Eric Cantona

Eric Cantona
Cantona in 2009
Born
Eric Daniel Pierre Cantona

(1966-05-24) 24 May 1966
Marseille, France
Occupations
Height1.88 m (6 ft 2 in)[1][2]
Spouses
Isabelle Ferrer
(m. 1987; div. 2003)
    Rachida Brakni
    (m. 2007)
    Children4
    Association football career
    Position(s) Forward[3]
    Youth career
    1980–1981 SO Les Caillols
    1981–1983 Auxerre
    Senior career*
    Years Team Apps (Gls)
    1983–1988 Auxerre 82 (23)
    1985–1986 → Martigues (loan) 15 (4)
    1988–1991 Marseille 40 (13)
    1989 → Bordeaux (loan) 11 (6)
    1989–1990 → Montpellier (loan) 33 (10)
    1991–1992 Nîmes 16 (2)
    1992Leeds United (loan) 11 (3)
    1992 Leeds United 17 (6)
    1992–1997 Manchester United 143 (64)
    Total 368 (131)
    International career
    France U17
    France U21
    1987–1995 France 45 (20)
    1997–2006 France (beach)
    Managerial career
    1997–2011 France (beach)
    2011–2012 New York Cosmos (director of soccer)
    * Club domestic league appearances and goals

    Eric Daniel Pierre Cantona (French: Éric;[4] pronounced [e.ʁik dan.jɛl pjɛʁ kɑ̃.tɔ.na]; born 24 May 1966) is a French former professional footballer who is currently an actor. In his football career Eric Cantona was a physically strong and technicaly skillful player with both creative and goalscoring ability. Mostly utilised as a deep-lying forward, he was also capable of playing as a centre-forward, as a dedicated striker, as an attacking midfielder, or as a central midfielder. He was named by Pelé in the FIFA 100 list of the world's greatest living players in 2004.[5][6][7]

    Cantona played for Auxerre, Martigues, Marseille, Bordeaux, Montpellier, Nîmes and Leeds United, before ending his career at Manchester United, with whom he won four Premier League titles in five years, including two League and FA Cup Doubles. He wore the iconic number 7 shirt at Manchester United and was known for turning up his collar. He is affectionately nicknamed "King Eric" by Manchester United fans. Cantona won league championships in England and France in seven of his last eight full seasons as a professional, and at least one trophy in eight of his last nine. At international level, he played for the France national team and scored 20 goals in 45 matches. He appeared at UEFA Euro 1992 and, in preparation for Euro 96, was appointed captain in 1994.

    In 2003, Cantona was voted as Manchester United's greatest-ever player by Inside United magazine. He was an inaugural inductee into the English Football Hall of Fame in 2002. At the Premier League 10 Seasons Awards in 2003, he was voted the Overseas Player of the Decade. Cantona was inducted into the Premier League Hall of Fame in 2021. Charismatic and outspoken, Cantona's achievements in football were set against fallings out with coaches and team-mates, and a poor disciplinary record throughout his career, including a 1995 conviction for an assault on an abusive spectator, for which he received a two-week prison sentence, reduced to community service on appeal, and an eight-month suspension from football – preventing him from participating at Euro 96.

    In 1997, Cantona unexpectedly announced his retirement from football just before his 31st birthday. He then moved into a career in cinema, including roles in the films Elizabeth (1998), French Film (2008) and The Killer (2024). In 2010, he debuted as a stage actor in Face au Paradis, a play directed by his wife, Rachida Brakni.[8] Cantona took an interest in the sport of beach soccer; as player-manager of the France national beach soccer team, he won the 2005 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup.

    1. ^ "Cantona, Éric Daniel Pierre Cantona - Footballer | BDFutbol". www.bdfutbol.com. Retrieved 20 August 2025.
    2. ^ "Fédération Française de Football". www.fff.fr. Retrieved 20 August 2025.
    3. ^ "Eric Cantona". Barry Hugman's Footballers. Archived from the original on 8 June 2024. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
    4. ^ "Éric Cantona". fff.fr. French Football Federation. Retrieved 3 December 2022.
    5. ^ "Pele's list of the greatest". BBC Sport. 4 March 2004. Retrieved 22 November 2013.
    6. ^ "Ranked! The 101 greatest football players of the last 25 years: full list". FourFourTwo (253 ed.). 13 February 2018. Retrieved 22 December 2023.
    7. ^ White, Mark (25 March 2025). "Ranked! The 100 best Premier League players ever". FourFourTwo. Retrieved 25 March 2025.
    8. ^ Davies, Lizzy (10 January 2010). "Eric Cantona and Rachida Brakni are toast of Paris as ex-footballer makes stage debut". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 January 2018.