Trezeguet, the disaster!

2 hours ago 2
ARTICLE AD

The last Israel-France date back to March 2005 and David Trezeguet, scorer for Raymond Domenech’s Blues in Tel Aviv, was sent off five minutes later for a gesture of humor towards an opposing defender.

During its previous match against the selection of Israel, the French team, then led by the sulphurous Raymond Domenech, was greeted with whistles by the public in Tel Aviv, on Wednesday March 30, 2005. The Blues without Zinédine Zidane, Lilian Thuram and Claude Makelele (who came out of international retirement a few months later) had difficult qualifiers for the 2006 World Cup. A year before “Zizou”’s headbutt on Marco Materazzi in the World Cup final in Berlin, there was David Trezeguet’s head-to-head against an Israeli player…

It was precisely “Trezegol” who opened the scoring for the French visitors in front of the 32,150 spectators at the Ramat Gan Stadium, by heading in a cross from Sylvain Wiltord in the 50th minute, but the Juventus center forward was sent off five minutes later. His one and only red card in the French team and one of his three career reds. Tackled from behind by Tal Ben Haïm, the colossus of Bolton at the time, the Franco-Argentinian quickly revealed himself and lightly touched his opponent’s face. A gesture of humor punished with an exclusion by the German referee Mr. Merk. A decision “severe” for Gaël Givet, who started this match.

Trezeguet in front, Henry on the bench

After this 31st goal from Trezeguet in the selection (then overtaking Just Fontaine and Jean-Pierre Papin), the evening on Israeli soil turned into a poor performance since the locals equalized 10 minutes from the end through Walid Badier, who took advantage of a failed intervention by Fabien Barthez. Domenech, however, thought he had made a perfect move by aligning a particularly solid team, with an improbable Benoît Pedretti-Alou Diarra-Patrick Vieira midfield, leaving Sylvain Wiltord and Florent Malouda to occupy the wings of the 4-3-3. Only Vikash Dhorasso came on, in the 91st minute, with Thierry Henry remaining on the bench until the end…

The French team then conceded its fourth draw in six days in its qualifying groups, after a 0-0 against the Israelis at the Stade de France to start the campaign and two other scoreless results against Ireland and Switzerland. Catastrophic! The Blues then recovered and a final victory against Cyprus, 4-0, thanks in particular to Zinédine Zidane’s opener, allowed them to finish at the top of this group, heading to Germany, but in an atmosphere still more deleterious at each gathering in Clairefontaine.

Avatar photo

Written by:

Manu Tournoux

Manu Tournoux is a passionate and knowledgeable football enthusiast with a special focus on French football. Born and raised in France, Manu discovered his love for the beautiful game at a young age and developed a deep understanding of the ins and outs of "Le Championnat." His French roots and extensive experience in football journalism have made him an invaluable asset to the French Football Weekly team.
 
 As an author for the website, Manu's expertise includes not only in-depth analysis of Ligue 1 and Ligue 2 matches but also insightful profiles of up-and-coming talents, detailed transfer news, and engaging coverage of the French national team. His captivating writing style and undeniable passion for the game have earned him a loyal following among our readers.
 
 When he's not crafting engaging articles for French Football Weekly, Manu enjoys attending live matches whenever he can, exploring football culture in various French cities, and engaging in spirited debates with fellow fans. Feel free to follow Manu on Twitter and interact with him as he shares his expert opinions, insights, and love for French football.

Read Entire Article