Choc des Olympiques explained

Choc des Olympiques
Other Names:Olympico[1]
City Or Region:Lyon / Marseille, France
Team2logo:Olympique Marseille logo.svg
First Contested:
1945–46 French Division 1
(23 September 1945)
Most Wins:Lyon (43)
Top Scorer:Bernard Lacombe (12)
Mostrecent:
2023–24 Ligue 1
(4 February 2024)
Nextmeeting:TBC
Largestvictory:Lyon 8–0 Marseille
1996–97 French Division 1
(24 May 1997)
Stadiums:Parc Olympique Lyonnais (Lyon)
Stade Vélodrome (Marseille)

The Choc des Olympiques (Clash of the Olympics), also known as the Derby des Olympiques (Derby of the Olympics), is the name of the football rivalry between two major teams in French football with "Olympique" in their names – Olympique Lyonnais and Olympique de Marseille. The French major football broadcaster Canal+ has referred to the match as the "Olympico", in reference to El Clásico, a name that has gained in popularity among fans and the media. It specifically refers to individual matches between the teams. Unlike Le Classique, the rivalry has no bad blood within it and, instead, stems from the competitiveness of the each club's players, managers, supporters, and presidential hierarchy. The rivalry is often cited as being particularly important as both clubs are of high standard in French football and the championship is regularly decided between the two. Marseille and Lyon (along with Saint-Étienne and Paris Saint-Germain) are the only French clubs to have won the French first division four straight times with Marseille doing it on two occasions. The Rivalry is also comparable with that of between Borussia Mönchengladbach and Borussia Dortmund better known as "Borussen Derby" in Germany.

History

The first meeting between the two sides was played on 23 September 1945 and ended in a 1–1 draw. Following Jean-Michel Aulas's acquisition of Olympique Lyonnais in 1987, the rivalry entered a more competitive environment. In 1989, Marseille began an impressive streak of five consecutive French league titles, though the fifth and final title was stripped, due to the Bernard Tapie scandal, which saw the club relegated to the second division. Marseille also won the 1993 edition of the European Cup. One notable match during the streak was a 7–0 thrashing of Lyon by Marseille during the 1990–91 season.

Following Marseille's relegation to the second division and eventual return, Lyon got revenge during the 1996–97 season hammering Marseille 8–0 at the Stade de Gerland with all of their goals coming inside 55 minutes. The win, to this day, remains Lyon's biggest league victory. Lyon eventually began to ascend the French football ladder and, at the start of the new millennium, began a streak of seven consecutive French league titles, easily surpassing Marseille's streak of four. During Lyon's national record-breaking streak, Marseille finished runner-up only once, during the 2006–07 season.

Notable matches

Statistics and records

As of 4 February 2024, there have been 110 competitive league meetings between the two teams since their first league meeting. Lyon hold the advantage in the league having won 37 matches to Marseille's 33. The most goals in one game were scored in the closely contested 5–5 draw at the Stade de Gerland on 8 November 2009. The biggest winning margin was an 8–0 home win by Lyon on 24 May 1997. Seven years earlier, Marseille defeated Lyon 7–0.

Of the 110 league matches contested, both teams have scored 169 goals. Marseille's record for goals scored against Lyon is six and is held by Mamadou Niang, who has been with Marseille since 2004 and, at one point, had scored in four straight Choc des Olympiques. Lyon's record is held by Sonny Anderson who also attained six goals. He is followed by Sidney Govou and Juninho, who both scored five.

Summary of results

Updated 4 February 2024

PlayedLyon winsDrawsMarseille winsLyon goalsMarseille goals
Ligue 110837 40 31 169 167
Ligue 220 0 2 0 2
Coupe de France114 2 5 12 13
Coupe de la Ligue21 0 1 2 2
Trophée des Champions00 0 0 0 0
Coupe Charles Drago11 0 0 1 0
Total12443 42 39 184 184

Honours

CompetitionMarseilleLyon
Ligue 197
Ligue 213
Coupe de France105
Coupe de la Ligue31
Trophée des Champions38
UEFA Champions League10
UEFA Intertoto Cup11
Coupe Charles Drago10
Total2925

Crossing the Olympics

Due to the club's ongoing rivalry, few players have played for both Lyon and Marseille. Notable players include the Ghanaian Abedi Pele, who won the African Footballer of the Year award, defender Manuel Amoros, and goalkeeper Pascal Olmeta. All three players had been part of the Marseille dynasty that won five straight French league titles and the European Cup in 1993. Amoros is the only player in the rivalry's history to transfer from one club to another, then transfer back to the previous club. Amoros had played for Marseille from 1987 to 1993, then spent two years at Lyon, before returning to Marseille in 1995. Others who played for both clubs include Sonny Anderson, who had one respectable season at Marseille and later joined Lyon becoming one of the club's most prominent players, Hatem Ben Arfa, who developed into a prodigy at Lyon before departing to Marseille under bad circumstances, and Florian Maurice, who was one of Lyon's most influential players during the mid-1990s before leaving for the south coast having two solid seasons there.

OM, then OL

NamePosMarseilleLyon
CareerAppsGoalsCareerAppsGoals
Duje Ćaleta-CarDF2018–221305 2023– 270
Nicolas NkoulouDF2011–162075 2016–18210
Jérémy MorelDF2011–151533 2015–191421
Mathieu ValbuenaMF2006–1433138 2015–177612
Benoît PedrettiMF2004–053132005–06362
Reynald PedrosMF1996–992111997–98152
Sonny AndersonFW1993–9424161999–0315491
Pascal OlmetaGK1990–938401993–961310
Manuel AmorosDF1989–9310221993–95683
Abedi PeleMF1987–93111231993–94293
Ali BouafiaMF1987–881988–92
Albert EmonFW1968–77137331981–866017

OL, then OM

NamePosLyonMarseille
CareerAppsGoalsCareerAppsGoals
Clinton NjieFW2012–154382016–195912
Henri BedimoDF2013–1610312016–18230
Bafétimbi GomisFW2009–14243902016–173421
Loïc RémyFW2006–081902010–1310542
Alou DiarraMF2006–072432011–12502
Hatem Ben ArfaMF2004–0892122008–11588
Sylvain WiltordFW2004–07114322009152
Péguy LuyindulaFW2001–04126462004–054210
Steve MarletFW2000–0149182003–056417
Florian MauriceFW1991–97126441998–016223
Manuel AmorosDF1993–956631995–96160
Daniel BravoMF1997–981441998–99211
Eric RoyMF1993–9611191996–998710
Bruno NgottyDF1988–95237132000–01320
François LemassonGK1987–9010101998–9950
Jean-François DomergueDF1982–831986–88736
Daniel XuerebMF1977–8195231981–86193
Jean TiganaMF1978–81104151989–91761

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Marseille v Lyon boils over but Ligue 1 needs Olympico rivalry. Adam. White. Eric. Devin. Get French Football News. 19 March 2018. Guardian Sport Network. 22 March 2018.
  2. http://www.lfp.fr/ligue1/feuilleMatch.asp?saison=1990/1991&code_evt=D1&num_ordre=1&code_jr_tr=J22&no_groupe=0 Marseille v. Lyon 1991 Match Report
  3. http://www.lfp.fr/ligue1/feuilleMatch.asp?saison=1996/1997&code_evt=D1&num_ordre=6&code_jr_tr=J38&no_groupe=0 Lyon v. Marseille 1997 Match Report
  4. http://www.lfp.fr/ligue1/feuilleMatch.asp?saison=2008/2009&code_evt=D1&num_ordre=4&code_jr_tr=J18&no_groupe=0 Lyon v. Marseille 2008 Match Report
  5. http://www.lfp.fr/ligue1/feuilleMatch.asp?saison=2009/2010&code_evt=D1&num_ordre=4&code_jr_tr=J13 Lyon v. Marseille 2009 Match Report
  6. Web site: Ten-goal thriller not one to savour for Puel, Deschamps. Reuters. 9 November 2009.
  7. Web site: Des regrets et de la magie. 9 November 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100426011411/https://www.lequipe.fr/Football/breves2009/20091109_011024_des-regrets-et-de-la-magie.html . 26 April 2010 . dead .
  8. Web site: Un Olympico de rêve! . 9 November 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20091112125008/http://www.lfp.fr/actualiteLFP/lireArticle.asp?idArticle=14491 . 12 November 2009 . dead .