2011–12 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season

The 2011–12 season was Paris Saint-Germain Football Club's 42nd in existence and their 39th in the top-flight of French football. The team competed in Ligue 1, the Coupe de France, the Coupe de la Ligue and the UEFA Europa League.[2]

Paris Saint-Germain
2011–12 season
PresidentRobin Leproux
(until 13 July 2011)
Benoît Rousseau
(until 7 October 2011)
Nasser Al-Khelaifi
(from 7 October 2011)
Head coachAntoine Kombouaré
(until 30 December 2011)
Carlo Ancelotti
(from 30 December 2011)
StadiumParc des Princes
Ligue 12nd
Coupe de FranceQuarter-finals
Coupe de la LigueRound of 16
UEFA Europa LeagueGroup stage
Top goalscorerLeague:
Nenê (21)

All:
Nenê (27)
Average home league attendance43,005[1]

Players

Players, transfers, appearances and goals - 2011/2012 season.[3][4]

First-team squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK  FRA Nicolas Douchez
2 DF  BRA Ceará
3 DF  FRA Mamadou Sakho (captain)
4 DF  SRB Milan Biševac
5 DF  CIV Siaka Tiéné
6 DF  FRA Zoumana Camara
7 MF  FRA Jérémy Ménez
8 FW  FRA Péguy Luyindula
9 FW  FRA Guillaume Hoarau
10 MF  BRA Nenê
12 MF  FRA Mathieu Bodmer
13 DF  BRA Alex
14 MF  FRA Blaise Matuidi
15 DF  URU Diego Lugano
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 GK  FRA Alphonse Areola
17 DF  BRA Maxwell
18 FW  FRA Loris Arnaud
19 FW  FRA Kevin Gameiro
20 MF  FRA Clément Chantôme
22 DF  FRA Sylvain Armand
23 MF  MLI Mohamed Sissoko
25 FW  FRA Jean-Christophe Bahebeck
26 DF  FRA Christophe Jallet
27 MF  ARG Javier Pastore
28 MF  ITA Thiago Motta
29 MF  COD Neeskens Kebano
30 GK  ITA Salvatore Sirigu
40 GK  FRA Ronan Le Crom

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
MF  FRA Granddi Ngoyi (at Nantes)
FW  BRA Éverton Santos (at Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma)
No. Pos. Nation Player
FW  HAI Jean-Eudes Maurice (at Lens)
DF  FRA Loïck Landre (at Clermont)

Transfers in

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK  FRA Nicolas Douchez (from Rennes)
FW  FRA Kevin Gameiro (from Lorient)
DF  SRB Milan Biševac (from Valenciennes)
MF  FRA Jérémy Ménez (from Roma)
MF  FRA Blaise Matuidi (from Saint-Étienne)
MF  MLI Mohamed Sissoko (from Juventus)
GK  ITA Salvatore Sirigu (from Palermo)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF  ARG Javier Pastore (from Palermo)
DF  URU Diego Lugano (from Fenerbahçe)
DF  BRA Maxwell (from Barcelona)
GK  FRA Ronan Le Crom (free agent)
DF  BRA Alex (from Chelsea)
MF  ITA Thiago Motta (from Internazionale)

Transfers out

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
MF  FRA Claude Makélélé (retired)
GK  FRA Grégory Coupet (retired)
GK  ARM Apoula Edel (to Hapoel Tel Aviv)
DF  MLI Sammy Traoré (free agent)
FW  FRA Ludovic Giuly (to Monaco)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF  FRA Younousse Sankharé (to Dijon)
DF  FRA Tripy Makonda (to Brest)
MF  FRA Jérémy Clément (to Saint-Étienne)
FW  TUR Mevlüt Erdinç (to Rennes)

Transfers

In
No.
Pos.
Nat.
Name
Age
EU
Moving from
Type
Transfer
window
Ends
Transfer
fee
Source
17 DM Granddi Ngoyi 23EU Brest Loan Return Summer 2013
18 FW Loris Arnaud 24EU Angers Loan Return Summer 2012
27 LW Younousse Sankharé 21EU Dijon Loan Return Summer 2012
1 GK Nicolas Douchez 31EU Rennes Signed Summer 2014 Free
19 FW Kevin Gameiro 24EU Lorient Signed Summer 2015 €11M
28 CB Loïck Landre 19EU Youth system Signed Pro Summer 2014
25 FW Jean-Christophe Bahebeck 18EU Youth system Signed Pro Summer 2014
29 AM Neeskens Kebano 19EU Youth system Signed Pro Summer 2014
4 CB Milan Biševac 28Non-EU Valenciennes Signed Summer 2014 €3.2M
7 RW Jérémy Ménez 24EU Roma Signed Summer 2014 €8M
14 DM Blaise Matuidi 24EU Saint-Étienne Signed Summer 2014 €8M
23 DM Mohamed Sissoko 26EU Juventus Signed Summer 2014 €7M
30 GK Salvatore Sirigu 24EU Palermo Signed Summer 2015 €3.9M
27 AM Javier Pastore 22EU Palermo Signed Summer 2016 €42M
15 CB Diego Lugano 30EU Fenerbahçe Signed Summer 2014 €3M
17 LB Maxwell 30Non-EU Barcelona Signed Winter 2015 €3.5M
40 GK Ronan Le Crom 37EU Free agent Signed Winter 2012 Free
13 CB Alex 29Non-EU Chelsea Signed Winter 2014 €5M
28 CM Thiago Motta 29EU Internazionale Signed Winter 2015 €11.5M

Total spending: 106.1 million.

Out
N
Pos.
Nat.
Name
Age
EU
Moving to
Type
Transfer
window
Transfer
fee
Source
4 DM Claude Makélélé 38EU Retired Contract Ended Summer Retired
1 GK Grégory Coupet 38EU Retired Contract Ended Summer Retired
30 GK Apoula Edel 25EU Hapoel Tel Aviv Contract Ended Summer Free
13 CB Sammy Traoré 35EU Retired Contract Ended Summer Retired
31 AM Adama Touré 20Non-EU Lorient Contract Ended Summer Free
7 RW Ludovic Giuly 35EU Monaco Contract Ended Summer Free
27 RM Younousse Sankharé 21EU Dijon Transferred Summer €0.5M
24 LM Tripy Makonda 21EU Brest Transferred Summer €0.5M
23 DM Jérémy Clément 27EU Saint-Étienne Transferred Summer €1.8M
21 FW Jean-Eudes Maurice 25EU Lens Loaned Summer 30.06.2012
17 DM Granddi Ngoyi 23EU Nantes Loaned Summer 30.06.2012
28 CB Loïck Landre 19EU Clermont Loaned Winter 30.06.2012
11 FW Mevlüt Erdinç 24EU Rennes Transferred Winter €7.5M
19 FW Éverton Santos 25Non-EU Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma Released Winter Free

Total income: 10.3 million.

Expenditure: €95.8 million.

Squad information

N
Pos.
Nat.
Name
Age
EU
Since
App
Goals
Ends
Transfer fee
Notes
1 GK Nicolas Douchez40EU 2011 0 0 2014 Free
2 RB Ceará40Non-EU 2007 161 1 2013 €2.5m
3 CB Mamadou Sakho (captain)30EU 2006 141 5 2014 Youth system
4 CB Milan Biševac37Non-EU 2011 0 0 2014 €4M
5 LM Siaka Tiéné38EU 2010 42 0 2013 €1M
6 CB Zoumana Camara41EU 2007 164 5 2013 €6M
7 AM Jérémy Ménez33EU 2011 0 0 2014 €9M
8 ST Péguy Luyindula41EU 2006 179 37 2012 €2.5M
9 ST Guillaume Hoarau36EU 2008 126 48 2013 €0.5M
10 LW Nenê39EU 2010 51 20 2013 €5.5M
12 CM Mathieu Bodmer38EU 2010 42 10 2013 €2.5M
13 CB Alex38Non-EU 2012 0 0 2014 €5M
14 DM Blaise Matuidi33EU 2011 0 0 2014 €7.5M
15 CB Diego Lugano40EU 2011 0 0 2014 €3M
16 GK Alphonse Areola27EU 2010 0 0 2016 Free
17 LB Maxwell39Non-EU 2012 0 0 2015 €4M
18 ST Loris Arnaud33EU 2007 30 4 2012 Youth system
19 ST Kevin Gameiro33EU 2011 0 0 2015 €11M
20 CM Clément Chantôme33EU 2006 177 8 2015 Youth system
21 CF Jean-Eudes Maurice34EU 2008 50 3 2014 Free
22 LB Sylvain Armand40EU 2004 324 11 2013 €3.5M
23 DM Mohamed Sissoko36EU 2011 0 0 2014 €8M
25 CF Jean-Christophe Bahebeck27EU 2011 13 1 2014 Youth system
26 RB Christophe Jallet37EU 2009 95 6 2015 €2.5M
27 AM Javier Pastore31EU 2011 0 0 2016 €43M
28 DM Loïck Landre28EU 2011 1 0 2014 Youth system
29 AM Neeskens Kebano28EU 2011 7 1 2014 Youth system
30 GK Salvatore Sirigu34EU 2011 0 0 2015 €3.5M
40 GK Ronan Le Crom46EU 2012 0 0 2012 Free
RM Granddi Ngoyi32EU 2007 33 0 2013 Youth system
CF Éverton Santos34Non-EU 2008 3 0 2012 €2M
ST Mevlüt Erdinç33EU 2009 91 28 2014 €9M

Board and staff

Head coach Antoine Kombouaré (until 30 December 2011)
Carlo Ancelotti
Assistant coach Yves Bertucci (until 18 January 2012)
Claude Makélélé, Paul Clement, Angelo Castellazzi
Chief performance officer Nick Broad
Goalkeeping coach Gilles Bourges
Physical trainers Giovanni Mauri, Raphaël Févre, Simon Colinet, Denis Lefebve
Head doctor Éric Rolland
Physiotherapists Bruno Le Natur, Jérôme Andral, Gaël Pasquier

Source: PSG.fr

President Robin Leproux (until 13 July 2011)
Benoît Rousseau (until 7 October 2011)
Nasser Al-Khelaifi
Delegate director general Jean-Claude Blanc
General manager Phillipe Boindrieux
Director of football Leonardo
Marketing Michel Mimran
Communications Bruno Skropeta
Recruitment Alain Roche
Ground (capacity and dimensions) Parc des Princes (48,712 / 252m x 191m)

Source: Ligue 1

Friendly matches

Paris Saint-Germain went down to defeat in their clash with Swiss side Sion. Antoine Kombouaré's men were three goals down early in the second-half, although they did recover some pride after Siaka Tiéné and Clément Chantôme both scored late on.[5] PSG went down to Benfica in the opening match of the Guadiana International Tournament. Under the watchful eye of new sporting director Leonardo, Paris fell behind to an early Óscar Cardozo goal, but equalized soon after when Clément Chantôme's cushioned through ball was brilliantly lobbed home by Nenê. However, in this rematch of last season's Europa League tie, which Benfica won on aggregate, Franco Jara and Javier Saviola both netted after the restart to give the Lisbon club the win once again.[6] A day after, their second match of the Guadiana International Tournament ended in a draw against Anderlecht. Kevin Gameiro netted his first goal for PSG, only for Lukáš Mareček to equalize for the Belgians.[7] PSG recorded their first pre-season win, beating English second tier club Brighton & Hove Albion with Nenê making the difference, his goal laid on a plate by new signing Kevin Gameiro.[8] Opposed to Wacker Innsbruck and Roma in two halves of 45 minutes, Paris clinched the Innsbruck Cup. PSG narrowly defeated the locals and recorded a comfortable triumph over the Italians.[9] Paris lost to the New York Red Bulls in the Emirates Cup. Salvatore Sirigu lined up in the PSG goal for the first time and he was beaten by a low shot from Joel Lindpere.[10] PSG bounced back with a resounding victory over Boca Juniors. Jean-Eudes Maurice, Guillaume Hoarau and Ceará sealed the victory for the nouveau riche at the Emirates Stadium.[11] Alexandre Pato's fourth-minute goal meant Carlo Ancelotti's reign at PSG started with a loss as Milan beat the capital club in the Dubai Challenge Cup at the Al-Rashid Stadium.[12]

Competitions

Ligue 1

Paris Saint-Germain lost their first game of the season at home to Lorient, going down to a goal from Julien Quercia.[13] Kevin Gameiro's strike had PSG on the brink of their first win of the season at Rennes, but Jonathan Pitroipa salvaged a deserved draw for the hosts.[14] Nenê scored the winning goal from the penalty spot in Paris Saint-Germain's home win over Valenciennes.[15] Javier Pastore supplied two assists as PSG battled back from a goal down to win at Toulouse.[16] A moment of magic from Ligue 1 record signing Javier Pastore ended Brest's unbeaten start to the season at the Parc des Princes.[17] Javier Pastore's stunning goal helped Paris Saint-Germain battle back from two goals down at Evian to earn a point.[18] Kevin Gameiro converted the decisive penalty of three as PSG beat Nice at the Parc des Princes.[19] Paris Saint-Germain were ominously impressive against Montpellier, Javier Pastore scoring twice and Kevin Gameiro once to win at the Stade de la Mosson.[20] A sublime strike from Javier Pastore – and a late volley from Christophe Jallet – won PSG a thrilling victory over closest rivals Lyon, taking the capital club three points clear atop the table.[21] A Kevin Gameiro hat-trick ensured Paris Saint-Germain picked up a win at Ajaccio.[22] Two goals from Brazilian winger Nenê were enough for PSG to clinch a win over a valiant Dijon side.[23] Nenê was the inspiration as league leaders Paris Saint-Germain came from behind to beat Caen and record their sixth straight league win.[24] Mohamed Sissoko gave PSG the lead at Bordeaux, but Yoan Gouffran's goal meant it finished tied.[25] Nancy threw the French title race wide open after stunning leaders Paris Saint-Germain in the capital.[26]

Marseille took the clasico honours to condemn Paris Saint-Germain to a second straight league defeat, leaving Montpellier three points clear at the top.[27] Paris Saint-Germain returned to winning ways beating Auxerre after a thrilling second half at the Parc des Princes.[28] Kevin Gameiro's first goal in seven league matches proved enough for Paris Saint-Germain to beat Sochaux.[29] Paris Saint-Germain and Lille cancelled each other out at the Parc des Princes in a goalless draw.[30] Mathieu Bodmer headed the only goal of the game as Paris Saint-Germain won at Saint-Étienne to move clear at the top of the table once again.[31] Nenê scored twice and Javier Pastore netted his first league goal since October as leaders PSG beat Toulouse at the Parc des Princes to give Carlo Ancelotti the perfect start to his Ligue 1 coaching career.[32] Milan Biševac scored the only goal of the game as Paris Saint-Germain beat Brest.[33] Paris Saint-Germain maintained their winning run under Carlo Ancelotti after strikes from Nenê and Kevin Gameiro brought the Parisians back from a goal down to beat Evian at the Parc des Princes.[34] Carlo Ancelotti's perfect start as coach of Paris Saint-Germain ended after the capital club were held to a goalless draw by an impressive Nice.[35] A late Guillaume Hoarau strike ensured it finished tied between leaders PSG and second-placed Montpellier.[36] Guillaume Hoarau salvaged a draw for Paris Saint-Germain at Lyon in Ligue 1's match of the season with a 94th-minute equalizer as the capital club slipped from top spot.[37] Argentine superstar Javier Pastore marked a return to form with a goal and an assist as Paris Saint-Germain beat Ajaccio to return to the top of the table.[38]

Kevin Gameiro scored a dramatic injury-time winner as ten-man Paris Saint-Germain beat Dijon.[39] Paris Saint-Germain scored through Christophe Jallet after the regulation 90 minutes for the fourth game running to salvage a draw at Caen.[40] Paris Saint-Germain missed the opportunity to go back to the top of the Ligue 1 table when they were held at home by Bordeaux.[41] Paris Saint-Germain suffered a first Ligue 1 defeat in 15 outings as Nancy won over the title pretenders.[42] Paris Saint-Germain centre-half Alex scored the winner as PSG beat Marseille at the Parc des Princes.[43] Anthony Le Tallec scored a late equaliser to secure a draw for Auxerre against Paris Saint-Germain.[44] Inspired by a dazzling performance from Nenê, PSG got back to winning ways in emphatic fashion with a win over relegation-threatened Sochaux.[45] Eden Hazard was once again outstanding as Lille came from behind to beat ten-man Paris Saint-Germain.[46] Paris Saint-Germain moved to within three points of leaders Montpellier as Nenê and Javier Pastore gave the capital club a win over Saint-Étienne.[47] PSG came back from two goals down to beat Valenciennes in a thriller in the north of France.[48] A brilliant hat-trick from Nenê and a magnificent performance from Jérémy Ménez handed Paris Saint-Germain a win against Rennes that keeps them in the title running with a game to spare.[49] PSG came from behind to beat Lorient at the Stade du Moustoir but the win was not enough for them to win the Ligue 1 title.[50]

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Montpellier (C) 38 25 7 6 68 34 +34 82 Qualification to Champions League group stage
2 Paris Saint-Germain 38 23 10 5 75 41 +34 79
3 Lille 38 21 11 6 72 39 +33 74 Qualification to Champions League play-off round
4 Lyon 38 19 7 12 64 51 +13 64 Qualification to Europa League group stage[lower-alpha 1]
5 Bordeaux 38 16 13 9 53 41 +12 61 Qualification to Europa League play-off round[lower-alpha 1]
Source: Ligue 1
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champion.
Notes:
  1. Lyon won the 2011–12 Coupe de France and thus qualified for the group stage of the 2012–13 UEFA Europa League. Since they finished 4th, the spot for the Europa League play-off round goes to the fifth-placed team.

Results summary

OverallHomeAway
PldWDLGFGAGDPtsWDLGFGAGDWDLGFGAGD
38 23 10 5 75 41  +34 79 14 3 2 42 16  +26 9 7 3 33 25  +8

Source: Ligue 1

Results by round

Round1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738
GroundHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHAHAHA
ResultLDWWWDWWWWWWDLLWWDWWWWDDDWWDDLWDWLWWWW
Position1513934541111111222211111121112222222222
Source: Ligue 1
A = Away; H = Home; W = Win; D = Draw; L = Loss

Coupe de France

The draw for the Coupe de France's last 64 was held as France's élite joined the competition. Last season's runners-up Paris Saint-Germain fared well, being pitted against fifth-division Locminé.[51] PSG needed a stoppage time strike from Diego Lugano to see off the amateurs from Locminé in what was new coach Carlo Ancelotti's first competitive game in charge. In the draw for the last 32, Paris Saint-Germain were paired against Sablé, another fifth-division team.[52] Nenê and Kevin Gameiro both scored twice as PSG eased into the last 16 of the French Cup with a big win over fifth tier Sablé. But playmaker Javier Pastore went off injured in the first half.[53] Paris Saint-Germain went to Dijon in what was a repeat of the sides' meeting in the Coupe de la Ligue last 16 in October. On that occasion, Dijon came from 2-0 down to win 3-2.[54] PSG had a nervous time as they held off a spirited Dijon side to narrowly win – thanks to a Nenê goal – and reach the quarter-finals.[55] The draw for the last eight of the French Cup produced the stand-out fixture between eight-times winners Paris Saint-Germain and Olympique Lyonnais.[56] Lyon inflicted a first defeat of the Ancelotti era on PSG and reached the last four of the French Cup, where they joined Gazélec Ajaccio, who stunned Montpellier, and Rennes, winners over Valenciennes.[57]

Coupe de la Ligue

The draw for the Coupe de la Ligue's round of 16 pitted Dijon playing host to Paris Saint-Germain days after their Week 11 league clash at the Parc des Princes as Ligue 1's six sides competing in Europe entered into the competition.[58] Dijon, inspired by Brice Jovial, came from two goals down to dump league leaders PSG out of the League Cup thanks to a brilliant win.[59]

UEFA Europa League

Big-spending Paris Saint-Germain had to face Greek outfit Olympiakos Volou in the UEFA Europa League play-offs over two legs for a place in the group stages.[60] Olympiakos Volou, however, were excluded from the Europa League for their involvement in a match-fixing scandal, with UEFA handing the Greek club a three-season ban from continental competition.[61] Differdange from Luxembourg replaced Olympiakos Volou.[62] The UEFA Appeals Body seconded the decision of the Control and Disciplinary Body to exclude Olympiakos Volou from the Europa League competition.[63] Javier Pastore provided two assists in his debut to help Paris Saint-Germain take a commanding lead into the second leg of their UEFA Europa League play-off tie against Differdange.[64] Paris Saint-Germain never looked in danger of squandering their first-leg lead as they claimed a convincing win over Differdange to take the tie 6-0 on aggregate and advance to the group stages. However, it did take Antoine Kombouaré's star-studded side more than an hour to break down the Luxembourgish outfit, but Nenê's spectacular strike from distance was worth the wait.[65] Paris Saint-Germain were top seeds for the draw in Monaco and were placed in a testing Group F alongside Athletic Bilbao, Slovan Bratislava and Red Bull Salzburg.[66]

Paris Saint-Germain produced a classy attacking display to beat Red Bull Salzburg. Nenê, Mathieu Bodmer and Jérémy Ménez all scored to hand their side the perfect Europa League start.[67] PSG fell to a defeat - their first in 11 matches - away to Athletic Bilbao as Mohamed Sissoko saw red in his first start for the club.[68] After being reduced to nine men Paris Saint-Germain hung on to secure a potentially vital point thanks to a scoreless draw against Slovan Bratislava.[69] Javier Pastore's lone strike was enough to secure Paris Saint-Germain a narrow win over a tenacious Slovan Bratislava side at the Parc des Princes and reassert the capital club's claim on a qualifying spot for the knockout rounds of the Europa League.[70] Paris Saint-Germain were outplayed by Red Bull Salzburg and had to win against Athletic Bilbao - and hope that Salzburg didn't beat Slovan Bratislava - if they were to book a place in the Europa League's last 16.[71] Paris Saint-Germain produced a late surge to beat Athletic Bilbao, but their Europa League qualification hopes were dashed after rivals Red Bull Salzburg beat Slovan Bratislava in Slovakia.[72]

Appearances and goals

Only Paris Saint-Germain players with at least one appearance in a competitive match with the first team during the season.[73]
No. Nat. Position Player Total Ligue 1 Coupe de France Coupe de la Ligue UEFA Europa League
AppsGoalsAssists AppsGoalsAssists AppsGoalsAssists AppsGoalsAssists AppsGoalsAssists
1 GK Nicolas Douchez 1000 000 200 100 700
30 GK Salvatore Sirigu 4100 3800 200 000 100
2 DF Ceará 3620 2410 300 100 810
3 DF Mamadou Sakho 2600 2200 200 100 100
4 DF Milan Biševac 2511 1911 300 000 300
6 DF Zoumana Camara 2800 1900 200 100 600
13 DF Alex 1620 1520 100 000 000
15 DF Diego Lugano 2110 1200 310 100 500
17 DF Maxwell 1510 1410 100 000 000
22 DF Sylvain Armand 3112 2212 300 100 500
26 DF Christophe Jallet 4435 3335 400 100 600
5 MF Siaka Tiéné 2912 2312 000 000 600
7 MF Jérémy Ménez 42916 33713 301 101 521
10 MF Nenê 472714 352110 442 100 722
12 MF Mathieu Bodmer 4232 3112 300 100 720
14 MF Blaise Matuidi 3511 2911 200 000 400
17 MF Granddi Ngoyi 200 000 000 000 200
20 MF Clément Chantôme 2102 1502 200 000 400
23 MF Mohamed Sissoko 3021 2521 200 000 300
27 MF Javier Pastore 43168 33136 310 000 722
28 MF Thiago Motta 1620 1420 200 000 000
29 MF Neeskens Kebano 200 000 000 000 200
9 FW Guillaume Hoarau 2663 2052 401 000 210
11 FW Mevlüt Erdinç 1923 1112 100 110 601
19 FW Kevin Gameiro 45142 34112 320 100 710
21 FW Jean-Eudes Maurice 300 100 000 000 200
25 FW Jean-Christophe Bahebeck 1521 800 000 110 611

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