Full name: Éric Daniel Pierre Cantona
Date of birth: 24/05/1966
Date of birth: 24/05/1966
Has there ever been a more ‘French’ Frenchman in football than Eric
Cantona? He is perhaps one of the most iconic men to have ever played
the game - a loose canon on and off the pitch, with his tall frame
balanced by finesse, flair and skill the like the English game had never
seen before. Ooh Ahh said fans of Cantona and he certainly gave them
something to ooh and ahh about.
Biography
So
the Nike advert goes, Eric Daniel Pierre Cantona was born in a big year
for English football, 1966. His parents moved from Paris to the south
in Marseille, where Eric began to hone his love of the beautiful game.
His father was a huge influence on him and pretty soon Eric was
attracting the spying eyes of the talent-scouting clubs, who took boys
as professionals at only 14.
In 1981, when Eric was 15, he
joined the Auxerre youth team. There he was spotted by the French
national youth team too, but Eric had to do his duty to France in more
ways than football back then. The time had come for him to complete his
year of national service in the army.
Eric completed his stint
but kept up the football throughout and went straight to Auxerre upon
his return and right into their first team. After a promising period
with Auxerre, a bout of illness led to him being dropped before going to
Martigues on loan and then in 1988 to Marseille. Eric remained at
Marseille until 1991, but during this period he was loaned to a couple
of other clubs before finally being taken by Nimes in 1991.
The
fires of the Frenchman’s belly were starting to bubble up. His temper
on the pitch, which had been a huge part of his rocky eight years in
French football, now made him a trouble-maker at Nimes and it was French
legend Michel Platini who suggested Eric should move to the more
aggressive game over the English Channel.
Calais to Dover…to Yorkshire
Eric
was going to sign for Sheffield Wednesday but it was rival Yorkshire
club Leeds United who nabbed the Frenchman. He became a vital part of
the Leeds side that won the last ever 1st Division before it became the
Premier League in 1991/92. As Platini predicted, Cantona enjoyed the
English ethos and discovered quite the goalscoring touch for the Whites,
none more so than in the 1992 Charity Shield, where he bagged a
hat-trick against rivals Liverpool.
Sadly Leeds Utd failed to
cut it in the new Premier League in the following season and their
beloved French star Cantona left the club in Nov 1992 and joined giants
of the English game Manchester United for what would become one of the
biggest bargains in football - only £1.2 million. Man Utd needed a goal
scorer and in Cantona they certainly got that.
The number 7 shirt
It’s
questionable whether the complete dominance Man Utd had on the English
game in the nineties would have been possible had it not been for ooh
ahh Cantona. He appeared in 143 games for the Red Devils between 1992-97
with a fine return of 84 goals. He made an explosive start at Old
Trafford and, in the first two seasons arriving from Leeds, Eric helped
United win the next two league titles, the FA Cup and picked up the
individual reward of 1994 PFA Player of the Year.
His skill
was immense and the partnerships he had with wingers such as Ryan Giggs
and fellow striker Mark Hughes made United an unstoppable force. But it
wasn’t long before those fires were ignited once again and an incident
at Crystal Palace in January 1995 would become a defining moment in the
man’s entire career.
Not everybody was Kung Fu fighting
Fan
abuse directed at players is the norm, but Cantona took issue with a
certain Matthew Simmons at Crystal Palace. Finally snapping after being
sent off, Cantona would deliver the most infamous kick in football,
directed at Simmons. Cantona received a year long ban and 120 hours of
community-service for assault. United consequently lost the league title
to Blackburn that year.
Press speculated that Eric would be
sold after this incident but manager Sir Alex Ferguson had faith in his
star Frenchman and he was rewarded for his belief. Eric returned to form
and he scored on his first game back against Liverpool. Manchester
United went on to win the league title that year again.
Cantona
helped United to 6 out of 7 league titles as well as numerous other cup
wins. However in 1997 Eric announced his early retirement aged only 30.
It came as a surprise to everyone but Eric. He simply felt he had
archived enough so he hung up his boots and turned down his collar.
Man Utd 1 - 0 France
Cantona’s
international playing career remains a mystery. His club form was never
replicated for his nation. His debut was way back in 1987 but it wasn’t
until he was made captain in 1996 for the qualifying stages of the
European Championships that he seemed likely to shine. Sadly, his kung
fu exploits meant he was banned from playing that year for France too
and when he returned, even though it was in time to join his team mates
for Euro 96, the French coach Aimé Jacquet made the (arguably correct)
choice to stick with the emerging Zinedine Zidane.
Eric told
fans and press that he was supporting England and not France during the
competition. He would never play for his country again.
Off le pitch
Cantona’s
colourful character meant he was always as popular outside football as
much as on the pitch. When he retired Eric began a career as an actor
and appeared in a number of short films and feature films in France. His
biggest acting role came alongside Cate Blanchett in the historical
film Elizabeth.
His cheeky flair was also perfect for
advertising and sports giants Nike snapped him up to front their cool
new adverts that featured other top footballers. However, Cantona has
also taken to some rather more strange exploits, for example as coach of
the French Beach Football side, taking them to their own World Cup in
2006, where they finished third.
Eric remains one of the most
talked about and unique players the game has ever seen. In England and
in the Manchester United number 7 shirt (with that collar turned up) he
was a magician. He made the ball do the hard work, as his father had
once taught him. He was what the French would call, la pièce de la
résistance.
Player Statistics
Period | Team | Appearances (Goals) |
---|---|---|
1983 - 1988 | Auxerre | 81 (23) |
1985 - 1986 | Martigues (Loan) | 15 (4) |
1988 - 1991 | Marseille | 40 (13) |
1989 | Bordeaux (Loan) | 11 (6) |
1989 - 1990 | Montpellier (Loan) | 33 (10) |
1991 | Nîmes Olympique | 16 (2) |
1992 | Leeds United | 28 (9) |
1992 - 1997 | Manchester United | 144 (64) |
1987 - 1995 | France | 45 (20) |
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