Mustapha Bettache
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | (1931-01-20)20 January 1931 | ||
Place of birth | Casablanca, French Morocco | ||
Date of death | 13 October 2005(2005-10-13) (aged 74) | ||
Place of death | ?, Morocco | ||
Position(s) | Defender | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1950–1956 | Wydad Casablanca | ||
1956–1963 | Nîmes Olympique | ||
1964–1966 | Raja Casablanca | ||
International career | |||
1960–1963 | Morocco | 8 | (1) |
Managerial career | |||
1972–1973 | Ittihad Khemisset | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Mustapha Bettache (20 January 1931 – 13 October 2005)[1] was a Moroccan professional footballer who played for clubs in Morocco and France as well as the Morocco national football team and a football manager.
Club career
Born in the Habous neighborhood of Casablanca, Bettache began playing senior football with local side Wydad Casablanca. He would play professionally in France's Ligue 1 with Nîmes Olympique for nearly eight seasons.[1][2] He was suspended from playing for six months in 1963, and returned to Morocco immediately after where he finished his career with Raja Casablanca.[1]
International career
Bettache made several appearances for the full Morocco national football team, including qualifying matches for the 1962 FIFA World Cup.[1][3]
Managerial career
After he retired from playing, Bettache became a football manager. He managed Ittihad Khemisset for several seasons, leading the club to the 1973 Moroccan Throne Cup final.[4][5] He also managed COD Meknès, Olympique Club de Khouribga, Difaâ Hassani El Jadidi and SCC Mohammédia.[4]
References
- ^ a b c d "Mustapha Bettache, le monument". Le Matin (in French). 14 October 2005. Retrieved 24 January 2019.
- ^ "Hospitalisés à l'hôpital militaire de Rabat : Khalfi et Bettache pris en charge par le président de la FRMF". Le Matin (in French). 9 December 2003. Retrieved 24 January 2019.
- ^ Courtney, Barrie (14 July 2003). "Morocco - Details of World Cup Matches". RSSSF. RSSSF. Retrieved 24 January 2019.
- ^ a b "Bettache ou le jubilé du souvenir". Le Matin (in French). 18 November 2005. Retrieved 24 January 2019.
- ^ José Batalha (28 January 2016). "Morocco 1972/73". RSSSF. RSSSF. Retrieved 24 January 2019.
- v
- t
- e
- Naoui (1949–54)
- Jalal (1954–56)
- Kacemi (1956)
- Jalal (1956–57)
- Jégo (1957–65)
- Ben Barek (1965)
- Jégo (1965–67)
- Jabrane (1967)
- El Kadmiri (1967–68)
- Jégo (1968–69)
- Mahjoub (1969–70)
- Lakhmiri (1970–71)
- Orosz (1971–73)
- Roudani (1973)
- Tibari (1973–75)
- Mindru (1975–76)
- Tashkov (1976–78)
- Houmane (1978–79)
- Orosz (1979–81)
- Bettache (1981)
- Tibari (1981–82)
- Houmane (1982–83)
- Tashkov (1983–84)
- Motroc (1984–85)
- El Ammari (1985–86)
- Hormat Allah (1986)
- El Ammari (1986–87)
- Cabrita (1987–89)
- Saâdane (1989–90)
- Fakhir (1990)
- Cabrita (1990–91)
- Settati (1991)
- Cabrita (1991–92)
- Nejmi (1992)
- Blinda (1992)
- Ivanov (1992–93)
- Fakhir (1993)
- Ighil (1993–94)
- Thissen (1994–95)
- Rogov (1995–96)
- Razamovski (1996)
- Saâdane (1996)
- Moldovan (1996–97)
- El Ammari (1997)
- Halilhodžić (1997–98)
- Muslin (1998)
- Fulloné (1998–00)
- Jamal (2000)
- Vieira (2000)
- Moldovan (2000–01)
- Takač (2001)
- Sevastyanenko (2001)
- Jamal (2001)
- Nejmi (2001–02)
- Meeuws (2002–03)
- Michel (2003–04)
- Casimiro (2004)
- Fiard (2004)
- Stambouli (2004–05)
- Moldovan (2005)
- Sellami (2005)
- Fulloné (2005–06)
- Hajry (2006)
- Fortes (2006–07)
- Nejmi (2007)
- Chay (2007–08)
- Romão (2008–09)
- Mozer (2009)
- Romão (2009–10)
- Michel (2010)
- Fakhir (2010–11)
- Balaci (2011)
- Marchand (2011–12)
- Fakhir (2012–13)
- Benzarti (2013–14)
- Benchikha (2014)
- Romão (2014–15)
- Jamal (2015)
- Krol (2015)
- Taoussi (2015–16)
- Fakhir (2016–17)
- Benchikha (2017)
- Garrido (2017–19)
- Carteron (2019)
- Sellami (2019–21)
- Chabbi (2021)
- Wilmots (2021–22)
- Benzarti (2022)
- Kebaier (2022–23)
- Zinnbauer (2023–)
This biographical article related to Moroccan football is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e