Section Paloise

Section Paloise Béarn Pyrénées ({pronounced [sɛksjɔ̃ palwaz beaʁn piʁene], Occitan: Seccion Paulina Bearn Pirenèus or Seccion Palenca), commonly referred to as Pau [po] or Section French pronunciation: [sɛksjɔ̃], is a French rugby union club founded in 1902 based in Pau, capital of the Pyrénées-Atlantiques Département. The rugby club competes in Top 14, the highest level of the French league system and is a section of the multisport club Section Paloise.

Section Paloise
Full nameSection Paloise Béarn Pyrénées
Nickname(s)Pau
Section
Founded1902 (1902)
LocationPau, France
Ground(s)Stade du Hameau (Capacity: 18,324)
PresidentBernard Pontneau
Coach(es)Nicolas Godignon (forwards)
Frédéric Manca (backs)
Captain(s)Quentin Lespiaucq-Brettes
League(s)Top 14
2019–2011th
1st kit
2nd kit
Official website
www.section-paloise.com

Section Paloise has been chaired by Bernard Pontneau since 2006. The first team is coached by Nicolas Godignon and Frédéric Manca. The professional structure, known as Section paloise rugby pro, was created in 1998 and is supported by the Association Section paloise rugby which gathers more than 450 members.

Their home ground is the Stade du Hameau, after 80 years of playing at the Croix du Prince stadium (1910-1990). The club won the Bouclier de Brennus three times in 1928, 1946 and 1964 and the European Challenge in 2000.

The club also won the Challenge Yves du Manoir in 1939, 1952 and 1997, as well as a French Pro D2 title in 2015.

They most recently earned promotion by winning the championship of the second-level Rugby Pro D2 in 2015, nine years after having been relegated from the top flight.[1]

A stronghold of French rugby, the club has become a symbol of Béarn culture and heritage. The official Section Paloise anthem is the Honhada, since March 2012. The lyrics of the song were composed on the air of the famous Scottish ballad The water is wide.

Section are sponsored by French petroleum company Total.

Recent France internationals Imanol Harinordoquy, Damien Traille, and Lionel Beauxis began their professional club careers with Section Paloise.

History

Rugby in Pau and Béarn

After Le Havre and Bordeaux, Pau was the third major provincial french city to host rugby. As a matter of fact, the sport's presence has been attested since 1890 by the Coquelicots de Pau (Poppies of Pau), playing matches against the neighbouring teams of the Montagnards de Bayonne (Mountaineers of Bayonne) and the Pyrénéenne de Tarbes.

Stade Palois was founded in 1899 by former students of the Lous-Barthou high school, who were imbued with Anglophilia, in vogue in Pau during the Belle Epoque.

Beginnings and first title (1902 - 1939)

1913 - Tom Potter in Pau, France

Founded in April 1902, the Section paloise de ligue girondine is an all-round sports club in Pau. Since 1905, it is simply called Section paloise. At that time, rugby or "rugby football" was hugely popular. The club was first established as a Barette (sport) team, yet the club very quickly turned towards this new sport of rugby union. A rugby club had already been formed on November 12, 1899, since the Stade palois, had been founded in café on rue Bayard. The Stade Palois was thus integrated into Section to form the dominant club in bearnese rugby. In 1912, Section Paloise abandonned its blue and black jerseys, in order to definitively adopt green and white as its colours. The club was then led by Welshman Tom Potter, who took on the role of player-coach until the outbreak of the Great War. The club (all sports combined) paid a heavy price, with around forty deaths on the battlefields.

Section Paloise, winners of the French rugby championship in 1927-1928

During the 1927-1928 season, the first team won the title of Côte Basque champion for the second consecutive year. Subsequently, it finished first in its pool of 5 in the French championship. In the following groups of 4, it defeated Stade Français, USA Perpignan and Lyon OU as well as the defending champions Stade Toulousain in the semi-final by 3-0 after extra time (1 try at zero).

Section paloise won the final by beating Quillan 6-4 in Toulouse in May 1928. That day the local newspaper, Le Patriote, reported that the "berets" beat the "hats".

Before the war, the Section paloise won the Challenge Yves du Manoir in the 1938-1939 edition against RC Toulon by a score of 5-0 after extra time, courtesy of a try by Desperbasque and transformed by the full-back Courtade.

After WWII

In 1946, at the end of the war, the club was once again crowned French champions. Section Paloise, won the prize, beating the likes of Toulouse and Agen. In spite of some unispiring results during the first phase of the championship, Section successively beat Stade Toulousain in the quarter-finals and Perpignan in the semi-finals (6-3 after extra time) to reach the final against their neighbours from the French capital. However, guided by a series of 12 consecutive victories, FC Lourdes were largely defeated 11-0 at the Parc des Princes in Paris. The press noted then that the Section had a very homogeneous team without "stars" but with a perfect physical and moral condition. Theo Cazenave, Pierre Lauga and captain André Rousse are some of the figures of this remarkable XV.

Section Paloise lost in the semi-finals of the 1950 French championship against the future French Olympic champion, Castres Olympique.

After a French Cup semi-final in 1951, the team won the Yves du Manoir challenge in 1952. In 1959, François Moncla, then international and title holder with Racing Club de France, became captain and a new, younger team was formed.

The team slowly took its bearings and in 1964, Section Paloise became French champion for the third time, beating the great Béziers 13-0. Its stars at the time were Moncla, Piqué, Capdouze, Saux, Etcheverry and Abadie. However, all had started badly during this season, the press even published a headline in October entitled La Section en perdition (The Section in Perdition). The team had just lost 31-3 in Agen and lost on the Croix du Prince by 24-3 to their heavyweight rivals. The players returned to the changing rooms under the whistles and some supporters tore up their season tickets. Year in year out, the team qualified for the finals in extremis with a 3-0 victory against Saint-Girons. The Section thus qualifies in thirtieth position out of a total of 32 qualifiers. The adventure gradually took shape with successive victories over Brive, Chalon, Bayonne and Narbonne before the consecration against Béziers.

Robert Paparemborde era (1965 - 1990)

The following seasons were more unspectacular from a sporting point of view, with captain Moncla stopping his career at the beginning of the 1967 season. From 1968 onwards, a new development took place, as the positions of General President and Rugby President could not be held concurrently. It was the departure of Albert Cazenave after 16 years as President, and that of his brother Theo from the role of coach.

That same year, the Section saw the birth of a young talent from Laruns in the Ossau Valley. Robert Paparemborde started his first game as an inside centre but it was as a prop that he became a world reference. Laurent Cabannes made his debut at the age of 17 and years later became one of the world's best flankers. On a sporting level, the first team lost to Montferrand 14-11 in the quarter-finals in 1970 and reached the semi-finals against Narbonne in 1974, having gone past Agen in the round of 16 by a surprise 24-21. The team spent a single season in Group B, 1977-1978, and then moved back to the elite immediately.

Section did not fulfil its 18-year rule, after 1928, 1946 and 1964 as they did not win another title in 1982, narrowly defeated by SU Agen in the Round of 16. They did, however, reach the quarter-finals in 1983 against Nice.

At the end of the 1980s, with two seasons in Group B, the first team reached the finals of this category but narrowly failed (1989 and 1990). The Section was then in a delicate sporting and economic situation.

Revival then fall (1990 - 2006)

In October 1990, the club left its historic Stade de la Croix du Prince for the more modern Stade du Hameau. This move helped the club to solve its debts, as the Croix du Prince was sold to the Pau Town Hall. The beginning of the 1990s saw the first team begin to recover and they remained in Group A in 1991 and 1992. In 1993, the team even reached the Top 16 but failed to qualify for the quarter-finals in favour of FC Grenoble who were deprived of the title after a refereeing error and RC Narbonne who played their fifth quarter-final in 6 seasons.

During the 1994 and 1995 seasons, Section Paloise did not reach the top 16 and participated in the Moga Cup where it failed in the final against Aviron Bayonnais in Mont de Marsan.

Rugby Palois moves up in the hierarchy and obtains again good results. Also in 1996, the Section played in the final of the Challenge Yves du Manoir and was eliminated in the semi-final of the French championship, each time against Brive. These results enabled the club to qualify for the second edition of the European Rugby XV Cup.

In 1997, the Section was once again awarded a national trophy which was the Yves du Manoir challenge, while reaching the quarter-finals of the French championship, again both times against the same team from Bourgoin. In 1998, it reached the semi-finals of the H-Cup, beaten only by the future winner of the competition (the English Bath). In 2000, the Section won the European Shield against Castres by 34-21 in Toulouse. The same season, Pau eliminates Montferrand in the quarter-final of the French championship but misses the final by a hair's breadth against Colomiers in the semi-final. The Section lost 24-22 after extra time, the team is led by Joël Rey, David Aucagne, Thierry Cléda, Frédéric Torossian and David Dantiacq.

The following seasons were much more disappointing. The team is often satisfied to play the maintenance in the first division except a qualification in play-off in 2003, and a good course in European challenge in 2005 which sees it only failing in the final against the Sale Sharks. The Section is finally relegated to Pro D2 after the 2005-2006 season, a relegation that it had already avoided by very little the previous season (victory in the play-off). The club plays in Pro D2 from the 2006-2007 season hoping for a better tomorrow, betting a lot on training, like those youngsters trained at the club and who wore the jersey of the French Rugby team during the 2000s: Beauxis, Brusque, Harinordoquy, Traille and Bernat-Salles.

Rebuilding and then returning to ambitions (since 2006)

Section Paloise returned to the elite of French rugby in 2011-2012, after a season that saw it finish second in the championship, and undefeated at home, lost in the final against Stade Montois (29-20). In 2012-2013, the club again reached the Pro D2 final to gain promotion to the Top 14. On this occasion, the clubs of supporters, partners and other works councils organised a trip that will bring together no less than 142 buses to the Stade Chaban-Delmas. However, at this stage of the competition, the Section still lost to CA Brive by a score of 30-10 in front of 33,175 spectators.

After another disappointment the following season against La Rochelle, defeated 35-18 at the Stade Marcel-Deflandre in the semi-finals, the club made a good recruitment for the coming season with the arrival of manager Simon Mannix. Section obtained direct access to the Top 14 that year. As soon as the season ended, Simon Mannix used his address book to bring in players like Colin Slade and Conrad Smith, considered at that time to be of the best centres in the world.

Club Identity

Colours

The colours of Section Paloise have been green and white since 1912. Previously, the players wore blue and black jerseys (a legacy of Stade palois) which were soon abandoned for these new colours. Jean Plaà (manager at the time) justified this choice as green represents the club's hopes and white the snow of the Pyrenees in Bearn. It has since become customary for the club's teams to wear a white jersey at home and a green jersey away from home.

In recent years, a black and green jersey has been regularly used for playing away.

The coat of arms of Section Paloise represents the Pic du the Midi d'Ossau mountain, surrounded by green and white. Pic du the Midi d'Ossau is a Pyrenean peak, locally nicknamed Jean-Pierre which symbolises the region for many people from Béarn.

A second version of the coat of arms was released in 1998 for the creation of the professional structure, displayed on the jerseys of the first team at the beginning of the 2001-2002 season. This one then keeps the famous peak as emblem but evolves towards a darker bottle green colour. The latest version of the coat of arms dates from the start of the 2012-2013 season. The colour of the coat of arms reverts to the original lighter green and incorporates the new appellation Section paloise Béarn Pyrénées. With this name change, the club symbolises the desire of its directors to further anchor the club as the driving force behind professional rugby in Béarn but more generally in the Pyrenees.

Hymn and songs

Section Paloise's official anthem is the Honhada since March 2012. The song, composed by Didier Fois (Arraya, Hestiv'Oc festival, Ostau Bearnés), was met with a mixed reception in its early days and soon became a must for fans, who sing it at the start of every match. The lyrics of the song were composed on the air of the famous scottish ballad The water is wide, also covered by Renaud in the Northern Irish Ballad.

Tradiotionnal Bearn songs from local band Nadau(fr) such as the Encantada and De cap tà l'immortèla as well as the famous Béarn anthem Si Canti are also widely popular among the local faithful. De cap tà l'immortèla had long been considered to be the unofficial anthem Section Paloise as it is so popular with the public.

Mascot

The club's mascot is a bear named Bearnie (pronounced "Bernie"). The bear was chosen because it is one of the symbols of the Pyrenees, and its name is a play on words with Béarn, the region of which Pau has been the capital since 1464.

Club honours

Finals results

French championship

Date Winner Runner-up Score Venue Attendance
6 May 1928 Section Paloise US Quillan 6-4 Stade des Ponts Jumeaux, Toulouse 20.000
24 March 1946 Section Paloise FC Lourdes 11-0 Parc des Princes, Paris 30.000
24 May 1964 Section Paloise AS Béziers 14-0 Stade Municipal, Toulouse 27.797

Challenge Cup

Date Winner Runner-up Score Venue Attendance
27 May 2000 Section Paloise Castres Olympique 34-21 Stade des Sept Deniers, Toulouse 6.000
21 May 2005 Sale Sharks Section Paloise 27-3 Kassam Stadium, Oxford 7.230

Pro D2 promotion playoffs

Date Winner Runner-up Score Venue Attendance
27 May 2012 Stade Montois Section Paloise 29–20 Stade Chaban-Delmas, Bordeaux 23,928

Current standings

2019–20 Top 14 Table
Club Played Won Drawn Lost Points For Points Against Points Diff. Tries For Tries Against Try Bonus Losing Bonus Points
1Bordeaux Bègles17131347531715853286161
2Lyon17120546530416150275053
3Racing1791745132612551305346
4Toulon179263963346237323245
5La Rochelle17908370377-738383342
6Clermont171007423415839451041
7Toulouse178183683313737304240
8Montpellier176384043901442372537
9Castres177010392460-6838433233
10Brive17719364441-7732481233
11Bayonne17719327409-8227450333
12Pau176011334414-8031420428
13Agen175111323414-9136460426
14Stade Français175111328488-16030500325

If teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:

  1. Competition points earned in head-to-head matches
  2. Points difference in head-to-head matches
  3. Try differential in head-to-head matches
  4. Points difference in all matches
  5. Try differential in all matches
  6. Points scored in all matches
  7. Tries scored in all matches
  8. Fewer matches forfeited
  9. Classification in the previous Top 14 season
Green background (rows 1 and 2) receive semi-final play-off places and receive berths in the 2020–21 European Rugby Champions Cup.
Blue background (rows 3 to 6) receive quarter-final play-off places, and receive berths in the Champions Cup.
Plain background indicates teams that earn a place in the 2020–21 European Rugby Challenge Cup.
Pink background (row 13) will qualify to the Relegation play-offs.
Red background (row 14) will automatically be relegated to Rugby Pro D2.

Final table — source:

Current squad

The Pau squad for the 2019–20 season is:[2]

Note: Flags indicate national union as has been defined under WR eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-WR nationality.

Player Position Union
Rayne Barka Hooker France
Quentin Lespiaucq Hooker France
Lucas Rey Hooker France
Lourens Adriaanse Prop South Africa
Mohamed Boughanmi Prop France
Ignacio Calles Prop Argentina
Nicolas Corato Prop France
Siegfried Fisi'ihoi Prop Tonga
Malik Hamadache Prop France
Geoffrey Moïse Prop Portugal
Omar Odishvili Prop Georgia
Lucas Pointud Prop France
Julien Delannoy Lock France
Dan Malafosse Lock France
Denis Marchois Lock France
Fabrice Metz Lock France
Daniel Ramsay Lock New Zealand
Antoine Erbani Back row France
Clément Fournier Back row France
Pierrick Gunther Back row France
Giovanni Habel-Kuffner Back row Samoa
Baptiste Pesenti Back row France
Martin Puech Back row France
Lekima Tagitagivalu Back row Fiji
Matthieu Ugena Back row France
Dominiko Waqaniburotu Back row Fiji
Luke Whitelock Back row New Zealand
Player Position Union
Thibault Daubagna Scrum-half France
Clovis Le Bail Scrum-half France
Samuel Marques Scrum-half Portugal
Antoine Hastoy Fly-half France
Colin Slade Fly-half New Zealand
Tom Taylor Fly-half New Zealand
Baptiste Couchinave Centre France
Alexandre Dumoulin Centre France
Julien Fumat Centre France
Florian Nicot Centre France
Pierre Nueno Centre France
Atila Septar Centre France
Jale Vatubua Centre Fiji
Eoghan Barrett Wing Ireland
Marvin Lestremau Wing France
Vincent Pinto Wing France
Bastien Pourailly Wing France
Ben Smith Wing New Zealand
Watisoni Votu Wing Fiji
Charly Malié Fullback Spain
Jesse Mogg Fullback Australia
Mathieu Colombet Fullback France

Notable former players

Rank Name Total caps

while playing for Section Paloise

1 Robert Paparemborde 52 (52)
2 Damien Traille 34 (86)
3 Imanol Harinordoquy 28 (82)
4 Jean-Pierre Saux 22 (22)
5 Philippe Bernat-Salles 21 (41)
6 François Moncla 18 (31)
7 Jean Piqué 18 (18)
8 Roger Piteu 15 (15)
9 David Aucagne 15 (15)
10 Thierry Cléda 9 (9)
11 Pierre Aristouy 6 (6)
12 Lucien Martin 6 (6)
13 Nano Capdouze 6 (6)
14 Albert Cazenave 5 (5)
15 Gilbert Pierrot 3 (3)
16 Fernand Taillantou 3 (3)
17 Philippe Carbonneau 2 (32)
18 Marc Etcheverry 2 (2)
19 Nicolas Brusque 1 (26)
20 Jean-Louis Jordana 1 (7)
21 Georges Caussarieu 1 (1)
22 Robert Sarrade 1 (1)
23 David Aguilar 1 (1)
24 Robert Labarthète 1 (1)
25 Paul Cassagne 1 (1)
26 Claude Mantoulan 1 (1)
27 Michel Lacome 1 (1)
28 Henri Marracq 1 (1)
29 André Abadie 1 (1)
30 Frédéric Torossian 1 (1)
31 David Dantiacq 1 (1)

Rivalries

The high density of rugby clubs in south-west France has led to numerous rivalries between SectionPaloise and neighbouring clubs. In Béarn, the rivalry has mainly centred around the often muscular clashes against the FC Oloron, also known as Fécéo.

See also

References

  1. "PRO D2, J27 - Pau – Montauban : la Section retrouve l'élite" (Press release). Ligue nationale de rugby. 11 April 2015. Archived from the original on 19 April 2015. Retrieved 12 April 2015.
  2. "Effectif". Section Paloise (in French). Retrieved 6 September 2019.
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