The Coupe de la Ligue trophy The Coupe de la Ligue was a knockout cup competition in French football organised by the Ligue de Football Professionnel and comprises clubs of France's top football division, Ligue 1 , France's second division, Ligue 2 , and the third division, the Championnat National . The current competition was established relatively late in 1994 but another competition named Coupe de la Ligue existed from 1963 to 1965 and in 1982, a Coupe d'Été (later also called Coupe de la Ligue) was held before the start of the French league season. It was abolished after the 2019–20 season to reduce fixture congestion.[ 1]
The most successful club in the history of the modern Coupe de la Ligue was Paris Saint-Germain , who won the cup nine times.[ 2] Paris Saint-Germain also made the most appearances in the final, with ten. The venue for the final was the Parc des Princes for its first three years, until it was moved to the Stade de France . In September 2016, the LFP voted for the next three finals to be at Parc Olympique Lyonnais in Lyon, the Nouveau Stade de Bordeaux in Bordeaux, and the Stade Pierre-Mauroy in Lille, respectively.[ 3] In 2000 , Gueugnon became the first team outside the top French league to win the tournament.[ 4]
Coupe de la Ligue (1963–1965)
Coupe d'Été (1982)
Coupe de la Ligue (1984-1994)
Finals (since 1995) Final Winner Score Runners-up Venue Attendance 1995 Paris Saint-Germain 2–0 Bastia Parc des Princes 24,663 1996 Metz * 0–0 *[B] Lyon Parc des Princes 45,368 1997 Strasbourg * 0–0 *[C] Bordeaux Parc des Princes 39,878 1998 Paris Saint-Germain * 2–2 *[D] Bordeaux Stade de France 77,700 1999 Lens 1–0 Metz Stade de France 78,180 2000 Gueugnon 2–0 Paris Saint-Germain Stade de France 75,400 2001 Lyon † 2–1 † Monaco Stade de France 78,000 2002 Bordeaux 3–0 Lorient Stade de France 75,923 2003 Monaco 4–1 Sochaux Stade de France 75,379 2004 Sochaux * 1–1 *[E] Nantes Stade de France 78,409 2005 Strasbourg 2–1 Caen Stade de France 78,732 2006 Nancy 2–1 Nice Stade de France 76,830 2007 Bordeaux 1–0 Lyon Stade de France 79,072 2008 Paris Saint-Germain 2–1 Lens Stade de France 78,741 2009 Bordeaux 4–0 Vannes Stade de France 75,822 2010 Marseille 3–1 Bordeaux Stade de France 72,749 2011 Marseille 1–0 Montpellier Stade de France 78,511 2012 Marseille † 1–0 † Lyon Stade de France 78,877 2013 Saint-Étienne 1–0 Rennes Stade de France 79,087 2014 Paris Saint-Germain 2–1 Lyon Stade de France 78,489 2015 Paris Saint-Germain 4–0 Bastia Stade de France 72,000 2016 Paris Saint-Germain 2–1 Lille Stade de France 68,640 2017 Paris Saint-Germain 4–1 Monaco Parc Olympique Lyonnais 57,841 2018 Paris Saint-Germain 3–0 Monaco Nouveau Stade de Bordeaux 41,248 2019 Strasbourg * 0–0 *[F] Guingamp Stade Pierre-Mauroy 49,161 2020 Paris Saint-Germain * 0–0 *[G] Lyon Stade de France 3,500[ note 1]
Key
The statistics includes all predecessors (marked in italics ).
Team Winners Runners-up Years won Years runner-up Paris Saint-Germain 9 1 1995, 1998, 2008, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2020 2000 Strasbourg 4 0 1964 , 1997, 2005, 2019 — Bordeaux 3 3 2002, 2007, 2009 1997, 1998, 2010 Marseille 3 0 2010, 2011, 2012 — Metz 2 1 1986 , 1996 1999 Lens 2 1 1994 , 1999 2008 Laval 2 0 1982 , 1984 — Lyon 1 5 2001 1996, 2007, 2012, 2014, 2020 Monaco 1 4 2003 1984 , 2001, 2017, 2018 Montpellier 1 2 1992 1994 , 2011 Nantes 1 1 1965 2004 Sochaux 1 1 2004 2003 Nancy 1 1 2006 1982 Reims 1 0 1991 — Gueugnon 1 0 2000 — Saint-Étienne 1 0 2013 — Bastia 0 2 — 1995, 2015 Rouen 0 1 — 1964 Toulon 0 1 — 1965 Cannes 0 1 — 1986 Niort 0 1 — 1991 Angers 0 1 — 1992 Lorient 0 1 — 2002 Caen 0 1 — 2005 Nice 0 1 — 2006 Vannes 0 1 — 2009 Rennes 0 1 — 2013 Lille 0 1 — 2016 Guingamp 0 1 — 2019
Notes A. ^ : Reims won the 1991 final 4–3 in a penalty shoot-out. B. ^ : Metz won the 1996 final 5–4 in a penalty shoot-out. C. ^ : Strasbourg won the 1997 final 6–5 in a penalty shoot-out. D. ^ : Paris Saint-Germain won the 1998 final 4–2 in a penalty shoot-out. E. ^ : Sochaux won the 2004 final 5–4 in a penalty shoot-out. F. ^ : Strasbourg won the 2019 final 4–1 in a penalty shoot-out. G. ^ : Paris Saint-Germain won the 2020 final 6–5 in a penalty shoot-out.
References General Specific
External links
National and regional teams
Metropolitan Overseas Unofficial
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Domestic cups
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