
The city of Le Mans has spent decades being defined by what happens on its circuit every June. Twenty-four hours, prototype cars, the Mulsanne Straight. But right now, the most compelling story coming out of Le Mans involves a football club that refused to stay buried — and is suddenly, improbably, one step from the top flight of French football.
Le Mans FC were a Ligue 1 club once. They played in the top division, they had a stadium, they had fans who turned up every week expecting something. Then came the collapse — financial, structural, the kind that French football has seen too many times — and the club found itself rebuilt from almost nothing, dropped into the sixth tier of the French football pyramid and told to start again.
Six divisions below the top flight is a long way down. For context, that's the kind of level where pitches are uneven, away trips are done in a minibus, and the match report is written by someone's cousin. Most clubs that fall that far don't come back. Le Mans FC, apparently, didn't get the memo.
There's something fitting about a Le Mans story being built around endurance. The 24 Hours of Le Mans — the race that made the city famous worldwide — is essentially a test of how long you can keep going when everything is trying to stop you. Le Mans FC's journey through six divisions of French football has lasted years, eaten through managers and players and budgets, and required exactly that kind of stubborn, grinding forward momentum. The motorsport metaphor writes itself, and for once, it actually earns its place.
According to BBC Sport, the club's rise has been fuelled in part by backing from high-profile sportsmen — though the specific names haven't been confirmed publicly. The involvement of notable sporting figures as investors has become a familiar story in football's lower reaches: see Wrexham, see Como, see the queue of athletes and entertainers who've discovered that owning a football club is either a passion project or a very slow way to spend money. Whether Le Mans FC's backers fall into the former or latter category, their support has clearly helped accelerate a climb that might otherwise have taken another decade.
The club now sits on the edge of a Ligue 1 return, according to BBC Sport's reporting — the precise promotion scenario still playing out, but the direction of travel unmistakable. Hansi Flick's Barcelona, Luis Enrique's PSG, the Ligue 1 giants — they may soon be joined on the fixture list by a club that was playing sixth-tier football not so long ago.
Somewhere in Le Mans, a fan who watched the club fall apart and then drove to sixth-tier away games on a Saturday morning is having a very good week. They deserve it.
The city of Le Mans has spent decades being defined by what happens on its circuit every June. Twenty-four hours, prototype cars, the Mulsanne Straight.
Lähteet
BBC Sport — Football
Flagsiden jutut ovat omaperäisiä, monista lähteistä syntetisoituja kirjoituksia. Mainitsemme jokaisen median, joka ruokki juttua.
Yön otteluiden poiminta, mitä siirtoikkunassa tapahtuu, ja yksi kolumni, josta toimituksen pöytä väitteli. Ei mainoksia. Ei vinkkejä. Ei operaattoreita.
Yksi klikkaus poistaa tilauksesta. Emme jaa sähköpostiosoitteita.
“Stays on Ligue 1 — different angle, same beat.”
LIGUE 1AS Monacolla saattaa olla uusi päävalmentaja ensi kaudella. Ranskalaismedia spekuloi SuomiFutisin mukaan, että Sébastien Pocognoli voisi jättää seuran kesän jälkeen – sopimuksesta huolimatta. Lukas Hr
“Stays on Ligue 1 — different angle, same beat.”
LIGUE 1AS Monacolla saattaa olla uusi päävalmentaja ensi kaudella. Ranskalaismedia spekuloi SuomiFutisin mukaan, että Sébastien Pocognoli voisi jättää seuran kesän jälkeen – sopimuksesta huolimatta. Lukas Hr