Stado Tarbes Pyrénées Rugby Explained

Teamname:Stado Tarbes Pyrénées Rugby
Fullname:Stado Tarbes Pyrénées Rugby
Countryflag:France
Nickname:Les Ours bigourdans (The Bigourdan Bears)
Capacity:16,400
Position:12th
Url:www.tpr65.com
Body1:D50C12
Pattern La1:_whiteshoulders
Leftarm1:D50C12
Pattern Ra1:_whiteshoulders
Rightarm1:D50C12
Pattern B1:_whiteshoulders
Shorts1:FFFFFF
Pattern So1:_3_stripes_white
Socks1:D50C12
Pattern La2:_redshoulders
Pattern B2:_thinredsides
Pattern Ra2:_redshoulders
Pattern So2:_3_stripes_red
Leftarm2:FFFFFF
Body2:FFFFFF
Rightarm2:FFFFFF
Shorts2:FFFFFF
Socks2:FFFFFF

Stado Tarbes Pyrénées rugby is a French rugby union team that currently takes part in Nationale, the third level of the country's league system.

They were founded in August 2000 as a result of a merger between Stadoceste Tarbais and the senior side of Cercle Amical Lannemezanais. They play in red and white. They are based in Tarbes, the capital of the Hautes-Pyrénées département, in Occitania, and play at the Stade Maurice Trélut.

History

Several clubs from the Bigorre region have been part of the history of rugby union in France, but none of them was able to keep up with the times when professionalism appeared. Stadoceste Tarbais, the big regional gun, a two-time French champion, was struggling in the amateur leagues, like FC Lourdes (8 times French champion) and Stade Bagnérais. However, at the end of the 1999-2000 season, CA Lannemezan reached Pro D2 for the first time ever. But the Ligue Nationale de Rugby, which operates the French professional leagues, blocked the promotion, fearing that a club in a town of 6 000-odd inhabitants would never survive as a professional outfit. Stadoceste Tarbais, which had just been promoted to the 4th division (Fédérale 2), made CA Lannemezan an offer to join forces in order to build a strong viable club and reach Top 14 in the near future. Tarbes and Lannemezan are 35 km apart. The plan was backed by the local government of Hautes-Pyrénées, which would only support one top level club in the area. FC Lourdes and Stade Bagnérais were offered to join but rejected the offer as they feared that they would lose their identity in a bigger club which, in all likelihood, would play in the capital of the department, Tarbes. The board of CA Lannemezan originally rejected the merger 73%–27%, but the club president managed to get it done.

In August 2000, the new club LT65 (Lannemezan Tarbes Hautes-Pyrénées) took off as a merger of Stadoceste Tarbais and CA Lannemezan, and took the place of Lannemezan in Pro D2. Very soon though, dissensions appeared inside the club: all games were played in Tarbes, while Lannemezan became « dead on matchdays » (according to the CAL president), professional and semi-professional players were mixed, leading to frictions inside the squad etc. Soon, the club was renamed Tarbes Pyrénées Rugby, severing the symbolic link with Lannemezan. In 2003, some players and board members left and decided to relaunch the senior team in their lifelong club which had kept its youth teams. By 2005, Lannemezan was back in Fédérale 1 and hoping to climb back to Pro D2, with a view to juicy derbies against TPR; their ambitions were realized in 2009, when they won the Fédérale 1 crown and earned promotion to Pro D2. TPR has not been able to establish itself as a candidate for promotion to Top 14 so far.

Honours

Finals results

French championship

DateWinnerScoreRunner upVenueSpectators
3 May 1914AS Perpignan8–7Stadoceste TarbaisStade des Ponts Jumeaux, Toulouse15,000
25 April 1920Stadoceste Tarbais8–3Racing Club de FranceRoute du Médoc, Le Bouscat20,000
20 May 1951US Carmaux14–12 (a.e.t)Stadoceste TarbaisStadium Municipal, Toulouse39,450
20 May 1973Stadoceste Tarbais18–12US DaxStadium Municipal, Toulouse26,952
28 May 1988SU Agen9-3Stadoceste Tarbais Parc des Princes, Paris48,000

French Cup

DateWinnersScoreRunners-up
1951FC Lourdes align=center 6-3Stadoceste Tarbais

Current squad

2021

Notable former players

See also

External links