Elie Rous
Elie RousPersonal information |
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Date of birth |
(1909-09-10)10 September 1909 |
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Teams managed |
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Years |
Team |
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1939–1940 |
Racing Paris |
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1940–1943 |
Sète |
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1949–1950 |
Sète |
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1950 |
Nice |
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1951–1952 |
Metz |
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Elie Rous, or Ely Rous (10 September 1909 – ?) was an English,[2] football manager, active primarily in France.
Rous led Racing Paris to the 1940 Coupe de France title, and was runner-up with Sète in 1942.[3]
He later coached Nice in 1950, and Metz between 1951 and 1952.
References
- ↑ (French) Dictionnaire historique des clubs de football français (Racing), Pages de Foot 1999
- ↑ "Top Ten English Exports to France". Les Rosbifs. 27 July 2010. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
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- Regan (1929–33)
- Dedieu (1933–36)
- Azema (1936–37)
- Marmiès (1937–39)
- Cazal (1939–40)
- Rous (1940–43)
- Stevanović (1943–46)
- Féron (1946–47)
- Danzelle (1947–48)
- Féjean (1948–49)
- Rous (1949–50)
- Tomazover (1950–54)
- Zavadsky (1954–55)
- Koranyi (1955–56)
- Plovie (1956–58)
- Balmanya (1958–60)
- Tomazover (1960–65)
- Mandaron & Plovie (1965–69)
- Bernard (1969–70)
- Marc & Plovie (1970–72)
- Louis (1972–74)
- Milosavljević (1974–76)
- Miramond (1976–77)
- Nagy & Tomazover (1977–78)
- Passi (1978–80)
- Calabuig (1980–83)
- Herbet (1983–85)
- Milosavljević (1985–86)
- Bathenay (1986–88)
- Calabuig & Milosavljević (1988–89)
- Calabuig (1989–90)
- Pellegrini (1990–91)
- Calabuig (1991–96)
- Bourrier (1996–97)
- Calabuig (1997–2000)
- David & Lebeau (2000–01)
- Scala (2001–02)
- Rust (2002–03)
- Beaumian & Calabuig (2003–06)
- Batelli (2006)
- Buiges (2006)
- Sarramagna (2006–07)
- Laurey (2007–08)
- Aboufares (2008)
- Rémola (2008–09)
- Beaumian (2009–10)
- Chabert (2010–)
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