Olympique Lyonnais Féminin

Last updated

Olympique Lyonnais Féminin
Olympique Lyonnais logo.svg
Full nameOlympique Lyonnais Féminin
Nickname(s)Les Fenottes
Les Lyonnaises
Short nameOL
Founded1970;55 years ago (1970) (as FC Lyon)
2004;21 years ago (2004) (as Olympique Lyonnais)
GroundStade Gérard Houllier, Décines-Charpieu
Capacity1,524
Owner Michele Kang (52,00%) [1]
OL Groupe (48,00%)
President Michele Kang
Manager Joe Montemurro
League Première Ligue
2024–25 Division 1 Féminine, 1st of 12 (champions)
Website ol.fr/feminin
Soccerball current event.svg Current season

Olympique Lyonnais Féminin (French pronunciation: [ɔlɛ̃pikljɔnɛ] ; commonly referred to as Olympique Lyon, Lyon, or simply OL) is a French women's professional football club based in Lyon. The club has been the female section of Olympique Lyonnais since 2004. It is the most successful club in the history of the Première Ligue, with seventeen league titles as Olympique Lyonnais and four league titles as FC Lyon before the acquisition.

Contents

Since the 2010s, Lyon has frequently been named the strongest women's team in the world, [2] and has been cited as a model for the development of women's football in both economic and cultural terms. [3] The team has won eight Champions League titles, including a record five successive titles from 2016 to 2020, as well as fourteen consecutive domestic league titles from 2007 to 2020. They have also won five trebles when the top-level continental competition is considered, the most for any team.

History

The club was formed as the women's section of FC Lyon in 1970. In 2004, the women's club became the women's section of Olympique Lyonnais. Since joining Lyon, the women's section has won the Division 1 Féminine fourteen times and the Coupe de France nine times. Lyon reached the semi-finals of the 2007–08 edition of the UEFA Women's Cup and, during the 2009–10 season, reached the final of the inaugural edition of the UEFA Women's Champions League, losing to German club Turbine Potsdam 7–6 on penalties. [4] [5] In the following season, Lyon finally captured the UEFA Women's Champions League, defeating its nemesis Turbine Potsdam 2–0 in the 2011 final. It successfully defended its title in 2012, defeating FFC Frankfurt in the final.

From 2016 to 2020, the club won five consecutive Champions League titles, equaling the male record held by Real Madrid. Three players: Sarah Bouhaddi, Wendie Renard, and Eugénie Le Sommer have all won eight Champions League trophies.

Lyon's main rivalry is with Paris Saint-Germain, with matches between the two teams sometimes referred as the "Classique féminin". Paris is OL's main contender for national titles, as they finished in second place of D1 Féminine seven times. Lyon had never lost the D1 title to PSG until 2021 when PSG finished ahead of Lyon, and won five Coupe de France finals against Paris. In 2017 both teams reached the Champions League final, with Lyon beating Paris after a penalty shoot-out and winning its fourth title in the competition. [6]

Lyon hosts its matches at the Stade Gérard Houllier, a stadium of capacity 1,524 located in the Groupama OL Training Center and situated not far from the larger Parc Olympique Lyonnais where the male teams play. The women's team does host its "big" matches at the 59,000-seat stadium. The current president of the club is Michele Kang and the captain of the team is Wendie Renard. According to the UEFA women's coefficient, Lyon was the highest-ranked club in UEFA in 2014. [7]

Ownership and finances

Lyon Féminin is part of OL Groupe, whose majority shareholder since December 2022 is Eagle Football Group, which is controlled by American businessman John Textor. Club president Jean-Michel Aulas was also OL Groupe's previous and founding owner, and remains a minority owner of OL Groupe and board director of Eagle Football Group. [1] [8] [9]

As of April 2023, L'Équipe reported that Lyon Féminin operated at a €12 million annual deficit. [1]

On 16 May 2023, OL Groupe and Michele Kang announced the formation of a separate entity that would be composed of Kang's Washington Spirit of the NWSL, and Olympique Lyon Féminin. OL Groupe would sell its NWSL club, OL Reign, to resolve conflicts of interest. OL Groupe would retain a 48% stake in the resulting new entity, and Kang would become the club's majority owner and CEO, pending regulatory approval. [10] [11] [12] [13] Kang's proposed deal for the women's side reportedly valued it at $54.4 million. [14] Kang attended Lyon's victory in the Coupe de France féminine finals on 13 May 2023 and raised the trophy with the team. [13] [15]

Players

Current squad

As of 16 January 2025. [16]

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
1 GK Flag of Chile.svg  CHI Christiane Endler
2 DF Flag of the United States.svg  USA Sofia Huerta (on loan from Seattle Reign )
3 DF Flag of France.svg  FRA Wendie Renard (captain)
4 DF Flag of France.svg  FRA Selma Bacha
5 DF Flag of Sweden.svg  SWE Elma Junttila Nelhage
6 MF Flag of Haiti.svg  HAI Melchie Dumornay
7 MF Flag of France.svg  FRA Amel Majri
8 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Sara Däbritz
9 FW Flag of France.svg  FRA Eugénie Le Sommer
10 MF Flag of Germany.svg  GER Dzsenifer Marozsán
11 FW Flag of France.svg  FRA Kadidiatou Diani
12 DF Flag of Australia (converted).svg  AUS Ellie Carpenter
13 MF Flag of the Netherlands.svg  NED Damaris Egurrola
No.Pos.NationPlayer
14 FW Flag of Norway.svg  NOR Ada Hegerberg
16 GK Flag of France.svg  FRA Féerine Belhadj
17 MF Flag of the Netherlands.svg  NED Daniëlle van de Donk
18 DF Flag of France.svg  FRA Alice Sombath
21 DF Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Vanessa Gilles (on loan from Angel City )
22 FW Flag of Malawi.svg  MWI Tabitha Chawinga
23 DF Flag of Denmark.svg  DEN Sofie Svava
25 MF Flag of France.svg  FRA Inès Benyahia
26 MF Flag of the United States.svg  USA Lindsey Heaps
27 FW Flag of France.svg  FRA Vicki Bècho
30 GK Flag of Germany.svg  GER Laura Benkarth
33 DF Flag of Brazil.svg  BRA Tarciane
34 MF Flag of France.svg  FRA Laureen Oillic

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
19 DF Flag of France.svg  FRA Kysha Sylla (at Washington Spirit until 31 December 2025)
DF Flag of France.svg  FRA Wassa Sangaré (at Le Havre until 30 June 2025)
DF Flag of Portugal.svg  POR Alice Marques (at Valencia until 30 June 2025)
No.Pos.NationPlayer
DF Flag of France.svg  FRA Julie Swierot (at Reims until 30 June 2025)
MF Flag of France.svg  FRA Maeline Mendy (at Strasbourg Alsace until 30 June 2025)
FW Flag of France.svg  FRA Liana Joseph (at Strasbourg Alsace until 30 June 2025)

Notable former players

Current staff

As of 7 August 2024. [17]
PositionStaff
Head coach Flag of Australia (converted).svg Joe Montemurro
Assistant coaches Flag of Australia (converted).svg Joe Palatsides
Flag of France.svg Méline Gérard
Flag of Italy.svg Patrizia Panico
Goalkeeping coach Flag of France.svg Simon Pouplin
Director of Performance Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Jack Sharkey
Physical trainer Flag of France.svg Rémi Pullara
Video analyst Flag of France.svg Marceau Goguer
Medical director Flag of France.svg Franck Pelissier
Doctor Flag of France.svg Jad Dbouk
Physiotherapists Flag of Japan.svg Shingo Kitada
Flag of France.svg Anthony Martin
Flag of France.svg Ganaelle Rigondaud
Nutritionist Flag of Mexico.svg Ana Sena Martinez
General manager/team delegate Flag of France.svg Olivier Blanc
Equipment manager Flag of France.svg Julien Legrand
Kit manager Flag of Spain.svg Amilcar Perez
Flag of France.svg Jacques Raffin
OMS cell manager Flag of France.svg Nadi Ferran
Team coordinator Flag of France.svg Manon Eleure

Honours

Celebration of the sixth UEFA Women's Champions League in 2019. 2019-05-18 Fussball, Frauen, UEFA Women's Champions League, Olympique Lyonnais - FC Barcelona StP 0068 LR10 by Stepro.jpg
Celebration of the sixth UEFA Women's Champions League in 2019.

Official

Invitational

Others

Record in UEFA Women's Champions League

As of match played 27 April 2025
CompetitionPldWDLGFGAGD
UEFA Champions League 152119191451483+431

All results (away, home and aggregate) list Lyon's goal tally first.

SeasonRoundOpponentsAwayHomeAgg.
2007–08 First qualifying round Flag of Slovakia.svg Slovan Duslo Šaľa 12–0
Flag of North Macedonia.svg Škiponjat Struga (Host)10–0
Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg Sarajevo 7–0
Second qualifying round Flag of Denmark.svg Brøndby 0–0
Flag of Norway.svg Kolbotn 1–0
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Sparta Prague 2–1
Quarter-final Flag of England.svg Arsenal 3–20–0 f3–2
Semi-final Flag of Sweden.svg Umeå 0–01–1 f1–1 (a)
2008–09 Second qualifying round Flag of Austria.svg Neulengbach 8–0
Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg Zürich 7–1
Flag of England.svg Arsenal 3–0
Quarter-final Flag of Italy.svg Verona 5–0 f4–19–1
Semi-final Flag of Germany.svg Duisburg 1–31–1 f2–4
2009–10 Round of 32 Flag of Serbia.svg Mašinac Niš 1–0 f5–06–0
Round of 16 Flag of Denmark.svg Fortuna Hjørring 1–0 f5–06–0
Quarter-final Flag of Italy.svg Torres Sassari 0–13–0 f3–1
Semi-final Flag of Sweden.svg Umeå 0–03–2 f3–2
Final Flag of Germany.svg Turbine Potsdam 0–0 ( a.e.t. )(6–7 p) ( Flag of Spain.svg Getafe)
2010–11 Round of 32 Flag of the Netherlands.svg AZ 2–1 f8–010–1
Round of 16 Flag of Russia.svg Rossiyanka Khimki 6–1 f5–011–1
Quarter-final Flag of Russia.svg Zvezda Perm 0–0 f1–01–0
Semi-final Flag of England.svg Arsenal 3–22–0 f5–2
Final Flag of Germany.svg Turbine Potsdam 2–0 ( Flag of England.svg London)
2011–12 Round of 32 Flag of Romania.svg Olimpia Cluj-Napoca 9–0 f3–012–0
Round of 16 Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Sparta Prague 6–0 f6–012–0
Quarter-final Flag of Denmark.svg Brøndby 4–04–0 f8–0
Semi-final Flag of Germany.svg Turbine Potsdam 0–05–1 f5–1
Final Flag of Germany.svg Frankfurt 2–0 ( Flag of Germany.svg Munich)
2012–13 Round of 32 Flag of Finland.svg Vantaa 7–0 f5–012–0
Round of 16 Flag of Russia.svg Zorky Krasnogorsk 9–0 f2–011–0
Quarter-final Flag of Sweden.svg Rosengård Malmö 3–05–0 f8–0
Semi-final Flag of France.svg Juvisy 6–13–0 f9–1
Final Flag of Germany.svg Wolfsburg 0–1 ( Flag of England.svg London)
2013–14 Round of 32 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Twente Enschede 4–0 f6–010–0
Round of 16 Flag of Germany.svg Turbine Potsdam 1–0 f1–22–2 (a)
2014–15 Round of 32 Flag of Italy.svg Brescia 5–0 f9–014–0
Round of 16 Flag of France.svg Paris Saint-Germain 1–1 f0–11–2
2015–16 Round of 32 Flag of Poland.svg Medyk Konin 6–0 f3–09–0
Round of 16 Flag of Spain.svg Atlético Madrid 3–1 f6–09–1
Quarter-final Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Slavia Prague 0–09–1 f9–1
Semi-final Flag of France.svg Paris Saint-Germain 1–07–0 f8–0
Final Flag of Germany.svg Wolfsburg 1–1 ( a.e.t. )(4–3 p) ( Flag of Italy.svg Reggio Emilia)
2016–17 Round of 32 Flag of Norway.svg Avaldsnes 5–2 f5–010–2
Round of 16 Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg Zürich 9–08–0 f17–0
Quarter-final Flag of Germany.svg Wolfsburg 2–0 f0–12–1
Semi-final Flag of England.svg Manchester City 3–1 f0–13–2
Final Flag of France.svg Paris Saint-Germain 0–0 ( a.e.t. )(7–6 p) ( Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg Cardiff)
2017–18 Round of 32 Flag of Poland.svg Medyk Konin 5–0 f9–014–0
Round of 16 Flag of Kazakhstan.svg Kazygurt Shymkent 7–0 f9–016–0
Quarter-final Flag of Spain.svg Barcelona 1–02–1 f3–1
Semi-final Flag of England.svg Manchester City 0–0 f1–01–0
Final Flag of Germany.svg Wolfsburg 4–1 ( a.e.t. ) ( Flag of Ukraine.svg Kyiv)
2018–19 Round of 32 Flag of Norway.svg Avaldsnes 2–0 f5–07–0
Round of 16 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Ajax Amsterdam 4–0 f9–013–0
Quarter-final Flag of Germany.svg Wolfsburg 4–22–1 f6–3
Semi-final Flag of England.svg Chelsea 1–12–1 f3–2
Final Flag of Spain.svg Barcelona 4–1 ( Flag of Hungary.svg Budapest)
2019–20 Round of 32 Flag of Russia.svg Ryazan-VDV 9–0 f7–016–0
Round of 16 Flag of Denmark.svg Fortuna Hjørring 4–0 f7–011–0
Quarter-final Flag of Germany.svg Bayern Munich 2–1 ( Flag of Spain.svg Bilbao)
Semi-final Flag of France.svg Paris Saint-Germain 1–0 ( Flag of Spain.svg Bilbao)
Final Flag of Germany.svg Wolfsburg 3–1 ( Flag of Spain.svg San Sebastián)
2020–21 Round of 32 Flag of Italy.svg Juventus 3–2 f3–06–2
Round of 16 Flag of Denmark.svg Brøndby 3–12–0 f5–1
Quarter-final Flag of France.svg Paris Saint-Germain 1–0 f1–22–2 (a)
2021–22 Round 2 Flag of Spain.svg Levante 2–1 f2–14–2
Group D Flag of Germany.svg Bayern Munich 0–12–11st
Flag of Portugal.svg Benfica 5–05–0
Flag of Sweden.svg BK Häcken 3–04–0
Quarter-final Flag of Italy.svg Juventus 1–2 f3–14–3
Semi-final Flag of France.svg Paris Saint-Germain 2–13–2 f5–3
Final Flag of Spain.svg Barcelona 3–1 ( Flag of Italy.svg Turin)
2022–23 Group C Flag of England.svg Arsenal 1–01–52nd
Flag of Italy.svg Juventus 1–10–0
Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg Zürich 3–04–0
Quarter-final Flag of England.svg Chelsea 2–1 (a.e.t.)0–1 f2–2 (3–4 p)
2023–24 Group B Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Slavia Prague 9–02–21st
Flag of Austria.svg St. Pölten 7–02–0
Flag of Norway.svg Brann 2–23–1
Quarter-final Flag of Portugal.svg Benfica 2–1 f4–16–2
Semi-final Flag of France.svg Paris Saint-Germain 2–13–2 f5–3
Final Flag of Spain.svg Barcelona 0–2 ( Flag of Spain.svg Bilbao)
2024–25 Group A Flag of Turkey.svg Galatasaray 3–06–01st
Flag of Germany.svg VfL Wolfsburg 1–02–0
Flag of Italy.svg AS Roma 4–13–0
Quarter-final Flag of Germany.svg Bayern Munich 4–12–0f6–1
Semi-final Flag of England.svg Arsenal 1–42–1f3–5

f First leg.

List of seasons

Top scorers in bold were also the top scorers in the Division 1 Féminine that season.

ChampionsRunners-up Promoted Relegated
SeasonLeagueCupEuropeTop goalscorer(s)
DivisionPosPldWDLGFGAGDPtsName(s)Goals
2001–02D13rd2214265326+2766RU Flag of France.svg Séverine Creuzet-Laplantes 17
2002–03D12nd2215436019+4171W Flag of France.svg Sandrine Brétigny 26
2003–04D12nd2214445225+2768W Flag of France.svg Claire Morel 18
2004–05D13rd2215255020+3069RU Flag of France.svg Séverine Creuzet-Laplantes 13
2005–06D13rd2210843412+2260RU Flag of France.svg Sandrine Brétigny 11
2006–07D11st2220111169+10783RU Flag of France.svg Sandrine Brétigny 42
2007–08D11st221840934+8980W Women's Cup SF Flag of France.svg Sandrine Brétigny 25
2008–09 D1 1st22211011411+10386SF Women's Cup SF Flag of Brazil.svg Kátia 27
2009–10 D1 1st2218229311+8278 SF Champions League RU Flag of Brazil.svg Kátia 17
2010–11 D1 1st2222001066+10088 QF Champions League W Flag of France.svg Sandrine Brétigny 19
2011–12 D1 1st2219301193+11682 W Champions League W Flag of France.svg Eugénie Le Sommer 22
2012–13 D1 1st2222001325+12788W Champions League RU Flag of Sweden.svg Lotta Schelin 24
2013–14 D1 1st2221019512+8385W Champions League R16 Flag of France.svg Eugénie Le Sommer
Flag of France.svg Laëtitia Tonazzi
15
2014–15 D1 1st2222001476+14188W Champions League R16 Flag of Sweden.svg Lotta Schelin 34
2015–16 D1 1st2219301154+11182W Champions League W Flag of Norway.svg Ada Hegerberg 33
2016–17 D1 1st2221011036+9763W Champions League W Flag of Norway.svg Ada Hegerberg
Flag of France.svg Eugénie Le Sommer
20
2017–18 D1 1st2221101045+9964RU Champions League W Flag of Norway.svg Ada Hegerberg 31
2018–19 D1 1st222020899+8362W Champions League W Flag of Norway.svg Ada Hegerberg 20
2019–20 D1 1st161420674+6344W Champions League W Flag of Norway.svg Ada Hegerberg 14
2020–21 D1 2nd222011786+7261DNF Champions League QF Flag of England.svg Nikita Parris 13
2021–22 D1 1st222110798+7164R16 Champions League W Flag of the United States.svg Catarina Macario 14
2022–23 D1 1st222011699+6061W Champions League QF Flag of Denmark.svg Signe Bruun 8
2023–24 D1 1st2220118213+6961W Champions League RU Flag of Norway.svg Ada Hegerberg 12

References

  1. 1 2 3 Guillemet, Hugo (12 April 2023). "L'OL féminin bientôt vendu à Michele Kang, une femme d'affaires américaine". L'Equipe . Retrieved 14 April 2023.
  2. Smith, Rory (17 May 2019). "The World's Most Dominant Team Isn't Who You Think". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 May 2019.
  3. Ingle, Sean (29 June 2019). "How Lucy Bronze was polished at Lyon, the ultimate finishing school". The Observer. ISSN   0029-7712 . Retrieved 29 June 2019.
  4. "Lyon and Potsdam make history". UEFA. 11 May 2010. Retrieved 16 June 2010.
  5. "Potsdam hold nerve to claim European crown". UEFA. 20 May 2010. Archived from the original on 23 May 2010. Retrieved 16 June 2010.
  6. "2016–17 Women's Champions League Final Report". UEFA . Retrieved 26 May 2022.
  7. "UEFA WOMEN'S CHAMPIONS LEAGUE 2014/15" (PDF). UEFA. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  8. "Olympique Lyonnais Price Tag For John Textor: $846 Million". Forbes. 21 June 2022.
  9. "L'OL officiellement vendu à l'Américain John Textor". L'Équipe (in French). 20 December 2022.
  10. "OL Groupe and Michele Kang Form Global Multi-Team Women's Football Group" (Press release). Washington Spirit. 16 May 2023. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  11. Caron, Emily (16 May 2023). "Spirit's Michele Kang adds Lyonnais Feminin to Women's Soccer Venture". Sportico . Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  12. Hess, AJ (16 May 2023). "Spirit owner Michele Kang buys Lyon to build first international women's soccer empire". Fast Company . Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  13. 1 2 Guillement, Hugo (16 May 2023). "Michele Kang, nouvelle actionnaire majoritaire de l'OL féminin : " Il n'est pas question de changer l'OL "" [Michele Kang, new majority shareholder of OL Women: "There is no question of changing OL"]. L'Équipe (in French). Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  14. "Washington Spirit owner Kang to take over Lyon". Sports Business Journal . 16 May 2023. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  15. "Spirit owner Michele Kang attends Lyon women's match, hoists trophy with team amid takeover reports". The Athletic . 13 May 2023.
  16. "EFFECTIF & STAFF". Olympique Lyonnais. Retrieved 13 September 2024.
  17. "COMMUNIQUÉ DE PRESSE | NOUVELLE ORGANISATION AU SEIN DU STAFF DE L'ÉQUIPE FÉMININE DE L'OL". Olympique Lyonnais. 14 June 2021. Retrieved 22 June 2021.
  18. "Most consecutive association football victories (all competitions)". Guinness World Records.