Robert Jonquet
Robert Jonquet, April 1949 | |||
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Robert Jonquet | ||
Date of birth | 3 May 1925 | ||
Place of birth | Paris, France | ||
Date of death | 18 December 2008 83) | (aged||
Height | 1.76 m (5 ft 9 in) | ||
Playing position | Defender | ||
Youth career | |||
1937–1941 | Robinson | ||
1941–1942 | Châtenay-Malabry | ||
1941–1942 | SS Voltaire de Paris | ||
1942–1945 | Reims | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1945–1960 | Reims | 502 | (9) |
1960–1962 | Strasbourg | 55 | (3) |
National team | |||
1948–1960 | France | 58 | (0) |
Teams managed | |||
1961–1964 | Strasbourg | ||
1964–1967 | Reims | ||
Romilly-sur-Seine | |||
Épernay | |||
1978–1980 | Châlons-sur-Marne | ||
1980–1981 | Reims | ||
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. |
Robert Jonquet (3 May 1925 – 18 December 2008) was a French former football defender. He played the majority of his professional career for the club Stade de Reims, winning five French championships and appearing in two European Cup finals. He is considered as one of the best central defender of his time.[1]
Nicknamed "The Hero of Highbury" after an outstanding individual performance against England in London in 1951, Jonquet was integral to the French national teams of the 1950s, playing at the World Cup finals of 1954 and 1958.
Playing career
1946–1956
During his youth, Jonquet played in the surrounding countryside of southern Paris in Châtenay-Malabry, and afterwards for the Société Sportive Voltaire. In 1946/47, he played his first season at Stade de Reims in the division 1. He became a first-team player, and in the spring 1947, he was called up for the first time to the French national team. Jonquet was relatively short (1.76 m) for his playing position, but as a libero, played with elegance and talent in the number 5 shirt, rather than in the mould of a typical centre-back "destroyer".
In the 1948/49 season he won his first French championship, 1950 the Coupe de France, followed in 1953 by his second French championship and the Latin Cup. In the year after he participated with Les Bleus in its first World Cup finals in Switzerland; in 1955 he won the French championship again, the French Supercup, was finalist in the Latin Cup and the following year (1956) reached with Stade Reims the final of the newly born European Cup, losing to Real Madrid 3:4. Two further high points of these years took place on international fields: in October 1951 with the France he played in London against England (which included Alf Ramsey and Billy Wright). Jonquet's superb game helped France obtain a 2:2 draw, and on the next morning a newspaper headline referred to him as the "The Hero of Highbury".[2] The "hero" also played in a European selection which defeated England in a friendly match in 1955.
A main player in one of the best teams of Europe
Robert Jonquet's fellow players with Reims reads like a Who's Who of French football during the 1950s: between goalkeeper (Dominique Colonna) and offensive forces (Raymond Kopa, Michel Hidalgo, Léon Glovacki, Jean Vincent, Just Fontaine, Roger Piantoni, René Bliard) stood safe defensive players such as Roger Marche, Armand Penverne, Albert Batteux, Michel Leblond, Jean Wendling – and evenly over one decade for Jonquet, which is the only players who played in all four final of European Cup. Albert Batteux by the way accompanied and supported Jonquet career over this time in three different ways: as a fellow players (until 1950), as a manager (1950–1959) and as French national football coach (starting from 1955).
1957–1961
The 1957/58 season held further titles but also included probably the blackest hour for Jonquet. With Reims he won the treble of the French Championships Cup and Super Cup. In addition he participated in its second soccer world championship, at 1958 FIFA World Cup in Sweden where France finished third. However its misfortune in the semi-final (see below) prevented Jonquet's participation in the match for third place (6: 3 against Germany).[3]
After the second European Cup final against rival Real Madrid (1959, 0:2) Raymond Kopa returned from Los Merengues to Reims – and Jonquet won his fifth French championship in 1960 and his third Super Cup. In this summer he retired at age 35 from France and moved to Racing Strasbourg in the second division, helping them to promote to the top division division 1 in 1961 – his final success as a player.
International career
Between April 1948 and July 1960 Robert Jonquet played 58 matches for France and captained them. He participated 1954 FIFA World Cup (one match) and 1958 FIFA World Cup (five matches as the team captain). In Sweden his injury in the semi-final against Brazil after 35 minutes, following an impact with Vavá, all but incapacitated him. In the half-time break – substitutes at that time not yet permitted – the team physician injected a pain-satisfying syringe, and Jonquet was able to stand on two legs. He spent the second half more or less useless and hobbling on the left wing. Indeed, he had broken its fibula.[4][5] But five months later he came back in the national team.[6]
He played his last match at Euro 1960 against Czechoslovakia.[7]
After his playing career
At RC Strasbourg, Robert Jonquet moved from the playing field to the coaching sidelines, enjoying a spell with Stade Reims and afterwards with a small teams, Romilly-sur-Seine, Épernay and Châlons-sur-Marne.[8] He was very disappointed with the rise of money in football, missing his time at Stade de Reims.[9] He died on 18 December 2008.[10] His club Stade de Reims gave his name to a stand of their stadium Auguste Delaune.[11]
Overview on Jonquet's career
Clubs
- SS Voltaire Paris
- Stade de Reims (1946–1960, 502 matches in the D1)
- RC Strasbourg (1960/62, D2)
- Coach of RC Strasbourg (1961/64)[12]
- Coach of Stade de Reims (1964/1967 and 1980/1981)
Honours
- French championship winner: 1949, 1953, 1955, 1958, 1960 (and runner-up 1947 and 1954, in addition three times third and fourth the D1; only 1956 only 10th place for Reims)
- Coupe de France winner: 1950, 1958
- French Supercup (Trophée des Champions) winner: 1955, 1958, 1960
- European Cup finalist in 1956 and 1959,
- Coupe Latine winner: 1953 (and finalist 1955)
- 58 caps for France, including nine times as captain.
References and notes
- ↑ http://www.eurosport.fr/football/robert-jonquet-est-mort_sto1788217/story.shtml
- ↑ FFF : Equipe de France de Football, football, fiche, Bleus, actualité, vidéo, reportage, photo
- ↑ FFF : Equipe de France de Football, football, fiche, Bleus, actualité, vidéo, reportage, photo
- ↑ FFF : Equipe de France de Football, football, fiche, Bleus, actualité, vidéo, reportage, photo
- ↑ Fabuleuses histoires de l'équipe de France, les dossiers Ouest France, 1998
- ↑ FFF : Equipe de France de Football, football, fiche, Bleus, actualité, vidéo, reportage, photo
- ↑ FFF : Equipe de France de Football, football, fiche, Bleus, actualité, vidéo, reportage, photo
- ↑ http://www.racingstub.com/page.php?page=news&id=3313
- ↑ La nostalgie de Robert Jonquet – l'Humanite
- ↑ Robert Jonquet nous a quittés, Fédération Française de Football
- ↑ http://www.ville-reims.fr/fileadmin/documents/Centre_de_presse/CQ_Hommage_R_Jonquet.pdf
- ↑ France Football magazine, N°3044