OffsAIde
·3 January 2026
City Stades to the 13th, the places powering Paris football

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Yahoo sportsOffsAIde
·3 January 2026

Paris remains an exceptional talent nursery, its game fuelled by relentless play on City Stades and in clubs despite a shortage of facilities.
According to L'Équipe, global recruiters now flock to Île-de-France, which, over years of Les Bleus success, has been dubbed the new Brazil. From a distant ground in Seine-Saint-Denis to a Yvelines City Stade or the foot of a Val-de-Marne tower block, rare talents take shape.
Some progress into European standouts. The Paris FC takeover will, in the medium term, revive competition with PSG over developing Île-de-France prospects. The focus here is where the game is played in the capital, and the conditions in which Alphonse Areola, Ibrahima Konaté, Youssouf Fofana and Moussa Diaby began, beyond Kylian Mbappé, Mike Maignan and William Saliba who were schooled in neighbouring departments.
The lack of structures to serve 29,800 Paris licence holders, including 2,000 women, is central. Within the city, around 30 stadiums cater to 2,100,000 residents across only nine arrondissements. Paris has the lowest ratio between population and infrastructure.
Beyond City Stades and repurposed spaces, such as the Invalides lawn or squares in the northern districts, half of registered players are in the U6 to U18 age groups, spread across 130 clubs. Alongside PSG, whose amateur section is tied to the Yvelines, and Paris FC, two mastodons stand out, Paris 13 Atletico with 1,810 licence holders and AC Paris 15 with 1,697. Other notable outfits include Paris Université Club, la Salésienne (XVIIe), l'Espérance Paris XIXe, l'ES 16 and les Petits Anges (VIIe).
Source: L'Équipe
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