Le Classique
PSG/OM at the Parc des Princes in September 2007.
Other namesLe Classico, Le Clasico, Le Derby de France
LocationFrance
TeamsParis Saint-Germain
Olympique de Marseille
First meeting12 December 1971
Division 1
Marseille 4–2 Paris Saint-Germain
Latest meeting24 September 2023
Ligue 1
Paris Saint-Germain 4–0 Marseille
Next meeting31 March 2024
Ligue 1
Marseille v Paris Saint-Germain
StadiumsParc des Princes, Paris
Stade Vélodrome, Marseille
Statistics
Meetings total106
Most winsParis Saint-Germain (49)
Most player appearancesSteve Mandanda (30)
Top scorerZlatan Ibrahimović (11)
All-time recordParis Saint-Germain: 49
Draw: 23
Marseille: 34
Largest victoryParis Saint-Germain 5–1 Marseille
Division 1
(8 January 1978)
Marseille 4–0 Paris Saint-Germain
Division 1
(28 November 1986)
Marseille 1–5 Paris Saint-Germain
Ligue 1
(26 February 2017)
Paris Saint-Germain 4–0 Marseille
Ligue 1
(27 October 2019)
Paris Saint-Germain 4–0 Marseille
Ligue 1
(24 September 2023)

Le Classique (French pronunciation: [lə klasik], The Classic) is the rivalry between French professional football clubs Paris Saint-Germain and Olympique de Marseille. The duo are the two most successful clubs in French football, and the only French teams to have won major European trophies. Therefore, the fixture is the biggest rivalry in France.

PSG and OM were the dominant teams prior to the emergence of Olympique Lyonnais in the 2000s, and are the most followed French teams internationally. Both clubs are at or near the top of the French attendance lists each season. Their meetings during the 1970s gave little indication the two would become major adversaries. The newly formed Parisians were trying to assemble a competitive team, while the Olympians were Ligue 1 contenders.

The rivalry began in earnest in 1986 when PSG won their first championship and OM was bought by Bernard Tapie. By the end of the decade, PSG was fighting for the 1988–89 title against Tapie's Marseille. The accusations made by PSG president Francis Borelli against Tapie and OM for fixing matches during that season were a contributor to their growing rivalry.

In the 1990s, tensions between the two sides escalated. French TV channel Canal+ bought PSG in 1991 with the aim of breaking Marseille's hegemony but then agreed with Tapie to emphasize the animosity between them as a way to promote the league. With equivalent financial backing, PSG and OM became the main contenders in the title race. Both sides were less successful in the late 1990s and the 2000s but the rivalry remained strong. Since the 2010s, the matchup has been dominated by PSG, and the significant investment of their Qatari owners has created a wide gap between the clubs.

History

Origins

Personal picture of the football player Didier Deschamps in Spain.
Didier Deschamps was the captain of the great early 1990s Marseille side.

The term "Le Classique" is modelled after El Clásico, contested between Real Madrid and Barcelona. The Spanish press borrowed the term Clásico from South America, where most countries use it to label the biggest rivalries in the continent, such as the Superclásico between Boca Juniors and River Plate, and the Uruguayan Clásico between Nacional and Peñarol.[1] The fixture is also known as "Le Classico", "Le Clasico", "Le Derby de France", "PSG/OM" or "OM/PSG".[1][2][3]

Paris Saint-Germain were founded in 1970, and during that decade they were not at the same level as Olympique de Marseille, traditionally a giant of the French game. Formed in 1899, Marseille have been competing for trophies for most of their history and, for the first 87 years at least, were more concerned about games against Saint-Étienne or Girondins de Bordeaux than trips to the capital.[4] Today, the clash is considered France's biggest rivalry as well as one of the greatest in club football.[5][6] The duo are French football's most successful clubs as well as the only two French sides to lift a major European trophy.[7] They were also the undisputed top teams before the irruption of Olympique Lyonnais at the start of the 2000s.[7] Nevertheless, they still are the two most popular French clubs in the country and abroad, ahead of Lyon.[2][8][9] Both teams usually top the attendance lists every campaign as well.[2]

Like all major rivalries, it has a historical, cultural and social importance that makes it more than just a football match. People in France see it as a battle between the two largest cities in France: Paris against Marseille, capital against province, north against south, the hub of political power against the working class and the aristocracy's club against the people's club.[7][2][10] Ironically, though, PSG were born as a fan-owned team, while OM were founded by a circle of aristocratic gentlemen.[11][12] In short, the seeds of the fiercest French rivalry yet were always there but they only began to grow from 1986 onwards.[4] That year, PSG clinched their maiden championship and French businessman Bernard Tapie bought Marseille. Tapie proceeded to invest huge amounts of money in star signings such as Chris Waddle, Abedi Pelé, Jean-Pierre Papin, Basile Boli, Enzo Francescoli, Eric Cantona, Didier Deschamps and Marcel Desailly.[7][4][10]

The clash increased in importance and ferocity when they went head to head for the 1988–89 title, during which PSG president Francis Borelli accused Tapie and OM of fixing matches.[2][13][14] Between 1989 and 1992, the southerners won four successive Ligue 1 championships.[10][14] They also finished runners-up in the 1990–91 European Cup before claiming the 1992–93 UEFA Champions League.[10] Marseille fans have never let their PSG counterparts forget this triumph with the slogan "A jamais les premiers" (Forever First).[15] All these successes, however, were also tainted by match-fixing allegations from title rivals PSG and Monaco as well as other clubs, adding further fuel to the rivalry.[13][16][17][18]

Golden era and scandal

See also: French football bribery scandal

Tapie en 2011 en tournée en Belgique pour "OSCAR".
Bernard Tapie instigated the rivalry in the early 1990s.

Despite proving to be tough competitors, PSG were still no match for Marseille. This was the case until 1991 and the arrival of new owners Canal+, the biggest pay television station in France.[10] The main reason behind the buyout was to revive interest in a Ligue 1 completely dominated by Marseille as well as lure more subscribers by assembling a team that could beat them.[19] With Bordeaux a fading force, Bernard Tapie needed a new domestic rival to make the championship attractive again.[14][19] Tapie encouraged Canal+ to help him promote the enmity between the two clubs to a confrontational level, and the rivalry was born.[2][14] Backed by their own rich owner, PSG began to flex muscles in the transfer market with Tapie's Marseille, recruiting top talent like David Ginola, Youri Djorkaeff, George Weah and Raí.[2][10] The league was now a two-horse race and they battled each other for the title in the early 1990s.[10]

Between 1989 and 1998, PSG and OM picked up five league titles, four Coupe de France, two Coupe de la Ligue, a UEFA Champions League, a UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and reached two other European finals.[4] Many experts argue that those Marseille (1989–1994) and PSG (1993–1998) sides were two of the greatest teams in the history of French football.[20][21] The hype heightened tensions between supporters as well, and reports of fan violence became more frequent in the 1990s.[4] Since then, the matchup has been marred with injuries and arrests.[2]

The rivalry reached new heights during the 1992–93 French Division 1 campaign. PSG lost the title decider against OM and finished second.[20] Shortly after, however, Tapie and Marseille were found guilty of match-fixing, in what became known as the French football bribery scandal.[10][21] The French Football Federation stripped OM of their title and offered it to runners-up PSG, who refused it because club owners Canal+ thought that claiming the trophy would anger their subscribers back in Marseille.[20][22] As a result, the 1992–93 title remains unattributed. Canal+ even refused letting PSG participate in next year's Champions League after UEFA excluded Marseille from the competition. Third-placed Monaco took the spot instead.[22]

OM were then forcibly relegated to Ligue 2 in 1994 for lacking the necessary funds to continue among the elite.[10][23] With Marseille out of the picture, PSG would go on to claim nine trophies during that decade. Most notably, they won their second league title in 1994 and their crowning glory, the 1995–96 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, becoming only the second French team to win a major European title (after OM), and the last one to date.[24][25]

Marseille and their fans have since accused the Parisian political elite of plotting against them to crown PSG as the kings of French football.[26][27] This feeling of injustice stems from the political dimension to the rivalry, which has been described by FIFA as pitting "the chosen ones of French football (the politically-favored PSG) against their enfants terribles (the unruly OM)."[28] PSG have been indeed favored a few times. Club president Daniel Hechter was found guilty of running a ticketing scheme in 1977 and his replacement, Francis Borelli, incurred serious debts and financial irregularities in 1991. Unlike their arch-rivals, PSG were not relegated in either case; instead, they were bought by Canal+ with the specific goal of dethroning OM.[20] Two decades later, French president Nicolas Sarkozy, a well-known supporter of PSG, which was then struggling financially, facilitated the club's purchase by Qatar Sports Investments.[29]

Rivalry today

Kylian Mbappé, Lionel Messi et Neymar au retour des vestiaires pour commencer le deuxième mi-temps du match contre l'Olympique de Marseille, le 24 octobre 2021 au stade Vélodrome.
Led by high-profile signings, including Kylian Mbappé (left), Lionel Messi (center) and Neymar (right), PSG have dominated Marseille since the 2010s.

Marseille quickly bounced back into the top flight in 1996 after two seasons in Ligue 2 but their new owner was not so keen to spend like Bernard Tapie.[10] Likewise, PSG owners Canal+ slowly began to reduce their investment in the transfer market.[10] Nonetheless, the rivalry remained just as intense.[4] OM only lost twice to their northern rivals between September 1990 and February 2000, before Paris became the dominant force in the 2000s, during which they produced a spectacular run of eight consecutive wins between 2002 and 2004.[30]

In spite of both laying claim to being France's biggest club, PSG and OM have rarely been at their best at the same time and, thus, have competed directly for titles only a few times. They first met in a cup final in the 2006 Coupe de France Final where Paris defeated Marseille 2–1 to clinch the title.[3][30] The duo have also never been drawn together in UEFA competitions.[30] The closest they were of facing one another in Europe was in the 2008–09 edition of the UEFA Cup but were eliminated in the quarter-finals by Ukrainian teams Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk, thus preventing a semi-final matchup between them.[31]

The balance briefly shifted again in favor of Marseille during the late 2000s and early 2010s,[30] with the Olympians claiming the Ligue 1 and French League Cup double in 2010, ending their 17-year trophy drought,[13][32] and then downing Paris in the 2010 Trophée des Champions on penalties.[33] Since the arrival of Qatar Sports Investments as PSG owners in 2011, though, the matchup has turned into a one-sided affair.[34] Now with the money to compete with the best clubs in Europe, many great players have been part of PSG's all star-lineup that Ligue 1 had not seen since the early 1990s Marseille squads, including Neymar, Kylian Mbappé, Thiago Silva, Zlatan Ibrahimović, Edinson Cavani, Ángel Di María and Lionel Messi.[2][35][36] Paris have monopolized French football, becoming the country's most successful club in history in terms of titles won.[11]

In turn, OM have struggled to keep up.[34] Trophy-less since the 2012 French League Cup, they have occasionally threatened PSG's hegemony.[30][37] Marseille went head-to-head against eventual champions Paris for the league crown in 2013 as both sides finished in the two top spots for the first time since the 1994 title race, which PSG also won. They had previously competed for the championship in 1989 and 1993, with OM overcoming second-placed Paris both times.[3][30] PSG were also crowned champions ahead of Marseille in 2020 and 2022.[38][39] Further, they clashed in the 2016 Coupe de France Final and the 2020 Trophée des Champions, with PSG clinching both titles.[40][41]

The Parisians have won 23 out of the 30 matches played since their takeover. On the other hand, the Olympians have defeated their arch-rivals just three times.[30] In September 2020, Marseille's second win in nearly nine years sparked a new fire into the rivalry.[42] OM midfielder Dimitri Payet mocked PSG's 2020 UEFA Champions League final defeat to Bayern Munich ahead of kickoff, leading to a massive brawl with PSG superstar Neymar and Marseille defender Álvaro as protagonists.[42][43]

Notable games

First blood for Marseille, biggest win for PSG

Roger Magnusson et Bernard Bosquier à l'Aéroport d'Amsterdam-Schiphol pour le match Ajax Amsterdam-Olympique de Marseille.
Marseille defender Bernard Bosquier (right) scored the first goal in the history of Le Classique.

Marseille supremacy and Sauzée's title-winning goal

Basile Boli.
Marseille's Basile Boli scored one of the fixture's best goals.

Birth of Ligue 1's greatest rivalry

Ronaldinho, Pauleta and PSG's eight consecutive wins

PSG's Ronaldinho terrorised Marseille's defenders.

PSG triumph in Le Classique French Cup final

Fête Coupe de France / 6 mai 2006.
PSG defeated Marseille in the 2006 French Cup final.

H1N1 pandemic and Marseille's super cup victory over PSG

Zlatan's Parisian hegemony: ten back-to-back wins

Zlatan Ibrahimović.
Former PSG striker and Le Classique top scorer Zlatan Ibrahimović never lost a match against Marseille.

COVID-19 pandemic and "Battle of Paris"

Neymar Jr official presentation for Paris Saint-Germain, 4 August 2017.
Neymar's feud with Álvaro sparked a new fire into the rivalry.

Supporters

Violent incidents

Tifo choreographies

Statistics

As of 24 September 2023.[30][108][109]
OM (white) / Paris SG (red).
Starting lineups of both teams in the 2010 Trophée des Champions.
Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) Draw (including penalties) Olympique de Marseille (OM)

Honours

See also: Football records and statistics in France

Competition Titles won
PSG OM
Ligue 1 11 9
Ligue 2 1 1
Coupe de France 14 10
Coupe de la Ligue 9 3
Trophée des Champions 12 2
National total 47 25
UEFA Champions League 0 1
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1 0
UEFA Intertoto Cup 1 1
International total 2 2
Overall total 49 27

Finals

Main article: List of Le Classique matches

29 April 2006 Coupe de France Marseille 1–2 Paris Saint-Germain Saint-Denis
Maoulida 67' Report Kalou 6'
Dhorasoo 49'
Stadium: Stade de France
Attendance: 79,061
Referee: Laurent Duhamel
28 July 2010 Trophée des Champions Marseille 0–0
(5–4 p)
Paris Saint-Germain Tunis, Tunisia
Report 1
Report 2
Stadium: Stade Olympique Hammadi Agrebi
Attendance: 56,237
Referee: Aouaz Trabelsi
Penalties
Taiwo soccer ball with check mark
Ben Arfa soccer ball with check mark
Lucho González soccer ball with red X
Kaboré soccer ball with check mark
Gnabouyou soccer ball with check mark
Cissé soccer ball with check mark
soccer ball with red X Luyindula
soccer ball with check mark Jallet
soccer ball with check mark Nenê
soccer ball with check mark Kežman
soccer ball with check mark Makélélé
soccer ball with red X Giuly
21 May 2016 Coupe de France Marseille 2–4 Paris Saint-Germain Saint-Denis
Thauvin 12'
Batshuayi 87'
Report Matuidi 2'
Ibrahimović 47' (pen.), 82'
Cavani 57'
Stadium: Stade de France
Attendance: 80,000
Referee: Clément Turpin
13 January 2021 Trophée des Champions Paris Saint-Germain 2–1 Marseille Lens
Icardi 39'
Neymar 85' (pen.)
Report Payet 89' Stadium: Stade Bollaert-Delelis
Attendance: 0 [a]
Referee: Ruddy Buquet

Overall record

Competition Matches Wins Draws Goals Goal difference
PSG OM PSG OM PSG OM
Ligue 1 88 36 32 20 122 105 +17 −17
Coupe de France 14 10 2 2 27 13 +14 −14
Coupe de la Ligue 2 2 0 0 5 2 +3 −3
Trophée des Champions 2 1 0 1 2 1 +1 −1
Total 106 49 34 23 156 121 +35 −35

Head-to-head ranking in Ligue 1

P. 72 75 76 77 78 79 80 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
3 3 3 3 3
4 3 4 4 4 4 4
5 5 5 5 5 5 5
6 6 6 6
7 7 7 7
8 8
9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9
10 10
11 11 11 11
12 12 12 12
13 13 13 13 13
14 14
15 15 15 15 15 15
16 16 16
17 17
18
19 19
20

Total: Marseille with 22 higher finishes, Paris Saint-Germain with 22 higher finishes (out of 44 seasons with both clubs in Ligue 1).

Records

As of 24 September 2023.[30][111]
Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) Draw or Neutral Venue Olympique de Marseille (OM)

Club

Steve Mandanda in 2018.
Steve Mandanda
Marco Verratti
Zlatan Ibrahimović
Josip Skoblar en 1970.
Josip Skoblar
French soccer player (striker).
André-Pierre Gignac
Kylian Mbappé
Neymar.
Neymar

Biggest wins

Winning margin by 4 goals or more.

Rank Date Home team Result Away team Margin
1 8 January 1978 PSG 5–1 OM 4 goals
28 November 1986 OM 4–0 PSG
26 February 2017 OM 1–5 PSG
27 October 2019 PSG 4–0 OM
24 September 2023 PSG 4–0 OM

Most goals in a match

Six goals or more.

Rank Date Home team Result Away team Goals
1 7 April 1979 PSG 4–3 OM 7
2 12 December 1971 OM 4–2 PSG 6
5 October 1974 OM 4–2 PSG
8 January 1978 PSG 5–1 OM
26 October 2008 OM 2–4 PSG
21 May 2016 OM 2–4 PSG
26 February 2017 OM 1–5 PSG

Longest runs

Winning

Five consecutive matches won or more.

Rank Club From To Wins
1 PSG 31 October 2012 21 May 2016 10
2 PSG 26 October 2002 10 November 2004 8
3 PSG 7 April 1979 8 September 1984 6
4 PSG 25 February 2018 27 October 2019 5
Unbeaten

Five consecutive matches unbeaten or more.

Rank Club From To Wins Draws Matches
1 PSG 8 April 2012 13 September 2020 17 3 20
2 PSG 26 October 2002 16 October 2005 8 1 9
OM 8 September 1990 11 April 1995 6 3
3 PSG 7 April 1979 8 September 1984 6 0 6
4 OM 20 September 1975 30 August 1977 4 1 5
OM 12 December 1971 9 May 1975 3 2
OM 22 November 1996 29 November 1998 2 3
PSG 13 January 2021 8 February 2023 4 1

Highest attendances

All-time highest attendances (PSG home, OM home and Neutral venue).

Home team Date Stadium Location Attendance
Neutral 21 May 2016 Stade de France Saint-Denis, France 80,000
OM 26 February 2023 Stade Vélodrome Marseille, France 65,894
PSG 23 October 2016 Parc des Princes Paris, France 47,929

Individual

Most appearances

Rank Player Position Club Period Apps
1 France Steve Mandanda GK OM 2007–2016
2017–2022
30
2 Italy Marco Verratti MF PSG 2012–2023 22
3 Brazil Marquinhos DF PSG 2013– 21
4 France Sylvain Armand DF PSG 2004–2013 18
5 France Jean-Marc Pilorget DF PSG 1975–1989 16
France Édouard Cissé MF PSG 1997–2007
OM 2009–2011
6 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Safet Sušić MF PSG 1982–1991 15
France Joël Bats GK PSG 1985–1992
France Mathieu Valbuena MF OM 2006–2014
France Blaise Matuidi MF PSG 2011–2017
Brazil Thiago Silva DF PSG 2012–2020
Argentina Ángel Di María MF PSG 2015–2022
France Florian Thauvin MF OM 2013–2015
2016–2021
France Dimitri Payet MF OM 2013–2015
2017–2023

Top scorers

Rank Player Position Club Period Goals
1 Sweden Zlatan Ibrahimović FW PSG 2012–2016 11
2 France Kylian Mbappé FW PSG 2017– 9
3 Uruguay Edinson Cavani FW PSG 2013–2020 7
3 Portugal Pauleta FW PSG 2003–2008 6
4 France Hervé Florès FW OM 1975–1981 5
Argentina Ángel Di María MF PSG 2015–2022
5 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Josip Skoblar FW OM 1966–1967
1969–1975
4
Republic of the Congo François M'Pelé FW PSG 1973–1979
Algeria Mustapha Dahleb MF PSG 1974–1984
Ghana André Ayew FW OM 2007–2015
France André-Pierre Gignac FW OM 2010–2015
Argentina Mauro Icardi FW PSG 2019–2023
Brazil Neymar FW PSG 2017–2023

Hat-tricks

No player has ever scored a hat-trick in Le Classique.[85]

Playing for both clubs

Despite all of the bad blood, as many as 49 players have played for both clubs.[111] Some of them have even made the round trip several times, including Jérôme Leroy, Xavier Gravelaine, Boubacar Sarr and Bruno Germain.[112] When OM and PSG became Ligue 1's best of enemies in the early 1990s, transfers began to make headlines.[112] Talented French youngster Jocelyn Angloma was the rivalry's first notorious deal between the two sides; he left Paris for Marseille in 1990.[112] Managers have also crossed the divide, albeit without any of the drama. Only two coaches have been at the helm of both clubs: Lucien Leduc and Tomislav Ivić.[112]

Picture of Lorik Cana during round of 32 of "Coupe de France" Versus FC Metz.
Lorik Cana in 2006, shortly after swapping Paris for Marseille.

PSG made the next big move with the signings of French football prodigies Peter Luccin and Stéphane Dalmat from OM in 2000. After a convincing season in the south, the midfield duo responded positively to the sirens of the capital to compete in the 2000–01 UEFA Champions League.[113][114] Marseille hit back with adored PSG captain Frédéric Déhu who, following a confrontation with manager Vahid Halilhodžić, decided to sign for OM when his contract expired in 2004.[64][68] When his deal was revealed days before the 2004 French Cup Final, the match became a nightmare for Déhu, who was constantly booed by PSG fans. After lifting the trophy, he disappeared into the dressing room in tears and refused to perform a lap of honor with his teammates.[63]

That same summer, minutes before the end of the transfer window, fan favorite Fabrice Fiorèse joined Déhu at Marseille.[63][64] Citing a conflict with Halilhodžić as the main reason for him leaving,[64] Fiorèse also said that OM had always been the club of his dreams.[60] Upon their return to the Parc des Princes, Déhu and Fiorèse were whistled and jeered by PSG supporters, who also displayed dozens of insulting banners, including one from the Kop of Boulogne aimed at Fiorèse that read "We have Jesus (along with a portrait of PSG defender Mario Yepes), you have Judas."[64]

In similar fashion, beloved PSG Academy graduate Lorik Cana signed for Marseille in 2005 after losing his starting place under manager Laurent Fournier.[63][68] Like Fiorèse before him, Cana declared that he was joining 'the club of my heart' in his official presentation.[113] PSG fans welcomed him back with a flood of insults in 2006.[68] Later that year, Modeste M'bami also signed with OM despite previously saying he would never play for them.[115] In the next Classico in Paris, one banner read "Déhu, Fiorèse, Cana, M'bami, the list of whores keeps growing."[116] PSG consoled themselves with Peguy Luyindula, who signed from Marseille in 2007 claiming to have fulfilled a lifelong ambition. Luyindula was the last direct transfer between the two sides to date. As part of the deal, it was agreed he would not make his debut in the following match against OM.[117][118]

But Marseille had the last laugh so far. Idolized by fans during his stint in the capital, Argentine defender Gabriel Heinze told reporters in 2005 that he loved PSG and would only play for them if he ever went back to France.[63][68] Four years later, however, with his return for the 2009–10 season almost a done deal, Heinze decided instead to sign for OM at the last minute.[113] The Parisian fans welcomed him back to the Parc des Princes with insults, whistles and hostile banners, only for him to net Marseille's winning goal,[63][68] becoming the second player, after Boubacar Sarr, to have scored for both clubs in the clash.[30] Sarr, however, remains the only one to score for both teams as well as being transferred directly between them.[30][111] The 'transfer war' has cooled down since then as Qatar-backed PSG have had the financial muscle to recruit any player in the world, while OM have had to settle for more modest targets.[118]

List of players

As of 26 February 2023.[111]
Gabriel Heinze.
Gabriel Heinze (pictured) and Boubacar Sarr are the only players to have scored for both clubs in Le Classique.
Gabriel Heinze.
Peguy Luyindula was the last direct transfer between the two sides to date. He joined PSG from Marseille in 2007.
No. Player
1 France Jean Djorkaeff
2 France Jean-Pierre Destrumelle
3 France Jean-Louis Leonetti
4 France Jean-Pierre Dogliani
5 France Jacky Novi
6 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Ilija Pantelić
7 Cameroon Jean-Pierre Tokoto
8 Senegal Boubacar Sarr
9 France Michel N'Gom
10 France Marcel De Falco
11 France Claude Lowitz
12 France François Brisson
13 France William Ayache
No. Player
14 France Yvon Le Roux
15 France Thierry Laurey
16 France Daniel Xuereb
17 France Bernard Pardo
18 France Jocelyn Angloma
19 France Laurent Fournier
20 France Bruno Germain
21 France Alain Roche
22 France Benoît Cauet
23 France Xavier Gravelaine
24 Algeria Djamel Belmadi
25 France Patrick Colleter
26 France Florian Maurice
No. Player
27 France Daniel Bravo
28 France Jérôme Leroy
29 Guinea Kaba Diawara
30 France Cyrille Pouget
31 France Bruno Ngotty
32 France Stéphane Dalmat
33 France Peter Luccin
34 Liberia George Weah
35 France Pascal Nouma
36 France Jérôme Alonzo
37 Brazil André Luiz
38 France Frédéric Déhu
39 France Fabrice Fiorèse
No. Player
40 Albania Lorik Cana
41 Cameroon Modeste M'bami
42 France Péguy Luyindula
43 France Zoumana Camara
44 France Claude Makélélé
45 France Édouard Cissé
46 France Fabrice Abriel
47 Argentina Gabriel Heinze
48 France Hatem Ben Arfa
49 France Lassana Diarra
  Player scored for both clubs in Le Classique.[30]
  Player transferred directly between the two sides.[111]
  Player scored for both clubs in Le Classique and transferred directly between them.[30][111]

Most expensive transfers

As of 26 February 2023.[118]
Rank Player Year From To Fee (€) Source
1 France Peter Luccin 2000 OM PSG €13.5m [118]
2 France Stéphane Dalmat 2000 OM PSG €10.75m [118]
3 France Jocelyn Angloma 1991 PSG OM €6m [118]
4 France Florian Maurice 1998 PSG OM €6m [118]
5 France Peguy Luyindula 2007 OM PSG €4m [118]
6 Albania Lorik Cana 2005 PSG OM €4m [118]
7 France Fabrice Fiorèse 2005 PSG OM €3m [118]
8 Cameroon Modeste M'bami 2006 PSG OM €2.5m [118]
  Paris Saint-Germain (PSG)
  Olympique de Marseille (OM)

Notes

  1. ^ Match was played behind closed doors due to restrictions on attendance related to the COVID-19 pandemic in France.[110]

References

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  3. ^ a b c d "Le Classique: When two tribes go to war". French Football Weekly. 6 October 2012. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "Marseille vs PSG: France's bitter and violent north-south divide laid bare". FourFourTwo. 1 June 2003. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  5. ^ "The top 50 football derbies on the world 20-11". Mirror Online. 13 April 2018. Retrieved 29 March 2019.
  6. ^ "The 50 biggest derbies in world football". FourFourTwo. 12 December 2020. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
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  8. ^ "Le PSG est le nouveau club préféré des Français". Onze Mondial. 22 March 2018. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
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