2015 Coupe de France Final

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2015 Coupe de France Final
World championships in athletics 2003 Paris Saint-Denis stadium.jpg
Event 2014–15 Coupe de France
Date 30 May 2015
Venue Stade de France, Saint-Denis
Referee Antony Gautier
Attendance 80,000
2014
2016

The 2015 Coupe de France Final decided the winner of the 2014–15 Coupe de France, the 98th season of France's premier football cup. It was played on 30 May at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis, Paris, between Ligue 2 club Auxerre and Paris Saint-Germain of Ligue 1. Paris Saint-Germain won the match 1–0 with a goal by Edinson Cavani, thus achieving their ninth title.[1][2]

Background

It was Auxerre's sixth final, of which they had previously won four and lost one. Their last final was in 2005, a 2–1 win over Sedan, and their last defeat was their first final, losing 1–4 after extra time to Nantes in 1979.[3] PSG played in their 13th final, having won 8 (second only to Marseille's 10). Their most recent final was in 2011, a 0–1 defeat to Lille, and their last victory was the season before that, a 1–0 win over Monaco after extra time.[3] The two teams met in the 2003 final, which Auxerre won 2–1.[3]

Road to the final

Auxerre

Auxerre, of Ligue 2, entered the competition in the seventh round, winning 2–0 at seventh-tier Dinsheim on 15 November. In the eighth round on 6 December, they won 3–0 away to Sarreguemines of the Championnat de France amateur 2.

In the last 64 on 4 January 2015, Auxerre won 1–0 against Championnat National club Strasbourg at the Stade de l'Abbé-Deschamps with a goal by Vincent Gragnic in the last minute of the first half.[4] Sixteen days later in the last 32 they triumphed by the same score away to Championnat de France amateur club Jura Sud Lavans, with a first-half goal by Samed Kılıç.[5]

Auxerre played away to third-tier Le Poiré in the last 16 on 10 February. Livio Nabab put them ahead in the second half, with Loïc Dufau equalising in added time. Auxerre won 6–5 in a penalty shootout.[6] A shootout was also required on 5 March in the quarter-finals after a goalless draw at fellow Ligue 2 club Brest. Youssef Adnane missed their first attempt before Thomas Fontaine missed for Brest, with Frédéric Sammaritano scoring the decisive goal for Auxerre.[7] On 7 April, Sammartino scored the only goal of a semi-final victory against Ligue 1 club and cup holders Guingamp, but Jamel Aït Ben Idir was sent off.[8]

Paris Saint-Germain

Paris Saint-Germain, of Ligue 1, began the tournament in the last 64 with a 3–0 win away to fellow top-flight side Montpellier on 5 January 2015, with second-half goals by Clément Chantôme, Zlatan Ibrahimović and Lucas Moura.[9] Sixteen days later in the last 32, they hosted Bordeaux and won 2–1. An Edinson Cavani header and a Javier Pastore goal gave PSG the lead at half time, although Diego Rolán scored for Bordeaux in the first minute of the second half and the hosts had Zoumana Camara sent off.[10]

On 11 February, PSG defeated Nantes 2–0 at home in the last 16 with goals by Cavani and Yohan Cabaye while Ibrahimović was rested.[11] In the quarter-finals on 4 March they won by the same score against Monaco, David Luiz opening the scoring after three minutes and Cavani doubling the lead later on.[12] PSG won 4–1 in their semi-final against Saint-Étienne on 8 April, with a hat-trick by Ibrahimović which took him to 102 goals for the club, starting with a penalty for the 100th.[13]

Final

30 May 2015
21:00 CEST
Auxerre 0–1 Paris Saint-Germain
Report Cavani Goal 64'
Stade de France
Attendance: 80,000
Referee: Antony Gautier
GK 30 French Guiana Donovan Léon
RB 2 France Ruben Aguilar
CB 4 France Sébastien Puygrenier (c)
CB 3 France Thomas Fontaine
LB 17 France Karim Djellabi
CM 27 France Rémi Mulumba
CM 6 Morocco Jamel Aït Ben Idir
RW 20 France Grégory Berthier
AM 9 France Frédéric Sammaritano
LW 15 France Amara Baby
CF 26 Mali Cheick Diarra
Substitutes:
GK 1 Central African Republic Geoffrey Lembet
DF 5 Gabon Henri Ndong
MF 7 France Pierre Bouby
MF 8 France Samed Kılıç
FW 10 France Julien Viale
FW 22 Guadeloupe Livio Nabab
FW 34 France Alexandre Vincent
Manager:
France Jean-Luc Vannuchi
GK 1 France Nicolas Douchez
RB 23 Netherlands Gregory van der Wiel
CB 2 Brazil Thiago Silva (c)
CB 32 Brazil David Luiz
LB 17 Brazil Maxwell
DM 8 Italy Thiago Motta
CM 24 Italy Marco Verratti
CM 14 France Blaise Matuidi
RW 7 Brazil Lucas
LW 9 Uruguay Edinson Cavani
CF 10 Sweden Zlatan Ibrahimović
Substitutes:
GK 30 Italy Salvatore Sirigu
DF 5 Brazil Marquinhos
DF 19 Ivory Coast Serge Aurier
DF 21 France Lucas Digne
MF 4 France Yohan Cabaye
FW 15 France Jean-Christophe Bahebeck
FW 22 Argentina Ezequiel Lavezzi
Manager:
France Laurent Blanc

References

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