2010 Trophée des Champions

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2010 Trophée des Champions
200px
Marseille win 5–4 on penalties.
Date 28 July 2010
Venue Stade 7 Novembre, Tunis, Tunisia
Man of the Match Steve Mandanda
Referee Aouaz Trabelsi (Tunisia)
Attendance 57,000
Weather 25 °C (77 °F), Clear
2009
2011

The 2010 Trophée des champions (English: 2010 Champions Trophy) was the 15th edition of the French supercup. The match was contested by the winners of Ligue 1 the previous season, Olympique de Marseille, and the winners of the Coupe de France the previous season, Paris Saint-Germain. The match was played, for the second consecutive season, on international soil at the Stade 7 Novembre in Rades, Tunis, Tunisia. Like last year, the idea was to promote French football abroad, but this time more specifically in Africa and the Arab world.[1] The match was televised live on M6 and throughout 53 countries in the world.[2]

The match marked the 74th time Classique rivals Marseille and Paris Saint-Germain played against each other and was the second match, the first being the 2006 French Cup final, in the rivalry's history to not be contested at neither the Stade Vélodrome or the Parc des Princes. On 22 July 2010, the Ligue de Football Professionnel and the Fédération Tunisienne de Football confirmed that international referee Aouaz Trabelsi will officiate the match. Trabelsi was assisted by Béchir Hassani and Yamen Malloulchi and the fourth official was Herzi Riadh.[3][4]

The supercup was won by Marseille with the club defeating Paris Saint-Germain 5–4 on penalties after the match finished 0–0 in regular time. The victory gives Marseille their first Trophée des champions title. The 2010 edition hosted a record attendance of 57,000 people.

Preview

Defending Ligue 1 champions Marseille arrived in Tunisia with only one new recruit as of 28 July 2010; Spanish defender César Azpilicueta. Azpilicueta joined the club on 21 June after Marseille reached an agreement with his former club Osasuna on a deal valued at €7 million.[5] Aside from Azpilicueta, Ghanaian and Malian internationals André Ayew and Mamadou Samassa returned to the team after loan stints at Arles-Avignon and Valenciennes, respectively.[6] Other loanee returns included Jean-Philippe Sabo and Leyti N'Diaye who both return to the club after a season's stint at Ajaccio.

The Coupe de France champions Paris Saint-Germain arrived in Tunis with two new arrivals to the club; midfielders Mathieu Bodmer and Nenê. Bodmer joined the club on 30 June after a three-year stint at Lyon, while Nenê arrived at the club a week later after a successful individual 2009–10 season with AS Monaco.[6] Also returning to the team will be former French international Claude Makélélé. Makélélé had previously stated that the 2009–10 season would be his final season as a professional football player, but in June 2010, retracted the statement and signed a new one-year deal with the club.[7] Loris Arnaud returned to the team on 30 June following a six-month loan stint at Clermont Foot. Midfielder Jérôme Rothen also returned to the team on the same date after spending the 2009–10 season on loan at Scottish club Rangers and Turkish club Ankaragücü.

Match details

OM
PSG
MARSEILLE:
GK 30 France Steve Mandanda
RB 2 Spain César Azpilicueta
CB 21 Senegal Souleymane Diawara Substituted off 44'
CB 5 Brazil Vitorino Hilton
LB 3 Nigeria Taye Taiwo (c) Booked 74'
DM 6 France Édouard Cissé
CM 12 Burkina Faso Charles Kaboré
CM 8 Argentina Lucho González
RW 28 France Mathieu Valbuena Substituted off 61'
LW 20 Ghana André Ayew Booked 29' Substituted off 85'
FW 24 Mali Mamadou Samassa
Substitutes:
GK 40 Brazil Elinton Andrade
DF 14 Senegal Leyti N'Diaye Substituted in 44'
DF 26 France Jean-Philippe Sabo
MF 7 France Benoît Cheyrou
MF 10 France Hatem Ben Arfa Substituted in 61'
MF 18 France Fabrice Abriel
FW 29 France Guy Gnabouyou Substituted in 85'
Manager:
France Didier Deschamps
2010 French Supercup - Olympique de Marseille vs Paris SG Line-up.png
Paris SG:
GK 1 France Grégory Coupet
RB 26 France Christophe Jallet
CB 3 France Mamadou Sakho Booked 57'
CB 6 France Zoumana Camara
LB 22 France Sylvain Armand Booked 5'
CM 4 France Claude Makélélé (c)
CM 12 France Mathieu Bodmer Substituted off 76'
AM 10 Benin Stéphane Sessègnon Substituted off 65'
RM 8 France Péguy Luyindula
LM 19 Brazil Nenê
FW 11 Turkey Mevlüt Erdinç Substituted off 81'
Substitutes:
GK 30 Armenia Apoula Edel
DF 2 Brazil Ceará
MF 20 France Clément Chantôme
MF 23 France Jérémy Clément Substituted in 76'
FW 14 Serbia Mateja Kežman Substituted in 81'
FW 7 France Ludovic Giuly Substituted in 65'
FW 21 France Jean-Eudes Maurice
Manager:
France Antoine Kombouaré

MATCH OFFICIALS

  • Assistant referees:
  • Fourth official: Herzi Riadh (Tunisia)

MATCH RULES

  • 90 minutes.
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores level after 90 minutes.
  • Seven named substitutes
  • Maximum of six substitutions.

See also

References

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External links

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