Jean Tigana

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Jean Tigana
Personal information
Full name Jean Tigana
Date of birth June 23, 1955 (age 51)
Place of birth    Bamako, Mali
Height 168cm
Playing position midfielder
Youth clubs
1965-1972
1972-1974
1974-1975
ASPTT Marseille
SO Les Caillols
Cassis
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1975-1978
1978-1981
1981-1989
1989-1991
Sporting Toulon Var
Olympique Lyonnais
Girondins de Bordeaux
Olympique Marseille
76 (10)
104 (15)
251 (11)
56 (0)   
National team
1980-1988 France 52 (1)
Teams managed
1993-1995
1995-1999
2000-2003
2005-
Olympique Lyonnais
AS Monaco
Fulham F.C.
Beşiktaş J.K.

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only.
* Appearances (Goals)

Jean Tigana (born 23 June 1955 in Bamako, Mali) has played in midfield and managed professional football extensively throughout France, including 52 appearances and 1 goal for the France national football team during the 1980s.

Tigana started his professional career as a player at Toulon, having been spotted fairly late playing part-time while employed in a spaghetti factory and then as a postman. He moved to Lyon in 1978 and then to Bordeaux in a $4M transfer. He was part of the French national football team that won the European Championship in 1984, defeating Spain in the final. In Bordeaux's midfield for eight years, Tigana helped them to three league titles and three French cups, as well as taking them close to European glory on two occasions, losing in the semi-final of the European Cup and Cup Winners' Cup in 1985 and 1987 respectively. Most recently, he took Fulham of London from the Football League First Division to the English Premiership, and later the UEFA Cup (via the Intertoto Cup), but was sacked in March 2003. The club later took him to court, claiming he had wrongly overpaid for certain players such as Steve Marlet, but the charges were dropped.

As an international, he joined Michel Platini, Luis Fernandez and Alain Giresse in what was termed "the Magic Diamond" - one of the great midfield foursomes of all time.

In October 2005, he signed a two and a half year contract with Turkish side Beşiktaş. During that same season, Beşiktaş won their first Turkish Cup in eight years.

Tigana is well-known for his near-addictive consumption of toothpicks when on the bench.

As a manager, he prefers signing younger players and training them to be football stars, rather than signing players who are already stars. While managing AS Monaco FC, he was effective in training Thierry Henry, Ludovic Giuly and David Trezeguet. Similarly, he signed very young and promising players for Beşiktaş J.K., such as Burak Yilmaz, Gokhan Gulec, Fahri Tatan, Matias Delgado and Bobo as well as trying to improve younger players who were already in the squad before he arrived such as Gokhan Zan, Ibrahim Akin and Mehmet Sedef.

Canadian writer Guy Gavriel Kay has admitted [1] that the name of the fictuous province of Tigana in his book of the same name was taken from the name of Jean Tigana.

Preceded by
Paul Bracewell
Fulham F.C. Manager
May 2000-2003
Succeeded by
Chris Coleman
Preceded by
Rıza Çalımbay
Beşiktaş J.K. Manager
October 2005 -
Succeeded by
Incumbent


Flag of France France squad - 1982 FIFA World Cup Fourth Place Flag of France

1 Baratelli | 2 Amoros | 3 Battiston | 4 Bossis | 5 Janvion | 6 Lopez | 7 Mahut | 8 Trésor | 9 Genghini | 10 Platini | 11 Girard | 12 Giresse | 13 Larios | 14 Tigana | 15 Bellone | 16 Couriol | 17 Lacombe | 18 Rocheteau | 19 Six | 20 Soler | 21 Castaneda | 22 Ettori | Coach: Hidalgo

Flag of France France squad - 1984 European Football Championship (1st Title) Flag of France

1 Bats | 2 Amoros | 3 Domergue | 4 Bossis | 5 Battiston | 6 Fernández | 7 Ferreri | 8 Bravo | 9 Genghini | 10 Platini | 11 Bellone | 12 Giresse | 13 Six | 14 Tigana | 15 Le Roux | 16 Rocheteau | 17 Lacombe | 18 Tusseau | 19 Bergeroo | 20 Rust | Coach: Hidalgo

Flag of France France squad - 1986 FIFA World Cup Third Place Flag of France

1 Bats | 2 Amoros | 3 Ayache | 4 Battiston | 5 Bibard | 6 Bossis | 7 Le Roux | 8 Tusseau | 9 Fernández | 10 Platini | 11 Ferreri | 12 Giresse | 13 Genghini | 14 Tigana | 15 Vercruysse | 16 Bellone | 17 Papin | 18 Rocheteau | 19 Stopyra | 20 Xuereb | 21 Bergeroo | 22 Rust | Coach: Michel

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