Roger Marche
Personal information | ||||||||||||||
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Full name | Roger Gaston Louis Marche[1] | |||||||||||||
Date of birth | [1] | 5 March 1924|||||||||||||
Place of birth | Villers-Semeuse,[1] France | |||||||||||||
Date of death | 1 November 1997[1] | (aged 73)|||||||||||||
Place of death | Charleville-Mézières,[1] France | |||||||||||||
Height | 1.72 m (5 ft 8 in) | |||||||||||||
Position(s) | Left back | |||||||||||||
Youth career | ||||||||||||||
ASC Mohon | ||||||||||||||
Senior career* | ||||||||||||||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) | |||||||||||
1944–1954 | Reims | 300 | (1) | |||||||||||
1954–1962 | RC Paris | 242 | (0) | |||||||||||
Total | 542 | (1) | ||||||||||||
International career | ||||||||||||||
1947–1959 | France | 63 | (1) | |||||||||||
Medal record
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*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Roger Gaston Louis Marche (5 March 1924 – 1 November 1997) was a French footballer who played as a defender. He was part of the France national team during the 1954 and 1958 World Cup tournaments. He was nicknamed Le Sanglier des Ardennes ("the Boar of the Ardenne") for the region from which he came.
Career
Marche, born in Villers-Semeuse, Ardennes, is one of the players with the most appearances in the French top division, having played 542 matches for the clubs Stade Reims and RC Paris.[citation needed]
He was a member of the France national team from 1947 to 1959, and became the most-capped player ever for France with 63 international matches played, surpassing Étienne Mattler's previous record of 46 caps set in 1940. Marche held the record until 1983, when the also defender Marius Trésor established a new mark with his 64th cap. Several players since have surpassed that cap total.[citation needed] He was also the nation's oldest goalscorer at 35 years and 287 days, until Olivier Giroud surpassed his record on 22 September 2022.[2]
Marche died in 1997 in Charleville-Mézières.[citation needed]
Honours
Reims
- Division 1: 1948–49, 1952–53; runner-up: 1946–47, 1953–54[citation needed]
- Coupe de France: 1949–50[citation needed]
- Trophée des Champions: 1949[citation needed]
- Latin Cup: 1953[citation needed]
France
- FIFA World Cup third place: 1958[citation needed]
References
- ^ a b c d e "Fichier des décès – années 1990 à 1999" [Death file – years 1990 to 1999] (in French). National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
- ^ "Giroud becomes France's oldest scorer in win" – via www.bbc.co.uk.
External links
- Roger Marche at the French Football Federation (in French)
- Roger Marche at the French Football Federation (archived) (in French)
- Illustrated profile at the Wayback Machine (archived 2007-03-25)
- List of international appearances