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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Honours  





3 Finals results  



3.1  French championship  





3.2  European Rugby Challenge Cup  





3.3  Challenge Yves du Manoir  





3.4  French Cup  







4 Current standings  





5 Current squad  



5.1  Espoirs squad  







6 Notable former players  





7 See also  





8 References  





9 External links  














RC Narbonne






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Racing Club de Narbonne Méditerannée
Full nameRacing Club de Narbonne Méditerannée
Founded1907; 117 years ago (1907)
LocationNarbonne, France
Ground(s)Parc des Sports Et de l'Amitié (Capacity: 12,000)
PresidentBernard Archilla
Coach(es)Christian Labit,
Steve Kefu and
Sébastien Buada
League(s)Nationale
2023–242nd

1st kit

2nd kit

Official website
www.rcnm.com

Racing Club de Narbonne Méditerannée (also known as RCNM) is a French rugby union club that play in the third-level Nationale.

They are based in NarbonneinOccitania. They were founded in 1907. They play at Parc des Sports Et de l'Amitié (capacity 12,000). They wear orange and black.

History

[edit]

RC Narbonne were established in 1907. The club's first appearance in the domestic championship final came in May 1932, where they faced LyoninBordeaux. However, Narbonne were not able to capture their first title, as Lyon would go on to win the final 9 points to three. The following season Narbonne again made it to the final of the league, and once again, Lyon were their opponents. Again played in Bordeaux, Lyon were victorious once again, defeating Narbonne 10 points to three. However, by 1936 Narbonne were once again finalists of the French championship, and on May 10 in Toulouse they defeated Montferrand 6 points to three, claiming their first ever championship.

In 1967 Narbonne contested the final of the Challenge Yves du Manoir, playing FC Lourdes (the 1966 Challenge Yves du Manoir champions). FC Lourdes held onto their title, defeating Narbonne 9 points to three. However the following season, Narbonne were again finalists, and won their first Challenge Yves du Manoir title, defeating Dax 14 points to six.

The 1970s were another successful era for RC Narbonne. In 1973 Narbonne captured their first Challenge Yves du Manoir title since the 1968 season, defeating Béziers 13 points to six. 1974 was a great season for Narbonne; they successfully defended their Challenge Yves du Manoir title by defeating CA Brive in the final, they were also runners-up in the main French championship, being defeated by their 1973 Challenge Yves du Manoir opponents AS Béziers (16 points to 14). In 1978 Narbonne again won the Challenge Yves du Manoir, being awarded the title after drawing 19-all with AS Béziers due to them scoring more tries. 1979 was a very successful year for Narbonne; they were able to hold on to their Challenge Yves du Manoir title, defeating AS Montferrand 9 points to seven, as well as the Challenge Yves du Manoir, Narbonne won the French championship (for the first time since 1936), defeating Stade Bagnérais 10 to nil at Parc des Princes in the final.

Narbonne would also win a number of honours during the 1980s. The club were runners-up in the Challenge Yves du Manoir in 1982, losing to US Dax 19 points to 22 in the final. Narbonne won it again in 1984, defeating Toulouse 17 points to 13 in the final. In 1985 Narbonne won the Coupe de France, defeating AS Béziers 28 to 27 after extra time. In 1989 Narbonne won the Challenge Yves du Manoir again, defeating Biarritz 18 points to 12. The club won it again in 1990, defeating Grenoble 24 to 19 in the final. Narbonne made it three in a row after winning the 1991 Challenge Yves du Manoir, defeating CA Bègles 24 to 19 in the final game. Narbonne came close to winning the Challenge Yves du Manoir four times in a row, but lost to SU Agen 23-18 in the final. In 2001 Narbonne were runners-up in the European Challenge Cup, losing to the Harlequins 42 to 33 in the final.

The Club has been owned by an Australian Consortium since 2012. The consortium includes Bob Dwyer, Rocky Elsom, Pete O'Connell and Chris Bayman. RCNM made the finals of ProD2 in 2013/14 season losing narrowly to SG Agen. This was achieved with the smallest player budget in the League[1] and the innovation in recruitment, preparation and training enabled the club to perform well above expectation.

Honours

[edit]

Finals results

[edit]

French championship

[edit]
Date Winners Score Runners-up Venue Spectators
5 May 1932 Lyon OU 9-3 RC Narbonne Parc Lescure, Bordeaux 13,000
7 May 1933 Lyon OU 10-3 RC Narbonne Parc Lescure, Bordeaux 15,000
10 May 1936 RC Narbonne 6-3 AS Montferrand Stade des Ponts Jumeaux, Toulouse 25,000
12 May 1974 AS Béziers 16-14 RC Narbonne Parc des Princes, Paris 40,609
27 May 1979 RC Narbonne 10-0 Stade Bagnérais Parc des Princes, Paris 41,981

European Rugby Challenge Cup

[edit]
Date Winners Score Runners-up Venue Spectators
20 May 2001 England Harlequins 42-33 France RC Narbonne Madejski Stadium 11,211

Challenge Yves du Manoir

[edit]
Date Winners Score Runners-up
1967 FC Lourdes 9-3 RC Narbonne
1968 RC Narbonne 14-6 US Dax
1973 RC Narbonne 13-6 AS Béziers
1974 RC Narbonne 19-10 CA Brive
1978 RC Narbonne 19-19
(more tries scored)
AS Béziers
1979 RC Narbonne 9-7 AS Montferrand
1982 US Dax 22-19 RC Narbonne
1984 RC Narbonne 17-13 Stade Toulousain
1989 RC Narbonne 18-12 Biarritz Olympique
1990 RC Narbonne 24-19 FC Grenoble
1991 RC Narbonne 24-19 CA Bègles
1992 SU Agen 23-18 RC Narbonne

French Cup

[edit]
Date Winners Score Runners-up
1985 RC Narbonne 28-27 (a.e.t.) AS Béziers

Current standings

[edit]
2023–24 Nationale season Table
Pos Team
  • t
  • e
  • Pld W D L PF PA PD TB LB Pts Qualification or relegation
    1 Nice (P) 26 18 1 7 676 352 +324 11 4 96 Semi-final promotion play-off
    2 Narbonne 26 18 0 8 653 479 +174 7 6 94
    3 Carcassonne 26 18 1 7 552 344 +208 8 3 93 Quarter-final promotion play-off
    4 Albi 24 17 0 7 552 344 +208 8 3 91
    5 Suresnes 26 16 0 10 601 542 +59 4 3 80
    6 Chambéry 26 15 2 9 582 450 +132 5 5 80
    7 Périgueux 26 14 1 11 545 421 +124 5 6 78
    8 Bourgoin-Jallieu 26 13 1 12 447 423 +24 3 6 72
    9 Massy 26 12 0 14 548 506 +42 4 9 70
    10 Bourg-en-Bresse 26 11 1 14 546 503 +43 3 11 69
    11 Hyères 26 13 1 12 509 555 −46 4 3 67
    12 Tarbes 26 10 0 16 472 586 −114 3 9 61
    13 Vienne 26 3 0 23 255 807 −552 2 3 26 Relegation play-off
    14 Blagnac (R) 26 0 0 26 0 650 −650 0 0 −43 Relegation to Nationale 2
    Source: [2]
    Rules for classification: When two teams have the same points total, position is determined by head-to-head results before points difference.
    (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated

    Current squad

    [edit]

    The Narbonne squad for 2022–23 season is:[3]

    Note: Flags indicate national union under World Rugby eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-World Rugby nationality.

    Player Position Union
    Aurélien Blanc Hooker France France
    Christophe David Hooker France France
    Jordan Rochier Hooker France France
    Sylvain Abadie Prop France France
    Mohamed Boughanmi Prop France France
    Theo Castinel Prop France France
    Pascal Cotet Prop France France
    Vakhtang Jintcharadze Prop Georgia (country) Georgia
    Matthieu Loudet Prop France France
    Jules Martinez Prop France France
    Geoffrey Moise Prop Portugal Portugal
    Pierre Causse Lock France France
    Daniel Faleafa Lock Tonga Tonga
    Aston Fortuin Lock South Africa South Africa
    Mohamed Kbaier Lock France France
    Manuel Plaza Lock Argentina Argentina
    Valentin Sese Lock France France
    Dennis Visser Lock South Africa South Africa
    Baptiste Abescat Back row France France
    Carl Axtens Back row New Zealand New Zealand
    Paul Belzons Back row France France
    Aleksandre Burduli Back row Georgia (country) Georgia
    Bill Caffo Back row France France
    Louis-Benoit Madaule Back row France France
    Flavien Nouhaillaguet Back row France France
    Player Position Union
    Luke Campbell Scrum-half New Zealand New Zealand
    Jeremy Chaput Scrum-half France France
    Christopher Kaiser Scrum-half France France
    Pierrick Nova Scrum-half France France
    Lucas Meret Fly-half France France
    Joris Pialot Fly-half France France
    Jason Robertson Fly-half New Zealand New Zealand
    Saia Fekitoa Centre Tonga Tonga
    Lucas Lebraud Centre France France
    Apimeleki Nawaqatabu Centre Fiji Fiji
    Pierre Nueno Centre Spain Spain
    Jamie-Jerry Taulagi Centre Samoa Samoa
    Etienne Ducom Wing France France
    Pierre-Hugo Ducom Wing France France
    Guillaume Namy Wing France France
    Kimami Sitauti Wing Australia Australia
    Save Totovosau Wing Fiji Fiji
    Boris Goutard Fullback France France
    Pierre Justes Fullback France France

    Espoirs squad

    [edit]

    Note: Flags indicate national union under World Rugby eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-World Rugby nationality.

    Player Position Union
    Martin Vaca Hooker Argentina Argentina
    Benoit Fontanelle Prop France France
    Avto Gogiashvili Prop Georgia (country) Georgia
    Leon Gourmand Prop France France
    Dylan Hoyeau Prop France France
    Odran Peron Prop France France
    Paul Tarby Lock France France
    Kamil Bouregba Back row France France
    Dorian Peron Back row France France
    Player Position Union
    Pablo Barbaste Scrum-half France France
    Leo Ducasse Scrum-half France France
    Cyprien Saillard Scrum-half France France
    Theo Gomez Fly-half France France
    Louis Balfet Centre France France
    Luc Brocas Centre France France
    Theo Mias Centre France France
    Baptiste Tsague Wing France France
    Jason Pupunat Fullback France France
    Luca Serrano Fullback France France

    Notable former players

    [edit]
  • Argentina Mario Ledesma
  • Argentina Gonzalo Longo
  • Argentina Gonzalo Quesada
  • Argentina Martín Scelzo
  • Australia Huia Edmonds
  • Australia Rocky Elsom
  • Australia Justin Harrison
  • Australia Julian Huxley
  • Australia Brett Sheehan
  • Australia Jone Tawake
  • Australia Josh Valentine
  • Cook Islands Stan Wright
  • France René Araou
  • France Jean-Michel Benacloï
  • France Laurent Bénézech
  • France Gérard Bertrand
  • France Étienne Bonnes
  • France Julien Candelon
  • France Aimé Cassayet-Armagnac
  • France Didier Codorniou
  • France Patrick Estève
  • France Jean-Pierre Hortoland
  • France Christian Labit
  • France Jean-Marc Lescure
  • France Arnaud Martinez
  • France Jo Maso
  • France Olivier Merle
  • France Lucien Mias
  • France Lucien Pariès
  • France Jean-Baptiste Poux
  • France Vincent Rattez
  • France Marc Raynaud
  • France François Sangalli
  • France Henri Sanz
  • France Laurent Seigne
  • France Claude Spanghero
  • France Jean-Marie Spanghero
  • France Walter Spanghero
  • France Gérard Sutra
  • France Franck Tournaire
  • Germany Raynor Parkinson
  • Italy Federico Pucciariello
  • Italy Alessandro Stoica
  • Italy Massimo Giovanelli
  • Italy Marco Bortolami
  • Romania Tiberiu Brînză
  • Romania Gabriel Vlad
  • New Zealand Jerry Collins
  • New Zealand David Smith
  • New Zealand Karl Tu'inukuafe
  • South Africa Willem de Waal
  • South Africa Louis Koen
  • Scotland Bryan Redpath
  • Scotland Stuart Reid
  • United States Luke Hume
  • Wales Gareth Llewellyn
  • See also

    [edit]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ "Rapport DNACG" (PDF). LNR. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
  • ^ "Classement NATIONALE". Fédération Française de Rugby (in French). Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  • ^ "L'équipe". Racing Club Narbonne Méditerranée (in French). 9 September 2017. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=RC_Narbonne&oldid=1236190876"

    Categories: 
    Rugby union clubs in France
    Rugby clubs established in 1907
    Sport in Aude
    Narbonne
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