Jacques-Henri Eyraud Explained

Jacques-Henri Eyraud
Birth Date:22 March 1968
Birth Place:Paris, France
Office:President of Olympique de Marseille
Term Start1:17 October 2016
Term End1:26 February 2021
Predecessor1:Giovanni Ciccolunghi (Interim)
Successor1:Pablo Longoria
Alma Mater:Sciences Po
Paris Dauphine University
Harvard University
Occupation:Master of Business Administration

Jacques-Henri Eyraud (born 22 March 1968[1] in Paris[2] [3]) is a French entrepreneur and media man. He is currently a European Club Association representative on the UEFA Club Competitions Committee, and part of the supervisory board of Marseille, the club in which he formerly served as president from 2016 to 2021.[4] [5] [6]

Education

Jacques-Henri Eyraud comes from a family of teachers. He graduated from Sciences Po Paris[1] (class of 1989), Dauphine (Master 2 in telecommunications and new media management, 1990) and Harvard Business School[6] (Master of Business Administration, 1998). At the age of 22, he did his military service as a press attaché for the Armed Forces Information and Public Relations Service during the Gulf War.[7]

From Disney to entrepreneurship

He joined Euro Disney as spokesman in 1991, six months before the opening of Disneyland Paris, then presented as Europe's "greatest project". He became the group's communications director.[8]

Encouraged by Disney's CEO Steve Burke (now CEO of NBCUniversal), he entered Harvard at the end of 1996 to pursue an MBA. These two years spent on the Boston campus instigated his entrepreneurial spirit.[9]  

Upon his return, he became Director of New Products at Club Med under the direction of Philippe Bourguignon, one of his Disney mentors.[10]

In 2000, he founded Sporever with Patrick Chêne. Two months before the bursting of the internet bubble, he raised $10 million. The company became the European leader in digital sports information, being the first to broadcast live football matches on mobile phones.[11] In 2005, the startup was listed on Alternext and generated 13.5 million euros revenues.[12] In 2009, he became chairman and chief executive officer of Turf Éditions, a media group dedicated to horse racing, for which he undertakes the digital transformation.[12]  

In 2016, he left his position to devote himself to Marseille presidency.

Marseille

Takeover of the club

During the 2016 summer, when the club was put up for sale by Margarita Louis-Dreyfus, Jacques-Henri Eyraud first considered investing personally in the club. Didier Quillot, the new executive director of the LFP (Ligue de Football Professionnel), introduced him to Frank McCourt, who had previously expressed an interest in a club acquisition. The two men then decided to join forces. On October 17, 2016, the American businessman bought Marseille and Jacques-Henri Eyraud took over the leadership of the club.[13]

Strategy and results

Upon his arrival, he showed high ambition through a project called "OM Champion" which is based on four axes: sports performance, with the objective of regularly qualifying the club for the UEFA Champions League and making youth training a central point of the club's strategy; fan experience; the club's civic commitment; and finally, its economic sustainability.

Rudi Garcia was appointed coach and Andoni Zubizarreta was appointed sports director.

A budget of 200 million euros spent over two years was announced to build a competitive team. During the first transfer window, in winter 2017, 44 million euros were spent on four players, including 30 million euros only for Dimitri Payet who became the most expensive recruit in the club's history.

At the same time, he restructured the club. The voluntary departure plan[14] launched in June 2017 resulted in the end of OM TV in favor of investments in digital content. The OM Foundation was created to promote the club's social commitment.[15]

At the end of the 2017–18 season, Adidas, the club's equipment supplier since 1974, was replaced by Puma, with whom OM signed a five-year partnership.[16]

After several years of negotiations, in July 2018 he announced that he had reached an agreement with AREMA, a Bouygues subsidiary, to become the exclusive manager of the Stade Vélodrome. OM thus recovered all event activities (seminars, visits, concerts) and allowed itself to freely invest in the stadium (sound, light, etc). The creation of a museum near the stadium was also planned.[17]

He ranked 13th in Ligue 1 when he took over the club, and the team finished fifth in the first year and fourth at the end of the 2017/2018 season. The first European campaign ended in a UEFA Europa League final, which was lost against Atlético Madrid. This was the club's fifth European final, and the first in 14 years. Attendance records were beaten at the Orange Vélodrome during the quarter-finals and semi-finals, respectively against RB Leipzig and RB Salzburg.[18]

Institutional functions

Jacques-Henri Eyraud is a member of the board of directors and of the Bureau of the LFP.[19]

On 10 September 2019, Eyraud was appointed as one of the European Club Association Representatives on the Club Competitions Committee in UEFA.[20]

Innovation in football  

At the Sport Innovation Summit 2018, he described his vision of the football of the future in a strong impact speech. Looking ahead to 2030, he anticipates the creation of a closed European Super League where the best European teams compete. He also describes the revolution brought about by artificial intelligence in decision-making and depicts the characteristics of the augmented football player of tomorrow.[21]

Step down from president role

In February 2021, Eyraud left his role as the president of OM to instead work in the supervisory board of the club. He had been coming under fire by the supporters of the club, and Marseille was in a complicated situation following poor results on the pitch and the violent incident that occurred at La Commanderie with the fans. Pablo Longoria, previously director of football, replaced Eyraud as president. Earlier in February, OM manager André Villas-Boas had resigned, and had been replaced by Nasser Larguet as interim. Jorge Sampaoli would become the new coach in March, signing a contract until 2023.[22]

Recognition

In September 2018, a survey conducted by Capital ranked him sixth in the ranking of the French people's favorite business leaders. He is ahead of Jean-Michel Aulas (13th), to whom he opposes several times, including publicly during the 2017–18 season.[23]

Areas of interest

Jacques-Henri Eyraud was French junior champion of taekwondo in 1985[24] and a member of the French team from 1985 to 1987.[25]  

Since 2007, he has been teaching at Sciences Po Paris, where he teaches the "Introduction to Entrepreneurship" course.[26]

Passionate about music, he quotes a verse from IAM in an interview[27] and claims his taste for his musical idols such as Warren G, The Clash or Rammstein.[28]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Qui est vraiment Jacques-Henri Eyraud, le président de l'OM ?. L'ÉQUIPE. January 4, 2019.
  2. Web site: Portrait de Jacques-Henri Eyraud, un président à hauteur d'OM. Les Inrocks. fr-FR. January 4, 2019.
  3. Web site: OM : "L'espoir s'est mis à renaître" (Eyraud). October 29, 2016. LaProvence.com. fr. January 4, 2019.
  4. News: Andrea Agnelli reelected ECA chairman following constitution of new executive board. ECA. 10 September 2019 .
  5. Web site: 2021-02-27. Jacques-Henri Eyraud quitte l'OM, Bernard Tapie ravi. 2021-04-19. Le Point. fr.
  6. Web site: Ligue 1 : 5 choses à savoir sur Jacques-Henri Eyraud, nommé président de l'OM par Frank McCourt. France Football. January 4, 2019.
  7. Web site: Mes étudiants sont des entrepreneurs différents . Sciences Po. fr. January 4, 2019.
  8. Web site: Portrait de Jacques-Henri Eyraud, un président à la hauteur de l'OM. Les Inrocks. September 23, 2017.
  9. Web site: " OM : L'espoir s'est mis à renaître" (Eyraud). La Provence. October 29, 2016. fr. October 29, 2016.
  10. Web site: Ligue 1 : 5 choses à savoir sur Jacques-Henri Eyraud, nommé président de l'OM par Frank McCourt. France Football.
  11. Web site: Sporever étudie des offres de rachat. Les Échos. September 4, 2007. France. fr. January 4, 2019.
  12. Web site: Paris Turf change de mains. February 22, 2013. FIGARO. January 4, 2019.
  13. Web site: OM: le rôle de Quillot dans le rachat par McCourt et la venue d'Eyraud. SPORT. RMC. RMC SPORT. fr. January 4, 2019.
  14. Web site: Le plan social se poursuit du côté de l'OM. SO FOOT.
  15. Web site: L'olympique de Marseille lance sa fondation. La Tribune. October 30, 2017. fr. January 4, 2019.
  16. Web site: L'OM et Puma officialisent leur union pour 5 ans à partir de 2018. L'Obs. March 26, 2017. fr. January 4, 2019.
  17. Web site: L'OM devient gestionnaire exclusif du stade Orange Vélodrome. Les Échos. July 13, 2018. France. fr. January 4, 2019.
  18. Web site: OM-Salzbourg: record d'affluence " européen " au Vélodrome. SPORT. RMC. RMC SPORT. fr. January 4, 2019.
  19. Web site: Jacques-Henri Eyraud et Jean-Pierre Caillot élus au Conseil d'Administration. lfp.fr. fr. January 4, 2019.
  20. News: Andrea Agnelli reelected ECA chairman following constitution of new executive board. ECA. 10 September 2019 .
  21. News: Jacques-Henri Eyraud : " Dans les faits, la ligue fermée est déjà à l'œuvre dans le football européen ". November 5, 2018. Le Monde.fr. January 4, 2019. fr.
  22. Web site: 2021-02-26. OM : Jacques-Henri Eyraud quitte ses fonctions de président. 2021-04-19. Le Point. fr.
  23. Web site: Jacques-Henri Eyraud : "Il faut employer les armes qu'emploient certains". L'ÉQUIPE. January 4, 2019.
  24. Web site: OM: Précisions sur le passé de taekwondoïste de Jacques-Henri Eyraud. 20 Minutes. fr. January 4, 2019.
  25. News: Le nouveau président de l'Olympique de Marseille, Jacques-Henri Eyraud, l'ami des Américains. October 17, 2016. Le Monde.fr. January 4, 2019. fr.
  26. Web site: On a assisté au cours du président de l'OM à Sciences-Po. JDD. Le. lejdd.fr. fr. January 4, 2019.
  27. Web site: Vidéo : quand le président de l'OM chante du IAM. cnews.fr. fr. January 4, 2019.
  28. Web site: Jacques-Henri Eyraud. February 3, 2017. Libération.fr. fr. January 4, 2019.