
How Le Mans rose from sixth tier to cusp of top-flight return
How Le Mans rose from sixth tier to cusp of top-flight returnImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Thibaut Courtois is one of many sportspeople to invest in the French clubByLuke EntwistleBBC Sport in Le...
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Breaking news from the world of sport: How Le Mans rose from sixth tier to cusp of top-flight returnImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Thibaut Courtois is one of many sportspeople to invest in the French clubByLuke EntwistleBBC Sport in Le MansPublished8 minutes agoWords such as "speed" and "acceleration" permeate conversation about the French town of Le Mans - synonymous with the iconic 24-hour race that it hosts - but in this instance they reference its football club, now backed by big-name athletes and on a rapid rise. It has been a long road back for Le Mans FC since they last featured in Ligue 1 in 2010. Bankruptcy in 2013 meant they dropped to the sixth tier of French football.
Last summer, the club returned to Ligue 2 while also welcoming new owners in the form of OutField. The Brazilian investors brought Novak Djokovic, Felipe Massa and Kevin Magnussen with them. Real Madrid and Belgium goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois would later join the project.
Match Details
"We wanted to bring really high-profile people that could help us leverage the project from a branding perspective," OutField co-founder Pedro Oliveira tells Sport. The link with Massa and Magnussen, both former Formula 1 drivers, is perhaps obvious given the town's motorsport heritage. The connection was also forged by a common contact, Georgios Frangulis, the founder and CEO of Oakberry, now an investor and operating partner at Le Mans.
Massa was already an investor in Frangulis' company, and also had a close connection to Magnussen. Frangulis is also the husband of Aryna Sabalenka, the world number one in women's tennis, hence the connection with Djokovic. " told us that Djokovic is crazy about football.
We spoke to Djokovic, he liked the project, so he decided to invest," said Oliveira. Courtois "really liked the whole idea of what are building", and so he reached out to the investors and joined the project back in February. "It is important that they know the world of sport because it is a world that has its own way of working," Le Mans president Thierry Gomez, who arrived in 2016 and is responsible for helping rebuild the club following bankruptcy, said.
Reactions and Expectations
Now, the club are on the brink of a return to the top flight - a win at Bastia on Saturday (19:00 BST) would confirm their promotion. 'Having tomorrow's Mbappe at Le Mans is possible'Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Le Mans' stadium sits inside the famous racetrack At the time of OutField's arrival Le Mans were on a strong financial footing, despite the difficult economic context in French football and their own not-so-distant struggles. That is in part due to Gomez's management of the club, but there was a perceived ceiling that only outside investment would help break.
"There was no urgency; the club didn't need help, but wanted to grow," Gomez added. "Rather than a question of survival, as it is for some, it was a question of finding someone else to take over.
The story has climbed to the top of the sports agenda, with fans and analysts following closely.





