Grieving for the loss of his cousin, midfielder Lassana Diarra joined in with an emotional rendition of the national anthem before his Olympique de Marseille side faced AS Saint-Etienne in Ligue 1 on Sunday.
The French league resumed this weekend in the wake of the terror attacks in Paris, where 130 people died — among them Diarra’s cousin, with whom he was close — and fans from Normandy to Brittany and all the way down to Corsica paid their respects.
At AS Saint-Etienne’s Stade Geoffroy-Guichard, the sadness was plain to see on Diarra’s face as he lined up with his teammates. Saint-Etienne had removed the sponsor’s logo from their shirts and replaced it, touchingly, with a picture of the Eiffel Tower.
Photo: AFP
Saint-Etienne coach Christophe Galtier struggled to contain his emotions as the crowd joined in with the anthem, holding scarves aloft.
A huge banner, with white letters on a black background, simply read: “Repose en Paix” (Rest in Peace).
Marseille won the match 2-0.
Photo: AFP
Marseille’s fans, traditionally the sworn enemies of Paris Saint-Germain, made efforts of their own. They made a banner which was placed at the feet of the players and read “Nous Sommes Paris” (We Are Paris), signed by the fan group Ultras Marseille. It was a moving gesture considering the massive enmity between Marseille supporters and their Parisian counterparts.
A minute’s silence was then impeccably observed, as it was at all four of Sunday’s games.
Standing in the middle of the field, a teenage girl sang a heartfelt rendition of La Marseillaise before Stade Malherbe Caen’s game against Angers SCO, followed by total silence.
“I’ve never experienced a minute’s silence such as this,” Angers coach Stephane Moulin said. “When you feel such solidarity, it’s something huge.”
There were no away fans at any games this weekend, so as not to stretch the nation’s police forces any further.
The matches themselves had little resonance, but Caen moved back up to third place after drawing 0-0
SC Bastia hosted Gazelec Ajaccio in the Corsican derby at the Stade Armand Cesari. A banner spread on the pitch read “Ripusate in Pace” (Rest in Peace). Balloons were released after a minute’s applause.
“It gave me goose-bumps,” Gazelec coach Thierry Laurey said.
Before the 2001-2002 Coupe de France final, some SC Bastia fans had whistled the national anthem at Stade de France. On Sunday, one group of supporters — Bastia 1905 — only entered the stadium after it was played.
Gazelec won 2-1 thanks to a Jacques Zoua penalty-kick and Khalid Boutaib’s second-half goal.
In chilly Brittany, dozens of children dressed either all in blue, white or red formed a human French flag in the center circle before the match between Stade Rennais and Girondins de Bordeaux — whose coach Willy Sagnol shut his eyes tightly during the minute’s silence.
The peaceful mood was ruined when Bordeaux players reacted furiously after referee Sebastien Moreira awarded a penalty in the fourth minute of stoppage-time. Sagnol pushed away his own players and defender Nicolas Pallois was restrained as he tried to confront Moreira.
Striker Giovanni Sio’s spot-kick was saved by Cedric Carrasso and the score finished 2-2.
Bordeaux twice came from behind, with striker Enzo Crivelli canceling out Ousmane Demebele’s early goal and defender Diego Contento replying after Poland forward Kamil Grosicki made it 2-1.
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