While some of France’s biggest names struggle, unfashionable Brest is enjoying its best-ever season and are on course to crown it with qualification for the Champions League for the first time.
As Lyon lies in the bottom half of Ligue 1 and Marseille struggles to keep up in the race for Europe, Brest has emerged as the closest challenger to leader Paris Saint-Germain.
Nobody in the Brittany port city, situated on France’s far western tip in the rainy department of Finistere — which translates as “End of the World” — is imagining their local team can bridge the nine-point gap to PSG.
However, the fact that France will have four representatives in the expanded Champions League next season — up from the current three — may play into the hands of a club that has never before featured in Europe.
Brest comes into this weekend’s trip to Lens sitting six points ahead of fifth-place Nice and on a club-record run of 13 top-flight games without defeat.
It has conceded only five goals in that time, two of which came in a 2-2 draw at PSG, with Brest building its success on a solid defensive foundation.
The closest thing Brest has to a star player is midfielder Pierre Lees-Melou, who scored their winning goal last weekend against Le Havre.
Thirty-year-old former Nice player Lees-Melou, who had a season in the Premier League at Norwich City before joining Brest in 2022, was a target for Brittany rivals Rennes in the January transfer window.
“For me, in his position, there is nobody like him in France. He could play anywhere and deserves to be capped,” said coach Eric Roy.
Brest refused to sell Lees-Melou in January and also managed to keep hold of defender Lilian Brassier amid interest from Monaco.
Instead of being weakened mid-season, they appear to be going from strength to strength under Roy, who took over a team that was in relegation trouble midway through last season and immediately set about transforming their fortunes.
Former Marseille and Sunderland midfielder Roy, 56, had not coached since leaving Nice over a decade earlier but has done so well in Brest that fans last week unfurled a banner in his honor at their Stade Francis-Le Ble which called him “King Eric.”
The club where David Ginola briefly played in the early 1990s have never previously finished higher than eighth.
European qualification may present problems for an outfit with one of Ligue 1’s smallest budgets.
It may not be able to play European matches in their aging stadium, which is soon due to be replaced by a brand-new 15,000-seat venue.
But reaching Europe’s elite club competition would be an incredible achievement.
“Our objective was to avoid relegation which we have already gone well beyond. We are hungry for more and we going to try not to have any regrets,” Lees-Melou told radio station RMC.
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