad - 2023–24 |
1 Ngapandouetnbu • 2 Saliba • 3 Álvaro • 4 Kamara • 5 Balerdi • 6 Guendouzi • 7 Harit • 8 Gerson • 9 Milik • 10 Payet • 11 Luis Henrique • 12 Dieng • 13 Bakambu • 14 Luan Peres • 15 Ćaleta-Car • 16 López • 17 Ünder • 20 de la Fuente • 21 Rongier • 22 Gueye • 23 Kolašinac • 26 Targhalline • 29 Lirola • 30 Mandanda (c) • 32 Ben Seghir • Manager: Gennaro Gattuso |
Olympique de Marseille seasons |
Coupe de France winners |
1918: Olympique Pantin • 1919: CASG Paris • 1920: CA Paris • 1921: Red Star • 1922: Red Star • 1923: Red Star • 1924: Olympique de Marseille • 1925: CASG Paris • 1926: Olympique de Marseille • 1927: Olympique de Marseille • 1928: Red Star • 1929: Montpellier • 1930: Sète • 1931: Club Français • 1932: Cannes • 1933: Roubaix • 1934: Sète • 1935: Olympique de Marseille • 1936: RC Paris • 1937: Sochaux • 1938: Olympique de Marseille • 1939: RC Paris • 1940: RC Paris • 1941: Bordeaux • 1942: Red Star • 1943: Olympique de Marseille • 1944: [[|]] • 1945: RC Paris • 1946: Lille • 1947: Lille • 1948: Lille • 1949: RC Paris • 1950: [[|]] • 1951: [[|]] • 1952: Nice • 1953: Lille • 1954: Nice • 1955: Lille • 1956: [[|]] • 1957: [[|]] • 1958: [[|]] • 1959: [[|]] • 1960: [[|]] • 1961: [[|]] • 1962: [[|]] • 1963: [[|]] • 1964: Olympique Lyonnais • 1965: [[|]] • 1966: [[|]] • 1967: Olympique Lyonnais • 1968: [[|]] • 1969: Olympique de Marseille • 1970: [[|]] • 1971: [[|]] • 1972: Olympique de Marseille • 1973: Olympique Lyonnais • 1974: [[|]] • 1975: [[|]] • 1976: Olympique de Marseille • 1977: Saint-Étienne • 1978: Nancy • 1979: Nantes • 1980: Monaco • 1981: Bastia • 1982: Paris Saint Germain • 1983: Paris Saint Germain • 1984: Metz • 1985: Monaco • 1986: Bordeaux • 1987: Bordeaux • 1988: Metz • 1989: Olympique de Marseille • 1990: Montpellier • 1991: Monaco • 1993: Paris Saint Germain • 1994: Auxerre • 1995: Paris Saint Germain • 1996: Auxerre • 1997: Nice • 1998: Paris Saint Germain • 1999: Nantes • 2000: Nantes • 2001: Strasbourg • 2002: Lorient • 2003: Auxerre • 2004: Paris Saint Germain • 2005: Auxerre • 2006: Paris Saint Germain • 2007: Sochaux • 2008: Olympique Lyonnais • 2009: Guingamp • 2010: Paris Saint Germain • 2011: Lille • 2012: Olympique Lyonnais • 2013: Girondins de Bordeaux • 2014: Guingamp • 2015: Paris Saint Germain • 2016: Paris Saint Germain • 2017: Paris Saint Germain • 2018: Paris Saint Germain • 2019: Stade Rennais • 2020: Paris Saint Germain • 2021: Paris Saint Germain • 2022: Nantes • 2023: Toulouse • |
Template:Coupe de la Ligue winners
Trophée des champions winners |
1949: Reims • 1955: Reims • 1956: Sedan • 1957: Saint-Étienne • 1958: Reims • 1959: Le Havre • 1960: Reims • 1961: Monaco • 1962: Saint-Étienne • 1965: Nantes • 1966: Reims • 1967: Saint-Étienne • 1968: Saint-Étienne • 1969: Saint-Étienne • 1970: Nice • 1971: Rennes and Marseille • 1972: Bastia • 1973: Lyon • 1985: Monaco • 1986: Bordeaux • 1995: Paris Saint-Germain • 1997: Monaco • 1998: Paris Saint-Germain • 1999: Nantes • 2000: Monaco • 2001: Nantes • 2002: Nantes • 2003: Lyon • 2004: Lyon • 2005: Lyon • 2006: Lyon • 2007: Lyon • 2008: Bordeaux • 2009: Bordeaux • 2010: Marseille • 2011: Marseille • 2012: Lyon • 2013: Paris Saint-Germain • 2014: Paris Saint-Germain • 2015: Paris Saint-Germain • 2016: Paris Saint-Germain • 2017: Paris Saint-Germain • 2018: Paris Saint-Germain • 2019: Paris Saint-Germain • 2020: Paris Saint-Germain • 2021: Lille • 2022: Paris Saint-Germain • |
UEFA Intertoto Cup winners |
1995: Bordeaux, Strasbourg • 1996: Karlsruhe, Silkeborg, Guingamp • 1997: Auxerre, Bastia, Lyon • 1998: Bologna, Valencia, Werder • 1999: Juventus, West Ham United, Montpellier • 2000: Celta, Stuttgart, Udinese • 2001: Paris Saint-Germain, Troyes, Aston Villa • 2002: Málaga, Stuttgart, Fulham • 2003: Villarreal, Perugia, Schalke 04 • 2004: Villarreal, Lille, Schalke 04 • 2005: Hamburg, Marseille, Lens • 2006: Newcastle United • 2007: Hamburg • 2008: Braga |
Ligue 1 2023-24 |
Brest · Clermont · Le Havre · Lens · Lille · Lorient · Lyon · Marseille · Metz · Monaco · Montpellier · Nantes · Nice · Paris Saint-Germain · Reims · Rennes · Strasbourg · Toulouse |
France |