The Prague Post - Strasbourg on verge of European final amid fan displeasure at owners BlueCo

EUR -
AED 4.308628
AFN 73.912502
ALL 95.346222
AMD 431.876654
ANG 2.100325
AOA 1077.010275
ARS 1624.907303
AUD 1.620214
AWG 2.114717
AZN 1.99567
BAM 1.954664
BBD 2.363387
BDT 144.236187
BGN 1.955534
BHD 0.442854
BIF 3493.004263
BMD 1.173213
BND 1.493789
BOB 8.108565
BRL 5.742997
BSD 1.173468
BTN 112.158997
BWP 15.839201
BYN 3.280805
BYR 22994.980073
BZD 2.359989
CAD 1.606862
CDF 2610.399308
CHF 0.915692
CLF 0.02723
CLP 1071.683367
CNY 7.968579
CNH 7.966652
COP 4444.55422
CRC 535.502523
CUC 1.173213
CUP 31.090152
CVE 110.208006
CZK 24.339953
DJF 208.953924
DKK 7.471486
DOP 69.25153
DZD 155.335749
EGP 62.091375
ERN 17.598199
ETB 183.229104
FJD 2.565055
FKP 0.859468
GBP 0.866025
GEL 3.132606
GGP 0.859468
GHS 13.247754
GIP 0.859468
GMD 86.247845
GNF 10296.368033
GTQ 8.95337
GYD 245.495717
HKD 9.184494
HNL 31.204129
HRK 7.532259
HTG 153.306797
HUF 357.564317
IDR 20509.351781
ILS 3.41012
IMP 0.859468
INR 112.20031
IQD 1537.100271
IRR 1539255.809017
ISK 143.599717
JEP 0.859468
JMD 185.41542
JOD 0.831771
JPY 185.042129
KES 151.458414
KGS 102.597132
KHR 4707.445157
KMF 492.749569
KPW 1055.913348
KRW 1749.419401
KWD 0.361549
KYD 0.977828
KZT 544.251427
LAK 25723.271972
LBP 105080.922232
LKR 379.012994
LRD 214.74071
LSL 19.395895
LTL 3.464194
LVL 0.709665
LYD 7.423876
MAD 10.709242
MDL 20.083015
MGA 4903.276184
MKD 61.61994
MMK 2462.520385
MNT 4201.101075
MOP 9.461802
MRU 46.807998
MUR 54.917957
MVR 18.066222
MWK 2034.869611
MXN 20.189237
MYR 4.60428
MZN 74.979969
NAD 19.395647
NGN 1607.458395
NIO 43.186562
NOK 10.769822
NPR 179.447315
NZD 1.974131
OMR 0.451094
PAB 1.173418
PEN 4.021563
PGK 5.110355
PHP 72.070076
PKR 326.889096
PLN 4.251784
PYG 7163.020875
QAR 4.277488
RON 5.20297
RSD 117.376435
RUB 86.616549
RWF 1716.246609
SAR 4.405031
SBD 9.41974
SCR 16.602942
SDG 704.52965
SEK 10.899351
SGD 1.492169
SHP 0.875922
SLE 28.890357
SLL 24601.723031
SOS 670.621747
SRD 43.707478
STD 24283.145961
STN 24.486606
SVC 10.26699
SYP 129.674586
SZL 19.389559
THB 37.935263
TJS 10.971599
TMT 4.106246
TND 3.412735
TOP 2.824816
TRY 53.282768
TTD 7.963339
TWD 36.97323
TZS 3060.799918
UAH 51.57385
UGX 4410.587471
USD 1.173213
UYU 46.661295
UZS 14234.728482
VES 591.632164
VND 30911.823213
VUV 138.818641
WST 3.178581
XAF 655.592812
XAG 0.013566
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.170667
XCG 2.114762
XDR 0.815347
XOF 655.592812
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.98742
ZAR 19.321943
ZMK 10560.328109
ZMW 22.089729
ZWL 377.774194
  • RYCEF

    -0.3900

    16.2

    -2.41%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    61

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    23.11

    -0.04%

  • NGG

    0.0800

    87.24

    +0.09%

  • AZN

    2.6800

    184.54

    +1.45%

  • GSK

    1.0900

    50.9

    +2.14%

  • RELX

    -0.5000

    32.77

    -1.53%

  • VOD

    -1.2250

    15.095

    -8.12%

  • RIO

    1.6000

    109.5

    +1.46%

  • BTI

    3.2000

    63.64

    +5.03%

  • BCE

    0.1900

    24.47

    +0.78%

  • BCC

    -1.2700

    67.93

    -1.87%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    23.6

    -0.04%

  • BP

    0.1800

    44.4

    +0.41%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.14

    +0.08%

Strasbourg on verge of European final amid fan displeasure at owners BlueCo
Strasbourg on verge of European final amid fan displeasure at owners BlueCo / Photo: SEBASTIEN BOZON - AFP/File

Strasbourg on verge of European final amid fan displeasure at owners BlueCo

Strasbourg could this week reach the first European final in their history, at the end of a turbulent season for the club which belongs to the same BlueCo consortium that owns Chelsea.

Text size:

The team coached by Englishman Gary O'Neil host Rayo Vallecano at their Stade de la Meinau on Thursday in the second leg of their Conference League semi-final, looking to overturn a 1-0 deficit from the first meeting.

Neither team has made it to the last four of a European competition before, and the winner will progress to the final in the German city of Leipzig on May 27 against Crystal Palace or Shakhtar Donetsk.

Not so long ago, the prospect of lifting a European trophy would have felt like a pipe dream for Strasbourg fans.

The club from a city which sits on France's border with Germany and is the seat of the European Parliament, have been French champions just once, in 1979.

Before this campaign, their best run in Europe came in 1980, when they lost to Ajax in the European Cup quarter-finals, although there was a memorable win against Liverpool in the UEFA Cup in 1997.

But the involvement of BlueCo in all of this is a point of tension for Strasbourg's supporters.

"We needed someone to accompany us to get to this step," the club's president Marc Keller, an ex-Strasbourg player, told RMC radio after the team beat German side Mainz in the last round.

He pointed out that Strasbourg were languishing in the regional, amateur fourth and fifth tiers of French football 15 years ago, after running into financial difficulties and going into liquidation.

They returned to Ligue 1 in 2017 after almost a decade away, and had managed to establish themselves again in the top flight.

However, Strasbourg hardly looked like becoming competitors in Europe before BlueCo took over in June 2023, a year after buying Chelsea.

"We were conscious that we had gone as far as we could with our existing model," insisted Keller.

- Silent protests -

Significant money has since been invested in new players, and Strasbourg qualified for this edition of the Conference League after an exciting last campaign under English coach Liam Rosenior.

Some talented players have come to Strasbourg from Chelsea, albeit mostly on loan, but what fans have noticed above all is something else: if a player or coach does really well in Alsace, the chances are they will soon be off to Stamford Bridge.

In September, Dutch striker Emmanuel Emegha, Strasbourg's captain, announced he would join Chelsea next season, upsetting many fans.

In January, Chelsea decided to poach Rosenior, whose own comments did little to calm the anger among supporters.

"I hope the fans are proud in a way that somebody who's worked here has been identified to be the manager of a Champions League-winning club and current club world champions," he suggested.

He was replaced by O'Neil, under whom Strasbourg have already lost in the French Cup semi-finals.

"Thursday's game is the biggest in the club's history. We will need the same support and energy that we got against Mainz," said O'Neil.

The problem is that the club's most vociferous supporters have, since last season, chosen to express their displeasure at the ownership by staging a silent protest in the first 15 minutes of matches.

What is happening at Strasbourg is "what the future could look like for the vast majority of clubs," said Ultra Boys 90, a leading supporters group, in an open letter earlier this year.

"They will be relegated to the role of feeder teams, without their own resources, with no soul and no link to where they come from."

The silent protest is expected to take place as usual on Thursday, even if Ultra Boys 90 are calling on fans to gather ahead of kick-off to welcome the team bus to the ground.

The stadium has been recently renovated, with a huge new main stand having taken capacity to around 32,000.

It is almost always sold out now, but many of the fans who fill it are unhappy, or at least conflicted, about the direction in which the club is heading.

Even if they might be heading for a European final, with the chance of lifting a trophy won last season by none other than Chelsea.

R.Krejci--TPP