Former players
Goalkeepers
- Fabrice Catherine
- Aurélien Hérisson
- Andreas Isaksson
- Patrice Luzi
- Florent Petit
- Simon Pouplin
- Christophe Revault
Defenders
- Lucien Aubey
- Adailton
- Carlos Bocanegra
- Guillaume Borne
- Grégory Bourillon
- Amadou Coulibaly
- Elderson Uwa Echiejile
- Erik Edman
- Rod Fanni
- Jacques Faty
- Petter Hansson
- Maxime Le Marchand
- Gilbert Manier
- John Mensah
- Mario Melchiot
- Prince Oniangue
- Abdeslam Ouaddou
- Jean-Joël Perrier-Doumbé
- Yoann Pivaty
- Alain Rochat
- Laszlo Sepsi
- Arthur Sorin
- Djimi Traoré
Midfielders
- Cédric Barbosa
- Bruno Cheyrou
- Étienne Didot
- Papakouli Diop
- Yoann Gourcuff
- Junichi Inamoto
- Cyril Jeunechamp
- Kim Källström
- Felix Katongo
- Stéphane Mbia
- Arnold Mvuemba
- Jimmy Nirlo
- Olivier Sorlin
Forwards
- Ismaël Bangoura
- Jimmy Briand
- Emerson
- Julian Esteban
- Alexander Frei
- Asamoah Gyan
- Youssouf Hadji
- Yohann Lasimant
- Damien Le Tallec
- Hicham M’Laab
- Olivier Monterrubio
- Benjamin Moukandjo
- Daniel Moreira
- Stéphane N’Guéma
- Mickaël Pagis
- Moussa Sow
- Olivier Thomert
- John Utaka
- Sylvain Wiltord
Staff technique
- André Amitrano
- Laszlo Bölöni
- Landry Chauvin
- Guy Lacombe
- Christophe Lollichon
- Alain Ravera
- Philippe Redon
- Joaquim Rolao Preto
- Christian Schmidt
- Michel Sorin
Derniers articles de la rubrique
As Isaksson left for the Premier League, Rennes’ management had to compensate his departure by recruiting a new goalkeeper. Eventually, Christophe Revault came back to Rennes, where he had already played between 1998 and 2000. 34 years old, he came as Simon Pouplin’s substitute, offering him all his help and experience for the 2006-2007 season. In June 2007, he decided to leave and come back to his first ever club, Le Havre AC
Just crowned an U20 World Champion with Brazil, a team he was captaining, Adailton arrived in Rennes in summer 2004. Gifted with a great sense of anticipation, a good tackler and very strong in the air, Adailton had everything to succeed in Brittany. A regular starter during his first Rennes season, he was the main victim of John Mensah’s arrival and Grégory Bourillon’s emergence in central defence. Left with the Reserves, his misfortune worsened when he was victim of a serious knee injury, in April 2006. This was the final blow to his Rennes professional career, and removed him completely off Pierre Dreossi’s tactics. After the injury was healed, he only ever played 4 games with the Reserve, before leaving Rennes back to Brasil, where he signed for Santos FC, the legendary club where Pelé played for 18 years of his career.
An usual starter for Rennes' U18 Rand occasionanaly the Reserve, Guillaume Borne benefited of a series of injuries in the first team’s defence, to see his Ligue 1 career launched on a derby against Lorient, in December 2006. After he signed his first professional contract in June 2007, the man from Tarn disappointed for his second season at the highest level, only appearing in 10 occasions for the professional team, and failing to impress with his performances. After a disappointing loan in Brest (L2), he left Rennes in 2009 to join Boulogne, freshly promoted in Ligue 1.
Trained at the club’s academy, this athletic player can equally play as a defensive midfielder or as a central defender. Often injured during his early Ligue 1 career with Rennes, he actually managed to make his way into the first team, player as an anchor in midfield, and despite the competition at this position. In winter 2006, he is pushed back to play along John Mensah in central defence, immediately forming a very complementary partnership with the Ghanaian. Considered as a high potential player, “Boubou” has already won many titles in the youth categories. Severy injured at the end of the 2006-2007 season, he eventually decides to sign a contract with Paris Saint-Germain, in July 2007.
Arrived in Rennes in summer 2005, Amadou Coulibaly was soon left on the sidelines after a serious injury, which condemned him to a nearly void first season. The powerful right back tried his best afterwards, to try and get his chance in the first team, but numerous injuries hindered his ambitions in Rennes. He eventually left the club in 2007, two years after he first arrived, with no appearance in the professional team and only a handful of games with the Reserve.
Arrived in Rennes at the end of a disastrous month of August 2005, the Swedish international full back brought immediate stability to a very shaky defence. Regular in his good performances and highly professional, Erik Edman was one of the most valuable players in the “Rouge et Noir” squad during his first season in Brittany. Unfortunately, he then failed to live up to his initial performances, and Pierre Dréossi opened the door to his exit in January 2008, when he was transferred back in England, at Wigan Athletic.
A member and Captain of the 2003 Gambardella Cup winning team, “Doudou” Jacques Faty has confirmed the hopes put on him, little by a little. His good performances in Renne’s central defence made him a regular in the French U21 selection. However, Mensah’s recruitment and Bourillon’s repositioning as a centre back left him mainly on the bench, casting a gloom over the end of his 2005-2006 season. Tempted to leave the club during the 2006 summer, Jacques Faty eventually decided to stay in Rennes for another season, and profited of numerous injuries in the defensive line to gather playtime. At the end of his contract, he joined Marseille in June 2007.
Mario Melchiot, a 29 years old Dutch international, joined Rennes in July 2006, signing a one year contract in Brittany. Trained at the Ajax Amsterdam, he also played for Chelsea FC and Birmingham City FC. At the end of his contract with Birmingham, relegated in the Championship, Melchiot decided to use the French Ligue 1 to bounce back his career. At the end of an excellent season, he eventually decided to go back to England, signing a contract with Wigan to many supporters’ dismay A versatile defender, mostly playing at right back, the former Chelsea man has won one FA Cup and a Charity Shield.
A Moroccan international Abdeslam Ouaddou struggled to prove he had the ability to be in charge of Rennes’ defence. The target of many criticisms during his stay in Rennes, particularly because of his many defensive blunders, he was left on the bench by the combination of an injury and the emergence of Mensah and Bourillon’s partnership. At the end of his contract, he eventually decided to sign in Greece, for Oympiakos Piraeus, before coming to Ligue 1 soon, signing in Valenciennes.