Name
Arles
heart off icon (0 users)


Badge
team badge

Next Event


Head Coach
None Found...
Add new Player with 'Manager' position

League Position


Recent League Form ➡


Established
1912 (113 years old)

Sport
team sport icon Soccer

Venue
None Found Add one?

Equipment Clearart search icon
no thumb
Archive

Primary Colours

Location
Arles, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France

Nicknames
Les Lions

Competitions
_No League Soccer
Coupe de France

Last Edit
AndyIgnacio: 17/Nov/24
Logo
no logo thumb

Upcoming
None...

Results
calendar next 17 Nov Olympique de tiny home badge icon 1 - 0 tiny away badge icon Arles
calendar next 22 May Ajaccio tiny home badge icon 2 - 1 tiny away badge icon Arles-Avigno
calendar next 15 May Arles-Avigno tiny home badge icon 4 - 1 tiny away badge icon Orleans
calendar next 08 May Troyes tiny home badge icon 4 - 0 tiny away badge icon Arles-Avigno
calendar next 01 May Arles-Avigno tiny home badge icon 2 - 0 tiny away badge icon Creteil


Description Available in: british english flag icon
Athlétic Club Arlésien (French pronunciation: ; commonly referred to as Arlésien or simply Arles) is a French association football club originally based in Arles. The club was founded in 1912 as a result of a merger and was formerly known as Athlétic Club Arles, but in 2010, moved to the nearby commune of Avignon and adopted the name of AC Arles-Avignon. Athlétic Club Arlésien last played at a professional capacity in the Championnat de France Amateur, the fourth division in French football; it previously gained four promotions in five seasons to reach Ligue 1 in 2010. They were later relegated after one season.

When the club was named Arles-Avignon, they played their home matches at the Parc des Sports in nearby Avignon. The team was managed by former football player Franck Dumas and captained by defender Sébastien Cantini, who joined the club in 2012 after a five-year stint in Italy. In France, it was commonplace to describe Arles-Avignon as an overachieving club primarily due to succeeding despite limited resources. Arles-Avignon's highest honour was winning its group in the Championnat de France amateur, the fourth level of French football, in 2007. Regionally, the club has won the Division Honneur Sud-Est Ouest three times, and its reserve team are the current defending champions of the Méditerranée Division Honneur Régionale.

Arles-Avignon was known locally as Les Lions (The Lions) and incorporated the nickname into a multitude of club's fixtures, most notably its crest. After merging with Avignon, the club unveiled its new crest on 4 June 2009. The crest combined both elements of each club's predecessors, and inscribed on the crest is Pays d'Arles Grand Avignon, which pays tribute to the inhabitants of the city of Arles and Grand Avignon, the metropolitan area that encompasses the commune of Avignon. In 2010, the club changed its crest again to coincide with its promotion to Ligue 1.
wiki icon creative commons icon

Team Members


blur thumb
shiny flat for country Butelle
cutout thumb
shiny flat for country Baldé
blur thumb
shiny flat for country Pavón
blur thumb
shiny flat for country Cabella
blur thumb
shiny flat for country Savanier
blur thumb
shiny flat for country Abdelhamid
blur thumb
shiny flat for country Laurey
percentage bar = Player Contract years remaining
Showing 0 to 3 (Total: 3)




Trophies search icon


Fanart search icon
no fanartno fanartno fanartno fanart

Banner no banner

Other Links
x icon
Twitter
webpage icon
Website
instagram icon
Instagram
youtube icon
Youtube