Stade Montois Rugby

Stade Montois Rugby is a French rugby union team that currently is playing in Pro D2, the second level of the country's professional league system.

Stade Montois Rugby
Full nameStade Montois Rugby Pro
Nickname(s)Les Abeilles (The Bees)
Founded1908 (1908)
LocationMont-de-Marsan, France
Ground(s)Stade Guy Boniface (Capacity: 16,800)
PresidentPhilippe Cazaubon
Coach(es)David Auradou
Captain(s)Jérôme Dhien
League(s)Pro D2
2022–233rd (playoff semi-finalists)
1st kit
2nd kit
Official website
www.stademontoisrugby.fr
Stade Montois vs. LOU in 2005

They were founded in 1908 and play in yellow and black. They are based in Mont-de-Marsan, the capital of the Landes département, in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, and play at the Stade Guy Boniface.

History

Stade Montois is a multi-sports club (28 sections) but its rugby team has always been its flagship. After winning a few regional titles between the two world wars, it reached the top of French club rugby four times in 15 years. It lost its first three French championship finals to Castres Olympique in 1949 (3-14, in a replay, after the original final had ended in a 3-3 draw), to FC Lourdes in 1953 (16-21), and to Racing Club de France in 1959 (3-8). Their finest hour came in 1963 in an all Landes-final against US Dax, won by the Yellow and Black 9-6. They had finally won one, whereas their Dax neighbours would lose all five finals they would play in.

It finished in the bottom table in the first-tier Top 14 in the 2008–09 season. They had just been promoted to the Top 14 after winning the Pro D2 promotion playoffs. They remained in Pro D2 for three seasons before successfully navigating the 2012 promotion playoffs.

Stade Montois' players include the Boniface brothers (André and Guy, who died in a car accident on 1 January 1968), Thomas Castaignède, Christian Darrouy, Benoît Dauga, Laurent Rodriguez. Former Leicester Tigers and Fiji scrum-half wizard Waisale Serevi also played for them as well as other notable Fijians such as Viliame Satala and Vilimoni Delasau.

Honours

Finals results

French championship

Date Winner Runner-up Score Venue Spectators
22 May 1949 Castres Olympique Stade Montois 14-3 Stade des Ponts Jumeaux, Toulouse 23,000
17 May 1953 FC Lourdes Stade Montois 21-16 Stadium Municipal, Toulouse 32,500
24 May 1959 Racing Club de France Stade Montois 8-3 Parc Lescure, Bordeaux 31,098
2 June 1963 Stade Montois US Dax 9-6 Parc Lescure, Bordeaux 39,000

Current standings

Pos Team Pld W D L PF PA PD B Pts Qualification
1 Oyonnax (C, P) 30 23 1 6 904 457 +447 17 111 Top 14 promotion play-offs
2 Grenoble 30 19 3 8 672 588 +84 8 87[lower-alpha 1]
3 Mont-de-Marsan 30 19 0 11 764 649 +115 10 86
4 Nevers 30 17 3 10 718 551 +167 11 85
5 Vannes 30 17 1 12 718 633 +85 11 81
6 Agen 30 15 1 14 653 583 +70 15 77
7 Colomiers 30 15 0 15 674 678 4 10 70
8 Provence 30 13 4 13 652 638 +14 9 69
9 Béziers 30 13 1 16 700 716 16 11 65
10 Aurillac 30 15 0 15 586 706 120 5 65
11 Biarritz 30 12 2 16 690 699 9 8 60
12 Rouen 30 12 2 16 594 767 173 6 58
13 Montauban 30 12 1 17 678 784 106 6 54[lower-alpha 1]
14 Soyaux Angoulême 30 11 0 19 569 697 128 8 52
15 Carcassonne (R) 30 10 1 19 553 677 124 10 52 Relegation to Nationale
16 Massy (R) 30 7 0 23 499 801 302 5 33
Source: Pro D2
Rules for classification: When two teams have the same points total, position is determined by head-to-head results before points difference.
(C) Champion; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated
Notes:
  1. Grenoble were penalised three competition points, and Montauban were penalised two, for financial and administrative issues that made the clubs "non-compliant with the regulatory provisions and decisions of the CCCP".[1][2]

Current squad

The squad for the 2022–23 season is:[3]

Note: Flags indicate national union under World Rugby eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-World Rugby nationality.

Player Position Union
Vincent Dolier Hooker France France
José Luis González Hooker Argentina Argentina
Simon Labouyrie Hooker France France
Romain Latterrade Hooker France France
Anthony Alves Prop Portugal Portugal
Thomas Bultel Prop France France
Dino Casadei Prop France France
Max Curie Prop France France
Gheorghe Gajion Prop Romania Romania
Jean-Luc Innocente Prop France France
Matteo Lalanne Prop France France
Lasha Macharashvili Prop Georgia (country) Georgia
Leandro Cedaro Lock Italy Italy
Romain Durand Lock France France
Aston Fortuin Lock South Africa South Africa
Nicolas Garrault Lock France France
Baptiste Hezard Lock France France
Andrei Ostrikov Lock Russia Russia
Leo Banos Back row France France
Yann Brethous Back row France France
Michael Faleafa Back row Tonga Tonga
Aurelien Lisena Back row France France
Veresa Ramototabua Back row Fiji Fiji
Raphaël Robic Back row France France
Thibault Tauleigne Back row France France
William Wavrin Back row France France
Player Position Union
Baptiste Canut Scrum-half France France
Martin Doan Scrum-half France France
Christophe Loustalot Scrum-half France France
Joris Pialot Fly-half France France
Willie du Plessis Fly-half Netherlands Netherlands
Simon Desaubies Centre France France
Charli Espagnet Centre France France
Jules Even Centre France France
Lucas Mensa Centre Argentina Argentina
Misaele Petero Centre Fiji Fiji
Simon Renda Centre France France
Nacani Wakaya Centre Fiji Fiji
Julien Cabannes Wing France France
Ambrose Curtis Wing New Zealand New Zealand
Wame Naituvi Wing Fiji Fiji
Kaminieli Rasaku Wing Fiji Fiji
Pierre Sayerse Wing France France
Yoann Azpiazu Fullback France France
Simao Bento Fullback Portugal Portugal
Alexandre De Nardi Fullback France France

Espoirs squad

Note: Flags indicate national union under World Rugby eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-World Rugby nationality.

Player Position Union
Mehdi Porchet Prop Switzerland Switzerland
Gysbert du Preez Lock South Africa South Africa
Carl Vangsgaard Lock Denmark Denmark
Hector Matamoros Back row Spain Spain
Theo Cortes Fly-half France France
Harrison Obatoyinbo Wing England England

Notable former players

See also

References

  1. "Le FCG sanctionné de trois points de retrait au classement par la Ligue !". Le Dauphiné libéré (in French). 21 November 2022. Retrieved 18 January 2023. Un retrait de cinq points dont deux points avec sursis au classement du championnat professionnel de Pro D2 de la saison en cours [...] Cette sanction a été prononcée au motif du « non-respect des dispositions réglementaires et décisions de la CCCP ».
  2. "Pro D2 : l'US Montauban sanctionnée de cinq points de retrait pour la prochaine saison !" [Pro D2: US Montauban sanctioned with five withdrawal points for the next season!]. La Dépêche (in French). 20 May 2022. Retrieved 29 August 2022.
  3. "Joueurs". Stade Montois Rugby. Retrieved 1 March 2023.
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