
FC Metz and FC Nantes are struggling in Ligue 1, both facing relegation threats after a goalless draw. Metz sits at the bottom of the table with 15 points, while Nantes is just above with 18 points, trailing AJ Auxerre by five points.
Ligue 1 Review | Doom and gloom as Metz and Nantes circle the drop
The sound of a church bell rang out at the Stade Saint-Symphorien as AC/DCâs Hells Bells blared from the FC Metz PA system. Les Grenatsfamiliar entrance music is intended to pump up the crowd, but it took on a more funereal tone on Sunday afternoon as they entered the field alongside the yellow shirts of FC Nantes. It was hard not to shake the image of two struggling teams making the long walk to their open graves.
Ninety minutes of football did little to dispel that notion with a goalless stalemate, despite Tylel Tatiâs 39th-minute red card. Itâs been a miserable season for the two clubs as they circle the drop down into Ligue 2. Metz sit bottom of the table on 15 points with Nantes just ahead of them on 18. Already, it feels as if the relegation race has been solved with six games left of the season, with AJ Auxerre pulling slowly away in the playoff spot with a five-point buffer.
Nantes do have a game in hand, although thatâs against league leaders Paris Saint-Germain. I donât need to look up the latest odds to tell you that Nantes should probably expect that five-point buffer to remain in place once theyâve played their rescheduled game.
Last month, Nantes made history when they appointed Vahid Halilhodzic in their relegation fight. The Bosnian, who had been out of work since 2022, is the oldest manager to take the reins of a Ligue 1 side at 73 years old. Nantes have history of appointing elder statesmen, and it felt obvious that the management hoped experience would be enough to guide the club out of their current quagmire. However, that doesnât feel enough this time around.
After a promising defeat to RC Strasbourg (3-2), Halilhodzic seemed at a loss to explain the weekendâs performance. âPsychologically, thereâs a real weakness,â He mused. âIâve said it before, but since arriving, Iâve noticed the players donât talk much. We need to shake things up, get everyone communicating, helping each other out. Iâm working hard to try and improve that.â
Squad composition certainly doesnât help this. Ten of the first team squad are out of contract or return to their parent club at the end of the season, while the prospective sales of talents like Tati and Mathis Abline will become necessary if the club is to offset the financial cost of relegation. To put it simply, no wonder there are psychological problems when so much of the squad doesnât have survival at stake.
Benoit Tavenot faces a similar dilemma at Metz with a squad that seemed consigned to relegation even before the season began. A former assistant with Les Grenats between 2019 and 2022, he came in midway through the campaign for Stéphane Le Mignan, but has done little to change their fortunes. Since replacing Le Mignan in late January, Tavenot has seen his side lose seven and draw three.
Ahead of the match on Sunday, he gave a frank assessment of his side, saying, âIt is a nightmare! I have tried many things and I have been criticised, too, but my biggest regret is not having completely convinced [my team] to believe in staying upâŠÂ We canât hide from it: we have to win, no matter how, in order to give ourselves any hope.â
The cruel thing for Tavenot is that in the fifth minute of added time, he likely still thought there was hope left in this season when local lad Gauthier Hein tucked home what could have been the winner, only for VAR to rule him offside. It was a matter of millimetres, something that wouldnât have been spotted in a previous era.
It was crushingly inevitable, like this season in microcosm. If the white flag wasnât visible before, that moment certainly made sure that it was raised high for even the last remaining believer to see. As the poet T.S. Eliot once wrote, âApril is the cruellest month.â
This feature is a repost from Get French Football News and can be found HERE
GFNÂ |Â Nick Hartland
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FC Metz is at the bottom of the Ligue 1 table with 15 points, while FC Nantes is just above them with 18 points.
AJ Auxerre currently has a five-point buffer over Nantes, indicating they have at least 23 points.
Tylel Tati received a red card in the 39th minute, but the match ended in a goalless draw despite the numerical advantage.
Nantes has a game in hand against league leaders Paris Saint-Germain, which could affect their chances of avoiding relegation.






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