2014 Coupe de la Ligue Final

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2014 Coupe de la Ligue Final
2014 Coupe de La Ligue Final promotional poster.jpg
Event 2013–14 Coupe de la Ligue
Date 19 April 2014
Venue Stade de France, Saint-Denis
Referee Stéphane Lannoy
Attendance 78,489
2013
2015

The 2014 Coupe de la Ligue Final was the 20th final of France's football league cup competition, the Coupe de la Ligue, a competition for the 42 teams that the Ligue de Football Professionnel (LFP) manages. The final took place on 19 April 2014 at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis and was contested between Lyon and PSG. PSG won 2-1 and became the first club to win the competition four times, ahead of Bordeaux and Marseille.

The winner of the final should have been guaranteed a UEFA Europa League place for the 2014–15 season, but PSG had already qualified for the 2014–15 UEFA Champions League via its league position.

Build-up

Team backgrounds

Lyon appeared in its fifth final of the Coupe de la Ligue. The Rhône-Alpes-based club won its only league cup title in 2001 defeating Monaco 2–1 after extra time.[1] In Lyon's three other finals appearances, the club finished runner-up in 1996, 2007 and 2012 to Metz, Bordeaux and Marseille respectively.[2]

In their four previous finals, Paris Saint-Germain had won three: the inaugural final in 1995 against Bastia, in 1998 against Bordeaux in a penalty shootout, and a 2-1 win over Lens in 2008. Their one defeat in a final had been in 2000, losing to second-tier Gueugnon.[2] PSG manager Laurent Blanc had won the 2009 final with Bordeaux.

The two teams met in the league six days before the final, Lyon winning 1-0 at home through Jordan Ferri to inflict only PSG's second league defeat of the season and prevent them from possibly winning the title on that day.[3] However, Lyon manager Remi Garde said "The two matches shouldn't be compared. We were at home and on Saturday we're away from home. We're closer to Paris than Lyon. They are two competitions with different ingredients. I'm not worried that we'll relax after our win. We'll start from scratch."[4]

PSG were disadvantaged by the loss through injury of Ligue 1 top scorer Zlatan Ibrahimović, who was injured in their Champions League victory over Chelsea on 2 April. As a result, Edinson Cavani moved to centre-forward. First-choice goalkeeper Salvatore Sirigu was rested for PSG, with Nicolas Douchez starting instead. A BBC preview to the match said "Champions League heartbreak, losing your best player through injury and then being beaten by tonight's opponents in your last game. It's fair enough to say Paris St-Germain's build-up to the French League Cup final hasn't been ideal."[5]

Ticketing

The Coupe de la Ligue final has been played every year at the Stade de France since 1998, following the stadium's completion. The stadium has a capacity of 81,338 spectators. Both clubs will receive the same quota of tickets, which are distributed to season ticket holders and through each club's ticket sales at a later date. Ticketing information was released on 12 February 2014.[6]

Road to the Final

Lyon Round PSG
Opponent Result 2013–14 Coupe de la Ligue Opponent Result
Reims 3-2 Round of 16 Saint-Étienne 2–1 (AET)
Marseille 2–1 Quarter-finals Bordeaux 3-1
Troyes 2-1 Semi-finals Nantes 2–1

Lyon

As a Ligue 1 club involved in a European campaign, Lyon entered in the Round of 16 on 18 December 2013 and defeated Reims 3-2 at home, with all goals in the second half, Lyon's through Bafétimbi Gomis, Alexandre Lacazette and Yoann Gourcuff. In the quarter-finals on 15 January 2014, again at home, they beat Marseille 2-1 through Gourcuff and Gomis. Lyon's semi-final was at home against Ligue 2 club Troyes on 5 February, and they won 2-1 after Lacazette and Gomis scored in the first half hour of play.

PSG

Due to the same circumstances, PSG also entered the tournament at the same stage on the same day, and played holders Saint-Étienne at home in their first match. Edinson Cavani put the home team ahead in the first half, before Mevlüt Erdinç equalised late on. Cavani then scored the winner within the last five minutes of extra time. In the quarter-finals on 14 January, PSG travelled to the Stade Chaban-Delmas to play against Bordeaux. Javier Pastore scored the first goal at the end of the first half, with André Biyogo Poko equalising soon after play resumed. With two goals in the last five minutes of the match, Adrien Rabiot and Blaise Matuidi put PSG into the semi-finals. At the Stade de la Beaujoire, PSG gained the lead early on through Zlatan Ibrahimović, and the last ten minutes saw Olivier Veigneau equalise and Ibrahimović score the winner.

Match

After 178 seconds of play, Edinson Cavani opened the scoring for PSG by tapping in a cross from left-back Maxwell which beat Lyon goalkeeper Anthony Lopes. Cavani gained advantage by playing in a preferred centre-forward position due to the injury to Zlatan Ibrahimović, and soon after scoring forced a save by a volley. PSG defender Alex had a goal ruled out for offside, and Cavani converted a penalty won when Lopes fouled Lucas Moura.[7] A chance for a first-half hat-trick was denied when Cavani missed a one-on-one from eight yards out, and in the first 10 minutes of the second half, Alexandre Lacazette scored for Lyon by running from the halfway line and then shooting from 20 yards. Despite then dominating possession, Lyon had few subsequent chances to equalise.[8]

Match details

19 April 2014
21:00 CEST
Lyon 1–2 Paris Saint-Germain
Lacazette Goal 56' Report
Report
Cavani Goal 4'33' (pen.)
Stade de France, Saint-Denis
Attendance: 78,489
Referee: Stéphane Lannoy
Lyon
Paris Saint-Germain
GK 16 Portugal Anthony Lopes Booked 32'
RB 14 France Mouhamadou Dabo Substituted off 54'
CB 5 Serbia Milan Biševac Booked 72'
CB 23 France Samuel Umtiti
LB 3 Cameroon Henri Bedimo Substituted off 90+2'
DM 21 France Maxime Gonalons (c)
CM 24 France Corentin Tolisso
CM 28 Democratic Republic of the Congo Arnold Mvuemba
AM 17 France Steed Malbranque Substituted off 68'
CF 18 France Bafétimbi Gomis
CF 10 France Alexandre Lacazette
Substitutes:
GK 30 France Mathieu Gorgelin
DF 2 France Mehdi Zeffane
DF 4 Burkina Faso Bakary Koné Substituted in 90+2'
MF 20 France Gaël Danic
FW 19 France Jimmy Briand Substituted in 54'
FW 26 Cameroon Clinton N'Jie
FW 31 France Nabil Fekir Substituted in 68'
Manager:
France Rémi Garde
GK 1 France Nicolas Douchez
RB 26 France Christophe Jallet
CB 13 Brazil Alex
CB 2 Brazil Thiago Silva (c)
LB 17 Brazil Maxwell
DM 8 Italy Thiago Motta
CM 24 Italy Marco Verratti Booked 18' Substituted off 74'
CM 14 France Blaise Matuidi
RW 29 Brazil Lucas Substituted off 90+1'
CF 9 Uruguay Edinson Cavani
LW 22 Argentina Ezequiel Lavezzi Substituted off 75'
Substitutes:
GK 30 Italy Salvatore Sirigu
DF 5 Brazil Marquinhos
DF 21 France Lucas Digne
MF 4 France Yohan Cabaye Substituted in 74'
MF 7 France Jérémy Ménez Substituted in 90+1'
MF 25 France Adrien Rabiot
MF 27 Argentina Javier Pastore Substituted in 75'
Manager:
France Laurent Blanc

References

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External links