Le Havre AC

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Le Havre
Le Havre AC logo.svg
Full nameLe Havre Athletic Club
NicknamesLe Club Doyen (The Dean Club)
Les Ciel et Marine (The Sky-and-Navy) [1]
Founded1884;142 years ago (1884) (sports club)
1894;132 years ago (1894) (football section)
Ground Stade Océane
Capacity25,178 [2]
Owner Blue Crow Sports Group
Chairman Jeff Luhnow
Head coach Didier Digard
League Ligue 1
2024–25 Ligue 1, 15th of 18
Website hac-foot.com
Soccerball current event.svg Current season
HAC in Tournoi de paques 1913 HAC tournoi de paques 1913.jpg
HAC in Tournoi de paques 1913

Le Havre Athletic Club (French pronunciation: [ɑvʁ] ) is a French professional association football club based in Le Havre, Normandy. The football club was founded in 1894 as a section of the sports club of the same name, founded in 1884. Le Havre plays in Ligue 1, the first tier of French football, after securing promotion from Ligue 2 as winners of the 2022–23 season, and plays its home matches at the Stade Océane.

Contents

Le Havre AC home stadium Stade Oceane Stade Oceane nuit.jpg
Le Havre AC home stadium Stade Océane

Le Havre made its football debut in France's first championship in 1899 and, on its debut, became the first French club outside Paris to win the league. The club won the league the following season in 1900. Le Havre has yet to win the current first division of French football, Ligue 1, yet they won the second division, Ligue 2, for a record of six times. The club's highest honour to date was winning the Coupe de France in 1959.

The main rivalries of Le Havre are the "Derby Normand" with SM Caen and an always heated clash with Lens, located in the region of Nord-Pas-de-Calais.

History

Deportivo de La Coruna vs. Le Havre. Deportivolehavre.jpg
Deportivo de La Coruña vs. Le Havre.

Contrary to what the club has long claimed, Le Havre AC was not founded in 1872. It was in 1884 that a group of British residents formed Le Havre Athlétique, which played a hybrid form of football, a cross between rugby and association football, called "combination". Association football began being played in Le Havre in 1894. [3] [4]

In 1899, Le Havre became the first club from outside Paris to become French football champions. At the time the championship was organised by the USFSA. After being awarded a win over Iris Club Lillois in the semi-final by walkover, they were awarded the title after also receiving a walkover in the final against Club Français. [5] They would also win the following year, with the final being a "re-match" of the forfeited 1899 final.

The club has a youth investment program,[ citation needed ]. A large amount of young players have gone on to play at international level including Benjamin Mendy, Ibrahim Ba, Jean-Alain Boumsong, Lassana Diarra, Riyad Mahrez, Steve Mandanda, Vikash Dhorasoo, Paul Pogba and Dimitri Payet.

The club was on the receiving end of some high-profile illegal transfers, by which Charles N'Zogbia, Matthias Lepiller and Paul Pogba were signed by other clubs, allegedly without the proper compensation being paid.[ citation needed ] The first two were arbitrated by FIFA, who ordered Newcastle United and Fiorentina to pay training compensation.

In the 2022–23 Ligue 2, Le Havre finished top of the league table to win their sixth title in the division and secure promotion to the Ligue 1 for the first time since 2008. [6]

Club culture

Le Havre is known as 'les ciel et marine' in France, which translates as 'the sky and navy blues'. These colours were chosen by the club's English founders as they were those of their alma maters, the universities of Cambridge and Oxford: the anthem of the club is played to the melody of "God Save the King" to mark the English origins of the club:

"A jamais le premier
de tous les clubs français
ô H.A.C.
Fiers de tes origines
Fils d'Oxford et Cambridge
deux couleurs font notre prestige
Ciel et marine!"

English translation:

"The first ever
of all French clubs
The H.A.C
Proud of your roots
Son of Oxford and Cambridge
two colours make our prestige
(the colours of the) sky and the sea!"

Players

Current squad

As of 28 January 2026 [7]
No.Pos.NationPlayer
4 DF Flag of France.svg  FRA Gautier Lloris
6 DF Flag of France.svg  FRA Étienne Youte Kinkoue
7 DF Flag of Hungary.svg  HUN Loïc Négo
8 MF Flag of Morocco.svg  MAR Yassine Kechta
10 MF Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg  SUI Felix Mambimbi
11 FW Flag of France.svg  FRA Godson Kyeremeh
13 DF Flag of Mali.svg  MLI Fodé Doucouré
14 MF Flag of Senegal.svg  SEN Rassoul Ndiaye
15 DF Flag of Japan.svg  JPN Ayumu Seko
17 FW Flag of Morocco.svg  MAR Sofiane Boufal
18 DF Flag of France.svg  FRA Yanis Zouaoui
19 MF Flag of France.svg  FRA Lucas Gourna-Douath (on loan from Red Bull Salzburg )
20 FW Flag of France.svg  FRA Noam Obougou
24 MF Flag of Cote d'Ivoire.svg  CIV Guy-Noël Zohouri
26 MF Flag of France.svg  FRA Simon Ebonog
No.Pos.NationPlayer
27 FW Flag of France.svg  FRA Enzo Koffi
29 DF Flag of France.svg  FRA Stephan Zagadou
30 FW Flag of Germany.svg  GER Reda Khadra (on loan from Reims )
32 DF Flag of France.svg  FRA Timothée Pembélé (on loan from Sunderland )
33 DF Flag of Senegal.svg  SEN Georges Gomis
34 FW Flag of France.svg  FRA Kenny Quetant
45 FW Flag of Senegal.svg  SEN Issa Soumaré
50 GK Flag of France.svg  FRA Paul Argney
70 FW Flag of Tanzania.svg  TAN Mbwana Samatta
77 GK Flag of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.svg  COD Lionel Mpasi
78 MF Flag of France.svg  FRA Daren Mosengo
93 DF Flag of Senegal.svg  SEN Arouna Sangante (captain)
94 MF Flag of Guinea.svg  GUI Abdoulaye Touré
99 GK Flag of Senegal.svg  SEN Mory Diaw

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
MF Flag of France.svg  FRA Mokrane Bentoumi (at Aubagne Air Bel until 30 June 2026)
MF Flag of France.svg  FRA Ismaïl Bouneb (at Quevilly-Rouen until 30 June 2026)
No.Pos.NationPlayer
FW Flag of France.svg  FRA Élysée Logbo (at Bourg-Péronnas until 30 June 2026)

Honours

Nationals

Friendlies

Club staff

Name and NationalityPosition
Vincent Volpe Flag of the United States.svg President
Christopher Sargent Flag of the United States.svg Vice-President
Steve O'Connor Flag of the United States.svg Technical director
Ashton Smith Flag of the United States.svg Sporting director
Bruce Fallon Flag of the United States.svg Sports coordinator
Didier Digard Flag of France.svg Head coach
Bryan Bergougnoux Flag of France.svg Assistant coach
Gauthier Duchert Flag of France.svg First-team coach
Christophe Hoarau Flag of France.svg Goalkeeper coach
Jean Luc Pierrot Flag of France.svg Video analyst
Stéphane Meunier Flag of France.svg Video analyst
Corentin Rousseau Flag of France.svg Video analyst
Jules Delacroix Flag of France.svg Doctor
Auguste LeBlanc Flag of France.svg Academy Goalkeeping Co-ordinator
Grégory Proment Flag of France.svg Academy manager

Managerial history

References

  1. "#35 – Le Havre AC : Ciel et Marine" (in French). Footnickname. 4 May 2020. Archived from the original on 22 December 2021. Retrieved 22 December 2021.
  2. "Stade Océane". Archived from the original on 7 January 2019. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
  3. Charitas, Pascal (2011). "La combination au Havre Athletic Club (1872–1914) : les «origines» du football-rugby ?". Études Normandes. 60 (1): 20. doi:10.3406/etnor.2011.1833.
  4. Archives municipales du Fort de Tourneville (Le Havre), statuts du HAC, fonds de Sanvic, R3 1 L.2.
  5. "France – List of Champions". RSSSF . Archived from the original on 3 February 2023. Retrieved 2 February 2023.
  6. "Official | Le Havre promoted to Ligue 1". Get French Football News. 2 June 2023.
  7. "Effectif". Le Havre AC. Archived from the original on 27 December 2010. Retrieved 1 July 2022.
  8. "France – Trainers of First and Second Division Clubs on RSSSF". Archived from the original on 31 May 2008. Retrieved 23 July 2007.
  9. "Le Havre : Paul Le Guen manager général et entraîneur (off)" (in French). foot-national.com. 29 May 2019. Archived from the original on 1 June 2019. Retrieved 10 June 2019.