Vincent Tagremont, Media365, published on Saturday 03 May 2025 at 9:09 p.m.
This Saturday, Toulouse ended a series of seven matches without victory in Ligue 1, winning against Rennes (2-1).
The twelfth and eleventh had nothing to play at the end of the season. But the protégés of Carles Novell evolved in front of their audience, who came in number to the stadium. Téfecé therefore aligned his best elements, while Habib Beye chose to align the very young Mohamed Meïté, as well as the young Kazeem Olaigbe and Jordan James in front. More motivated and more accomplices collectively, the Haut-Garonnais logically dominated the first act. Brice Samba had to divert from the end of the gloves a center of Warren Kamanzi that Joshua King coveted in the 7th, then go out in front of the Norwegian striker, who had grilled the politeness to Christopher Wooh a minute later. As an imbalance in the 15th, Yann Gboho saw his shot fleeing the opposite skylight, after a center behind King. The former from the Rennes house was more fair to the 28th to conclude with 5.50, in two keys and on a step a center behind Djibril Sidibé. The French international had thrown himself into the surface after a beautiful percussion of Aron Dönnum.
-The Logically dominated reindeer team
The opening of the score was logical, as the Bretons suffered the purple waves. It was only in the additional time of the first act that Habib Beye’s men had the public shiver. Olaigbe sent a nice center wrapped at the second post. If Guillaume remained rampart of his body on the head of Meïté, the Toulouse porter did not need to intervene on the second ball, sent to the stands by James, little inspired this evening.
We did not see how, without making a change at the break, Habib Beye could hope for a return of his men. But the wait -and -seeing of the pitchouns in the recovery allowed the Rennes to project themselves. At the 55th, Djaoui Cissé rose higher than Charlie Cresswell to cut a brushed center from Adrien Truuffert from the head. At the parade, Guillaume Rests could only see the damage ten minutes later, following a center behind the same truffle perfectly cut from the inside by Arnaud Kalimuendo, whose entrance had just metamorphose visitors.
Dönnum’s feat restores the three points to the premises
Paradoxically, the Breton training won in quality over the replacements, and now tied up the three points against Hauts-Garonnais that the public was trying to wake up. Already decisive on the opening of the score, Dönnum decided to project himself in the 81st, on a release of remains. In the winger position, the Norwegian piston crunched truffle on the duel, then in the dribble. Its crossing crossed of the surface entrance was there in the opposite sigh. An action that will remain in the mythology of Téfécé, and offers victory to locals who thought they may have let it go, 141 days after their last success at home.