(Redirected from Éric Cantona)
'Eric Daniel Pierre Cantona' (born
24 May 1966 in
Paris raised in
Marseille) is a
French former
footballer of the late 1980s and 1990s. He ended his professional footballing career at
Manchester United where he won four
Premiership titles in five years, including two League and
FA Cup "
doubles". Cantona is often regarded as having played a major talismanic role in the revival of Manchester United as a footballing powerhouse and he enjoys iconic status at the club. In 2001 he was voted their player of the century, and to this day United fans refer to him as "Eric the King".
Career
France
Cantona's first club was
Auxerre, where he spent two years in the youth team before making his debut in 1983.
The whole of 1984 saw Cantona's footballing career put on hold as he carried out his
national service. After discharge he was loaned out to
FC Martigues in the French Second Division. Rejoining
Auxerre and signing a professional contract in 1986, his performances in the First Division were good enough to earn him his first full international
cap.
He was part of the
French under-21 side that won the
1988 U21 European Championship and shortly after that success, he transferred to
Olympique de Marseille (also known as "L'OM"), the club he supported as a boy, for a French record fee. Cantona had quite often shown signs of being 'short tempered' in his career to date, and in January 1989 during a friendly game against
Torpedo Moscow he ripped off and threw away his jersey after being substituted. His club responded by banning him for a month. Just a few months earlier, he had been banned from international matches for insulting the national coach on TV.
Having struggled to settle at Marseille, Cantona moved to
Bordeaux on a six-month loan and then to
Montpellier on a year-long loan. At Montpellier, he was involved in a fight with team-mate
Jean-Claude Lemoult and threw his boots in Lemoult's face. The incident led to six players demanding that Cantona be sacked. However, with the support of team-mates such as
Laurent Blanc and
Carlos Valderrama, the club retained his services and Cantona was instrumental as the team went on to win the French Cup. His form persuaded Marseille to take him back.
Back at Marseille, Cantona initially played well under the new coach
Franz Beckenbauer. However, the Marseille chairman
Bernard Tapie was not satisfied with the results, and replaced Beckenbauer with
Raymond Goethals with whom Cantona did not see eye-to-eye. Cantona was also continually at odds with Tapie and despite helping the team win the
French Division 1 title, he was transferred to
Nîmes the following season.
In December 1991, during a match for Nîmes he threw the ball at the referee, having been angered by one of his decisions. He was summoned to a disciplinary hearing by the
French Football Federation and was banned for a month. Cantona responded by walking up to each member of the hearing committee in turn and calling him an "idiot". His ban was increased to 2 months. For Cantona this was the last straw and he announced his retirement from football in December 1991.
The French national team coach
Michel Platini was a keen fan of Cantona, and persuaded him to make a comeback. On the advice of
Gérard Houllier, he moved to England to restart his career.
England
Leeds United
After having originally come to
England to trial for
Sheffield Wednesday, in February 1992 Cantona joined Leeds United A.F.C., where he was a part of the team that won the final old
First Division championship in (
1991-92). He was also inspirational in the
Charity Shield 4-3 win over
Liverpool in 1992, scoring a hat-trick.
He however left Leeds before the end of the 1992-93 season, which saw them finishing 17th out of 22 in the newly formed Premier League, moving to Manchester United in November 1992 for the relatively small fee of £1.2 million, much to the disgust of the Leeds fans, although Howard Wilkinson, the Leeds United manager, was eager for him to leave.
Manchester United
United's season had been disappointing up to Cantona's signing. They had had problems scoring goals:
Brian McClair was off form, and summer signing
Dion Dublin had broken his leg early in the season. However, Cantona quickly settled into the team, not only scoring many goals but also creating chances for the other players. For the next two years, United went on an amazing run, winning the inaugural
Premiership in
1993. They retained the
Premiership and with Cantona's two
penalties helping them to a 4-0 win over
Chelsea in the
FA Cup Final. Cantona was voted PFA Player Of The Year in
1994.

Eric Cantona kicks Crystal Palace fan Simmons.
Cantona then became infamous for an incident that occurred on
25 January 1995. In an away match against
Crystal Palace, after being
sent off by the
referee for a vengeful kick on Palace defender
Richard Shaw (after Shaw had pulled his shirt without punishment), he launched a 'kung-fu' style kick against a Crystal Palace fan, Matthew Simmons. At Simmons' subsequent trial for threatening language and behaviour, he attacked the prosecution counsel after being found guilty, leaping over a bench and executing a flying kick of his own. He was sentenced to seven days in jail, but only served 24 hours of his sentence.
[2] At a
press conference called later, Cantona gave what is perhaps his most famous quotation. As the
journalists gathered to hear him speak, Cantona entered the room, sat down and said, in a slow and deliberate manner:
"When the seagulls follow the trawler, it's because they think sardines will be thrown in to the sea"
He then got up from his seat and left, leaving many of the assembled crowd bemused. He was sentenced to 120 hours of
community service after an
appeal court overturned a 2 week prison sentence for
assault. He was also suspended by
The Football Association until the following October. Manchester United eventually lost the Premiership title to
Blackburn.
There had been much speculation that Cantona would leave English football when his ban finished, but
Alex Ferguson persuaded him to stay in Manchester and Cantona was once again inspirational. United had sold several key players at the start of the season and replaced them with players from the club's youth team and their prospects of winning the league were not looking good. Much hype surrounded Cantona's return game, against
Liverpool on
1 October 1995. In the match, Cantona set up a goal for
Nicky Butt inside 2 minutes, and then scored a penalty after
Ryan Giggs (the one player Cantona claimed had a telepathic understanding with him) had been upended. Eight months without competitive football had inevitably taken its toll and Cantona struggled for form prior to Christmas. Things then changed, however, with his goals helping United to recapture the league having been twelve points behind
Newcastle United in January 1996. There was a spate of important 1-0 wins for United, with Cantona the goal scorer, but a 0-3 victory against
Middlesbrough at the
Riverside Stadium decided the title. Fittingly, it was the same 1-0 scoreline, and the same scorer, in that year's FA Cup Final against
Liverpool, with Cantona becoming the first foreign player to lift the FA Cup as captain. The strike of that match happened with 5 minutes remaining and was perhaps Eric Cantona's most famous goal of his career. A corner from the left side troubled Liverpool keeper David James who attempted to fist the ball out of the box. Instead, the ball was deflected down the middle to the top of the box. Cantona, who had backed away when the corner was sent, lined up and took an extremely athletic twisting volley with his right foot firing the ball through a sea of defenders into the net. The game was won. His redemption was complete after the scandals and lows of a year earlier. Cantona gave a post-match interview saying: "You know that's life. Up and down." Manchester United became the first team to win "the double" twice.
Cantona galvanised the United team to greater success with the likes of
Ryan Giggs and youngsters
David Beckham,
Paul Scholes and
Gary Neville emerging under his influence. As United retained the league in the
1996-97 season, Cantona had won six league titles in seven years, the exception being the 1995 season which he had largely missed through suspension. At the end of an admittedly lacklustre season by his standards, which was fuelled by United's elimination at the hands of
Borussia Dortmund in the semi-finals of the
UEFA Champions League, his announcement that he was retiring from football at the age of 30 still came as a surprise, and was met with great dismay by United fans. Shortly afterwards, he became
captain of the French National
Beach Football team.
In 2004 Cantona was quoted as saying ''"I'm so proud the fans still sing my name, but I fear tomorrow they will stop. I fear it because I love it. And everything you love, you fear you will lose."''
In 2006 ''
The Sun'' newspaper reported Cantona as saying that Manchester United had lost their soul and that the current players were a bunch of sheep. The Old Trafford idol reckoned the days of maverick entertainers like himself and
George Best were gone and feared the Red Devils were betraying their past by putting out boring, functional teams. However on the Contrary he was interviewed in the Number 7's issue of 'United Magazine' in August 2006 stating he will only come back to Manchester United as 'Number 1' (meaning not return as assistant manager or coach) and would create a team like no other and play the way he thinks football should be played.
Cantona opposed the
Malcolm Glazer takeover of Manchester United, and has stated that he will not return to the club, even as a manager, while the Glazer family is in charge.
[1]
French National Team

The Art of Game painting featuring Eric Cantona, Phillip Neville, Gary Neville, David Beckham, Nicky Butt and Sir Alex Ferguson.
Eric Cantona was given his full international début against
West Germany in August 1987 by the then national team manager
Henri Michel. In September 1988, angered after being dropped from the national team, Cantona insulted Michel in a post-match TV interview and was indefinitely banned from all international matches. However, Michel was sacked shortly after that having failed to qualify for the
1990 World Cup.
The new coach was
Michel Platini and one of his first acts was to recall Cantona who was a favourite of his. He claimed that Cantona would be selected as long as he was playing competitive top-class football; Platini had initiated Cantona's move to England to restart his career. France qualified for the
1992 European Football Championship held in Sweden, but failed to win a single game despite the striking partnership of Cantona and
Jean-Pierre Papin. Platini resigned after the finals to be replaced by
Gérard Houllier.
Under Houllier, France then failed to qualify for the
1994 World Cup in the U.S.A. after losing the final game 2:1 at home to
Bulgaria when a draw would have sufficed.
David Ginola gave away possession in the game which led to Bulgaria's winning goal by
Emil Kostadinov. Cantona was reportedly angry with Ginola after the game. Houllier resigned and
Aimé Jacquet took over.
Jacquet began to rebuild the national team in preparation for
Euro 96 (the 1996 European Championship) and appointed Cantona as the captain. Cantona remained the captain until the Selhurst Park incident in January 1995. The suspension which resulted from this incident also prevented him from playing in international matches.
By the time Cantona's suspension had been completed, he had lost his role as the team's playmaker to another temperamental star,
Zinedine Zidane, as Jacquet had revamped the squad with some new blood and built it around Zidane. Cantona, Papin and Ginola were never again selected for the French team and missed Euro 96. Though there was criticism about Cantona's omission, as he was playing his best football in the
FA Premier League, Jacquet himself stated that the team had done well without Cantona, and that he wanted to keep faith with the players who had taken them so far.
[3] The decision was vindicated as
Les Bleus subsequently won the
World Cup in 1998.
To this day, Cantona still harbours resentment for the national team but also admiration for his adopted country; at
Euro 2004 and the
2006 FIFA World Cup, he supported England and not France.
[2]
Career in "retirement"
Cantona regularly enjoyed meeting his brother.
Cantona's subsequent career has mostly been in the French cinema, primarily as an
actor although he has also directed a short
film ''Apporte-moi ton amour'' in 2002; outside of France, he had a role as the French ambassador in the movie ''
Elizabeth'', starring
Cate Blanchett in 1998. See filmography below.

Eric Cantona in an advert for
Nike. Cantona was born in the same year as England's
World Cup triumph.
Since retiring from professional football Cantona has appeared in numerous European television advertisements, especially for
Nike. Cantona made cameos in two memorable commercials, one starring the Brazilian national team playing football in an airport, and another involving the national teams of both Brazil and Portugal. In a worldwide advertising campaign during the run-up to the
2002 FIFA World Cup, he starred as the organiser of "underground" games (branded by Nike as 'Scorpion football') between football players like
Thierry Henry,
Hidetoshi Nakata,
Ronaldo,
Roberto Carlos and
Luís Figo. In an earlier UK Nike commercial, he appeared playing "amateur" football on
Hackney Marshes with other stars including
Ian Wright,
Steve McManaman and
Robbie Fowler. In a Nike campaign in the advance of the
2006 FIFA World Cup, Cantona appears as the lead spokesman for the "
Joga Bonito" organization, an association attempting to eliminate acting and fake play from football. He also starred in an Irish
EuroMillions advertisement.
Cantona has continued his interest in
beach soccer games in southern Asia and at the Inaugural Kronenbourg beach soccer in 2002, in the city of Brighton. He managed the French Team which won the inaugural
FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup in 2005. He also coached the 2006 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup French National Team, which finished in third place.
In
1998, the
Football League, as part of its centenary season celebrations, included Cantona on its list of
100 League Legends.
Cantona's achievements in the English League were further marked in 2002 when he was made an Inaugural Inductee of the
English Football Hall of Fame.
Trivia
★ His first ever appearance for Manchester United was against Benfica in Lisbon, in a friendly match to mark the 50th birthday of Eusebio.
★ His first competitive appearance was as a second half substitute against Manchester city at Old Trafford, on December 6th, 1992.
★ His final competitive game came against West Ham on 11th May 1997. His final appearance before retiring was five days later on Friday 16th May. In a testimonial for David Busst against Coventry City at Highfield Road, Eric scored twice in a 2-2 draw.
★ Cantona is still featuring in Nike ads today - nearly ten years after his retirement, he fronted their Germany 2006 advertising campaign.
★ He was married to Isobel and has two children but is now divorced.
★ His brother Joel was also a footballer and played for Marseille,
Újpesti TE and Stockport County.
★ He became captain of the French National Beach Football team and won the beach soccer world championship in Rio de Janeiro.
★ Cantona joins the company of fellow Manchester United players
George Best and
Ryan Giggs along with
Alfredo Di Stéfano, who have never played in a World Cup.
Partial filmography
★ ''
Le bonheur est dans le pré'' - 1995 - Lionel
★ ''Eleven Men Against Eleven'' - 1995 - Player (uncredited)
★ ''
Elizabeth'' - 1998 - Monsieur de Foix
★ ''Mookie'' - 1998 - Antoine Capella
★ ''Les enfants du marais'' - 1999 - Jo Sardi
★ ''La grande vie!'' (English title: ''The High Life'') - 2001 - Joueur de pétanque 2
★ ''L'Outremangeur'' (English title: ''The Over-Eater'') - 2003 - Séléna
★ ''Les Clefs de bagnole'' (English title: ''The Car Keys'') - 2003
★ ''La vie est à nous'' - 2005
★ ''Une belle histoire'' - 2005
★ ''Lisa et le pilote d'avion'' - 2007
★ ''Le Deuxième souffle'' (English title: ''Second Wind'') - 2007
Quotations
By him
★ "When the seagulls follow the trawler, it is because they think sardines will be thrown into the sea."
★ "My best moment? I have a lot of good moments but the one I prefer is when I kicked the hooligan."
★ "I didn't study; I live. You can't study these things - life teaches them to you. You don't find them in a book... I've read a lot of Socrates on Page 3 of the Sun."
★ "Sometimes in life one experiences an emotion which is so strong that it is difficult to think, or to reason. Sometimes you get submerged by emotion. I think it's very important to express it - which doesn't necessarily mean hitting someone. I am very mistrustful of people who are constantly over-intellectualising things. It kills passion. You have to allow yourself to lose control from time to time."
★ "I feel close to the rebelliousness and vigour of the youth here. Perhaps time will separate us, but nobody can deny that here, behind the windows of Manchester, there is an insane love of football, of celebration and of music."
★ "When you are a rich man you are proud to own a Rolls Royce and when you are a poor man you are proud to own a Renault."
★ "France does not deserve Auxerre... England maybe, but France does not." about his youth club
AJ Auxerre.
★ "The Irish public should bow to the feet of
Roy Keane, not slate him as he is the best player they will ever have to boast."
★ "After his first training session in heaven, George Best, from his favourite right wing, turned the head of God who was filling in at left-back. I would love him to save me a place in his team - George Best that is, not God."
★ "I am God."
★ "I might have said that, but on the whole I talk a lot of rubbish."
★ "I don't play against a particular team. I play against the idea of losing." The latter part of the quote was scrawled on Cantona's body for his official photograph for ''
FIFA 100'',
Pelé's list of the 125 greatest living footballers.
★ Described national teammate
Didier Deschamps derisively as "the water-carrier". Cantona meant that Deschamps only existed to pass the ball to more talented players.
★ "I had heart, and I know without heart you cannot play."
★ "Joga Bonito! Play Beautiful!"
★ "No, it is me." (After being asked whether
Zinedine Zidane or
Michel Platini was the greatest-ever French footballer
[3])
★ "Goals are like babies... They are all beautiful."
About him
★ "How to create space, and then weave past a couple of defenders,
McClair, here's Cantona! He's done it! That is magnificent by Cantona. And after all his problems, and his lack of form, and the criticism that's come his way, there is the perfect riposte." ''(Commentator for
Manchester United F.C. vs.
Sunderland A.F.C. match at Old Trafford, 21st of December, 1996.)''
★ "I'd give all the champagne I've ever drunk to be playing alongside him in a big European match at Old Trafford." ''(
George Best, 1960s Manchester United legend, Eric pays a fine compliment to George)''
★ "Collar turned up, back straight, chest stuck out, he glided into the arena as if he owned the fucking place. Any arena, but nowhere more effectively than Old Trafford. This was his stage. He loved it, the crowd loved him" (
Roy Keane, Cantona's successor as Manchester United captain.)
★ "Who needs
Pelé when you've got Eric Cantona?!"
Martin Tyler commentating on
Manchester United FC vs.
Chelsea FC in the
1993-94 season. Cantona had just rattled the bar from the halfway line.
★
Paul Ince about Cantona before he entered court: 'We stayed at the Croydon Park hotel. So we got up in the morning and I've got me suit on - the nuts, know what I mean? I knock on Eric's door and he's standing in jacket, white shirt, long collars like that [he gestures to describe long, pointed collars], unbuttoned so you can see his chest. "Eric, you can't go to court like that", I told him and he says, "I am Cantona, I can go as I want"'.
★ "If a Frenchman goes on about seagulls, trawlers and sardines, he’s called a philosopher. I’d just be called a short Scottish bum talking crap."
Gordon Strachan in response to Cantona's famous quote following the 1995 Crystal Palace-Simmons incident.
★ "Cantona making an early run...here he is. Lovely goal. Lovely goal." This commentary was used in a song "Ooh Aah Cantona" and Man United fans still recite the commentary to one another.
Bibliography
★
FourFourTwo Great Footballers: Eric Cantona, , Rob, Wightman, Virgin Books, 2002,
★
Cantona on Cantona: Reflections of a sporting legend, , Eric, Cantona, Andre Deutsch, 1996,
★
La Philosophie De Cantona, , Michael, Robinson, Prentice Hall, 1995,
★
The Meaning of Cantona: Meditations on Life, Art and Perfectly Weighted Balls, , Terence, Blacker, Mainstream Publishing, 1997,
References
★
Biography on the official Manchester United website
Notes
1. ''FourFourTwo Great Footballers: Eric Cantona'' p. 5
2. http://observer.guardian.co.uk/osm/story/0,,1337066,00.html
3. ''FourFourTwo Great Footballers: Eric Cantona'' p. 198
External links
★
Career profile with pictures
★
Ooh aah Cantona from thefa.com
★
Eric Cantona: Appreciation, Recollections, Career Details
★
Idle Idol: Eric Cantona by Robert Newman
★
Pictures of Eric Cantona playing beach soccer
★
Career Statistics at soccerbase.com
★
A fans view of the King of Old Trafford
★
A WHO`S WHO of MANCHESTER UNITED FC
★