Alsace de Bagnolet

Summary

Alsace de Bagnolet or Alsace Bagnolet is a French basketball club founded in 1924 and based in Bagnolet in the eastern suburbs of Paris. It is a part of the sports club of the same name founded in 1908. It belonged to the highest level championship of France in the 1960s, winning three league titles. In 2006, the club tried to restructure itself in order to regain entry to the Championship of France. It currently operates in National League Three.

Alsace de Bagnolet
Alsace de Bagnolet logo
Founded1924
History1924 to present
ArenaMichel Saudemont
Location Bagnolet, France France
Team colorsRed and white
   
Championships2 French Leagues
1 French League 2
Websitealsace-de-bagnolet.fr

History edit

The club was formed in 1908 by Father Rouan, the patronage of St. Léon[1] devient l'Alsace de Bagnolet en 1921 en souvenir de l'Alsace redevenue française[2] becomes Alsace de Bagnolet in 1921 in tribute to the Alsace soldiers returning to the French state after World War I. The basketball section, even though the first team was founded in 1924,[3] first achieved prominence in 1938 by winning the National Cup in gymnastics under the Sports Federation of France (FGSPF).

In the 1950s, the club experienced a new momentum thanks to Emile Touzet who took the presidential chair. He built a club house in the courtyard of patronage and the Michel-Saudemont gym. From 1960 to 1970 Alsace succeeds sports association awakening ASVEL awards at the federal championship France Sports Federation (FSF).[4] In the same years, the club won three league titles in France in 1960-61, 1961–62 and 1966–67, came twice in the round of 16 of the FIBA European Champions Cup in 1961-62 and 1962-63. Ιn the first case the obstacle was the Belgian Antwerpse and in the second Ivo Daneu's Olimpija from Ljubljana. The 1967-68 season, Alsace Bagnolet returned to European Champions Cup but eliminated in the first round by Maccabi Tel Aviv.

Despite the second place in 1972-73, the club does not always pays its players except the American reinforcements. Alsace de Bagnolet permanently leaves the world of French basketball high level in 1978.[5] The club refuses upmanship of professional sports, but still exists with 220 graduates in 2008.

Honours edit

French League

  • Winners (3): 1960-61, 1961–62, 1966–67

French Cup

  • Runners-up (3): 1962-63, 1964–65, 1968–69

French League 2

  • Winners (1): 1958-59

Notable players edit

  •   Christian Berté
  •   Gérard Berté
  •   Franck Cazalon
  •   Laurent Dorigo
  •   Maxime Dorigo
  •   George Eddy
  •   Jean-Marie Jouaret
  •   Michel Longueville
  •   Gérard Mayeur
  •   Bernard Mayeur
  •   Léon Toffolon
  •   Victor Toffolon

Head coaches edit

  •   Auguste Taravella (?-1966)
  •   Maxime Dorigo (1966-76 & 1978)
  •   Pascal Esquillian (1976–78)

Bibliography edit

  • Yves Chéné (2008), Association Ecrits et Mémoires (ed.), Union d'Anjou FSCF : D'hier à aujourd'hui, 100 ans de vie associative depuis les patronages (1907-2007), Angers, p. 176, ISBN 978-2-914787-32-1{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Jean-Marie Jouaret (1999), FSCF (à compte d’auteur, imp. Déja-Glmc) (ed.), Petite histoire partielle et partiale de la Fédération sportive et culturelle de France (1948-1998), vol. 1, Paris, ISBN 2-9528-3870-4, Jean-Marie Jouaret tome 1{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Arnaud Lecomte (2007), L'Équipe (ed.), La Grande histoire du basket français, Saint-Étienne, ISBN 978-2-91553556-3{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

References edit

  1. ^ Yves Chéné 2008, p. 31
  2. ^ Julien Lesage (21 June 2008). "Le centenaire du club de l'Alsace". Le Parisien (in French). Seine-Saint-Denis.
  3. ^ Fédération sportive et culturelle de France (FSCF) (February 2006). "L'Alsace de Bagnolet : un mythe vivant" (in French) (2500). Les Jeunes: 16. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ Jean-Marie Jouaret 1999, p. 389
  5. ^ Arnaud Lecomte 2007, p. 131