French Division 3 (1971–1993) Explained

Division 3
Organiser:French Football Federation
Successor:Championnat National 2
Founded:1971
Folded:1993
Country:France
Most Successful Club:Auxerre B (5 titles)
Level:3
Promotion:Division 2
Relegation:Division d'Honneur (1971–1978)
Division 4 (1978–1993)
Domest Cup:Coupe de France
Confed:UEFA
Confed Cup:Cup Winners' Cup (via cup)
Teams:96
Other Countries:Monaco

The French Division 3 was the third tier in the French football pyramid, after the Division 1 and Division 2, from 1971 to 1993. Although it was succeeded by the Championnat National 2, the Championnat National became the new third division.

History

In 1971, the Division 3 replaced the previous version of the Championnat de France Amateur. In contrast to the former CFA, the D3 permitted the best amateur clubs to be promoted to the Division 2. It became an "open" league, meaning it was open to professional, semi-professional, and amateur clubs. The fathers of this evolution in the French football pyramid were Fernand Sastre and Henri Patrelle, who were fighting for almost a decade to break this segregation between amateur and professional clubs present since 1932.[1]

In 1993, the Championnat National 2 replaced the Division 3, although the Championnat National took the place of third tier. The National 2 became the fourth tier of French football.

Format

The league brought together amateur clubs and reserve sides of professional clubs, split into 6 geographic groups of 16 teams, making a total of 96 teams. The reserve teams were not allowed to be promoted to the Division 2, therefore only amateur clubs could have a chance at promotion. This meant that the best amateur club in each respective group was promoted to the D2 at the end of the season, for a total of 6 promoted teams.[2] Concerning relegation, both amateur clubs and reserve sides were eligible; the bottom three teams of each group were relegated to the fourth tier. From 1971 to 1978, this fourth division was the Division d'Honneur of regional leagues, but from 1978 to 1993, a Division 4 was put into place. From the D4, 8 clubs were promoted.

At the end of the season, the winners of each group (both amateur clubs and reserve sides) played against each other in order to crown a champion of the Division 3. This tournament would be concluded with a final. Some finals were played in two-leg confrontations. In 1981, ASPV Strasbourg refused promotion to the Division 2, and therefore won two consecutive D3 titles (in 1980–81 and 1981–82).

Performances by team

Division 3 winners by team[3] !Team!Winners!Runners-up!Years won!Years runner-up
Auxerre B531983–84, 1985–86, 1987–88, 1989–90, 1991–921984–85, 1990–91, 1992–93
Sochaux B211977–78, 1986–871975–76
Nice B211984–85, 1988–89
Saint-Étienne B21976–77, 1979–80
ASPV Strasbourg21980–81, 1981–82
Nantes B121973–741976–77, 1982–83
Nancy B11971–72
Vittel11972–73
Bastia B11974–75
Nœux-les-Mines11975–76
INF Vichy11978–79
Toulouse B11982–83
Sedan11990–91
Lyon B11992–93
Amiens21973–74, 1977–78
Menton11971–72
Quevilly11972–73
Malakoff11974–75
Metz B11978–79
RC Strasbourg B11979–80
Fontainebleau11980–81
Alès11981–82
Gazélec Ajaccio11985–86
Châtellerault11986–87
Monaco B11987–88
Chaumont11988–89
Rodez11989–90
Charleville11991–92

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 24 June 2012. Fernand Sastre. 7 April 2021. 1962lexode.fr. fr.
  2. Web site: France - List of Final Tables Third Level. 7 April 2021. RSSF.com.
  3. Web site: 30 May 2008. Championnat de France Amateur. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120802083333/http://www.fff.fr/palmares/2129.shtml. 2 August 2012. 7 April 2021. FFF. fr.