Alfred Mayssonnié

Alfred Mayssonnié
Full name Xavier Adrien Alfred Mayssonnié[1]
Date of birth (1884-02-10)10 February 1884
Place of birth Lavernose-Lacasse, France
Date of death 6 September 1914(1914-09-06) (aged 30)
Place of death Near Osches, France
Height 1.68 m (5 ft 6 in)
Weight 70 kg (11 st 0 lb)
Professional / senior clubs
Years Club / team Caps (points)
Stade Toulousain
National team(s)
Years Club / team Caps (points)
1908-1910  France 3 0

Alfred Mayssonnié, nicknamed Maysso (10 February 1884 – 6 September 1914), was a French rugby union player who appeared three times for the country's national team, and was also the first rugby international from any country to die in action in World War I.[1] A native of Lavernose, a village near Toulouse, he played as scrum-half and fly-half and is credited to this day by Stade Toulousain as the strategist of the club's first great teams in the early 20th century.[1]

Rugby career

Unlike most French players of his era, he did not have a professional occupation; he was instead an employee in a business run by his family. Paul Voivenel, who became a prominent rugby administrator and played a major role in keeping Mayssonnié's memory alive, recalled him as "a slight, unmuscular figure, an honest workman with the air of a teacher or public servant."[1]

Mayssonnié is believed to be the first player to be selected for the France national team while playing for Toulouse.[n 1] Although he appeared only three times for France, he was nonetheless involved in two historic matches. His first appearance, in 1908 against England, was France's first match at Colombes, which would remain the national team's primary home until the opening of Parc des Princes in the 1970s. His final match in 1910, against Wales, was the first in the Five Nations era (i.e., involving France, England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales) of the competition now known as the Six Nations Championship.[1]

He had a more successful career at club level, winning four national championships with three lower-level Toulouse teams in six seasons. (In his day, France held championships at several different levels, with major clubs such as Toulouse fielding teams at multiple levels.) The crowning moment of his club career came in 1912, when he started as fly-half for the Toulouse first team in the championship final against Racing Club de France due to an injury. With Toulouse trailing 6–0 early in the second half, Mayssonnié scored the try that swung the momentum toward Toulouse, which went on to score a second try and win the first of their many titles.[1]

Military service and death

Mayssonnié volunteered for service once World War I broke out, and was appointed a non-commissioned infantry officer. Within three weeks, he was cited for bravery in an action near Verdun. He died in action at the Battle of the Marne, making him the first of over 100 rugby internationals, including 23 of the 112 pre-war France internationals, to die during World War I. According to rugby historian Huw Richards, "His body might, like those of many war victims, have been lost but for his former Toulouse and France team-mate Pierre Mounicq, who buried it while under enemy fire." Two days later, a group of five men that included Voivenel marked his grave; after the war, his remains were exhumed, returned to Lavernose, and reinterred in the local churchyard.[1]

He is honored every 11 November, thanks to a stele bearing his image affixed to the monument to the dead Herakles Archer Toulouse.

Monument to the memory of Alfred Mayssonnié, Toulouse, by Antoine Bourdelle

History

Notes

  1. The club claims Augustin Pujol, a member of the first-ever France national squad in 1906, as its first French international. However, rugby historians in both France and the UK have concluded that Pujol was playing for Stade Français at that time, and did not move to Toulouse until after Maysonnié had made his first France appearance.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Richards, Huw (9 September 2014). "The ultimate sacrifice: Alfred Mayssonnie". Rewind to... 1914. ESPN Scrum. Retrieved 10 September 2014.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, April 28, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.