Name
Racing CFF

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Next Event
Boulogne vs Racing CFF (27 Apr)

Head Coach
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League Position
10

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Established
1882 (142 years old)

Sport
Soccer

Stadium/Home
Stade Yves-du-Manoir
(14,000 Capacity)

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Location
Colombes, France

Nicknames
Le Racing

Competitions
French National 2 Group C
Coupe de France

Last Edit
curswine: 29/Sep/22


Upcoming
27/04 Boulogne - Racing CFF
11/05 Racing CFF - Guingamp II
18/05 FC Bastia-Bo - Racing CFF

Results
20/04 Racing CFF 0 - 2 Dinan-Léhon
13/04 Voltigeurs d 2 - 1 Racing CFF
06/04 Racing CFF 0 - 0 US Granville
23/03 Aubervillier 2 - 1 Racing CFF
16/03 Racing CFF 0 - 1 Stade Brioch

Description
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Racing Club de France Football (also known as Racing Paris, RCF Paris, Matra Racing, Racing Club, or Racing) is a French association football club based in Colombes, a suburb of Paris.

Racing was founded in 1882 as a multi-discipline sports club, and is one of the oldest clubs in French football history. The team plays in the Championnat National 3, the fifth level of French football. Racing is managed by former player Azzedine Meguellatti and hosts its home matches at the Stade Lucien-Choine, a smaller stadium next to the Stade Olympique Yves-du-Manoir in Colombes.

Racing Club de France, founded in 1882, was a founding member of Ligue 1. The club has won one Ligue 1 title (in 1935–36) and five Coupe de France titles, and is tied for fourth-best. Racing also played in the Union des Sociétés Françaises de Sports Athlétiques-sanctioned league, France's first championship league. The club debuted in the league in 1899 and won the championship in 1907 after finishing second in 1902 and 1903. The club holds the Ligue 1 record for most goals scored during a 38-match season with 118 goals in 1959–60.

Notable players include Roger Marche, Oscar Heisserer, Thadée Cisowski, Raoul Diagne, Luis Fernández, Maxime Bossis, David Ginola, Luís Sobrinho, Pierre Littbarski, Enzo Francescoli, Alfred Bloch, and Rubén Paz. Diagne spent a decade with the club (1930–1940) and, in 1931, was the first black player on the French national team. He played in the 1938 FIFA World Cup with Abdelkader Ben Bouali, his Racing teammate who was one of the first North African players on the national team. From 2009 to 2012, the club moved to nearby Levallois-Perret after reaching a financial agreement with the commune.

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