Stade Rennais Football Club was founded on 10 March 1901 by a group of former students living in
Brittany. Football had quickly become widely circulated in nearby regions and it was soon brought to Brittany. The club's first match was played two weeks later against FC Rennais, which Stade lost 6–0. In 1902, Stade Rennais joined the
USFSA federation and, subsequently, became a founding member of the Ligue de Bretagne de football, a newly created regional league founded by the federation. In the second league season, the club won the competition after defeating the inaugural league winners FC Rennais 4–0 in the final. On 4 May 1904, Stade Rennais merged with its rivals FC Rennais to form
Stade Rennais Université Club, with the primary objective being to overcome the recent domination of the Ligue de Bretagne by
US Saint-Malo, then known as US Saint-Servan, which fielded mostly British players. The new club adopted the colours of Rennais, which consisted of a red and black combination with black vertical stripes on the shirt. After three years of Saint-Malo dominating the league, Rennes finally eclipsed the club in 1908 under the leadership of Welsh manager Arthur Griffith. In the following season, Rennes won the league again, but in 1910 Rennes was unable to win a third, as Saint-Malo won the league by two points. The champions subsequently went on an impressive run in which it won the league for the next four seasons over. After
World War I, Rennes began focusing its efforts on winning the recently created
Coupe de France. Strengthened by the arrivals of internationals Bernard Lenoble, Maurice Gastiger,
Ernest Molles and captain
François Hugues after the war, in the competition's fourth campaign, Rennes reached the final. In the
match, the club faced two-time defending champions
Red Star Olympique, which was led by attacker
Paul Nicolas, defender
Lucien Gamblin and goalkeeper
Pierre Chayriguès. Red Star opened the scoring in the fourth minute and the match was concluded following a late goal from Raymond Sentubéry. After the disorganisation of the USFSA in 1913, Rennes joined the Ligue de l'Ouest. In 1929, Rennes departed the league after disagreeing with the increased number of games the league sought to implement in the new season. The departure led to Rennes becoming a "
free agent", and the club played numerous friendly matches to compensate for the loss of league matches. In July 1930, the National Council of the
French Football Federation (FFF) voted 128–20 in support of professionalism in French football. Under the leadership of club president Isidore Odorico, Rennes was among the first clubs to adopt the new statute and, subsequently, became professional and became founding members of the new league. In the
league's inaugural season, Rennes finished mid-table in its group. Two years later, in 1935, the club reached the
Coupe de France final for the second time. Rennes, however, lost to
Marseille 3–0 after failing to overcome three first-half goals. The club's attack was also limited in the match due to being deprived of its top two attackers,
Walter Kaiser and Walter Vollweiler, who were both injured. Rennes spent four more years in the first division before suffering relegation to Division 2 in the
1936–37 season. Rennes played in Division 2 before professionalism was abolished due to
World War II. After the war, Rennes returned to Division 1. Led by the Austrian-born Frenchman
Franz Pleyer, Rennes achieved its best finish in the league after finishing fourth in the
1948–49 campaign. Despite the domestic resurgence under Pleyer, the club struggled to maintain consistency and, in the 1950s, rotated between the first division and the second division under the watch of the Spaniard
Salvador Artigas and
Henri Guérin, who acted in a player-coach role. Under the leadership of new president Louis Girard, Rennes underwent a major upheaval, which included renovations to the stadium. Girard sought to make Rennes competitive nationally and the first objective was achieved when the club earned promotion back to Division 1 in 1958. After finishing in the bottom-half of the table for six-straight seasons, Rennes, now managed by former club player
Jean Prouff, finished in fourth place in the
1964–65 season. In the same season, the club earned its first major honour after winning the Coupe de France. Rennes, led by players such as
Daniel Rodighiéro,
Georges Lamia and Jean-Claude Lavaud defeated
UA Sedan-Torcy 3–1 in the replay of
the final. The first leg of the match ended 2–2, which resulted in a replay. After the cup success, Rennes played in
European competition for the first time in the
1965–66 season, participating in the
European Cup Winner's Cup. The club, however, lost to Czechoslovak club
Dukla Prague in the first round. , pictured in 1935, led Rennes to its major successes. In the ensuing years, Rennes struggled in league play but performed well in the Coupe de France, reaching the semi-finals on two occasions in 1967 and 1970. In 1971, Rennes captured its second Coupe de France title after defeating
Lyon 1–0 in the
final, with the only goal coming from the penalty spot scored by
André Guy. On 23 May 1972, Rennes officially changed its name to its current form,
Stade Rennais Football Club. After another season in charge, Prouff departed Rennes and the club entered free-fall. From 1972 to 1994, Rennes was supervised by 11 different managers and, during the years, constantly hovered between Division 1 and Division 2. In 1978, the club was on the verge of bankruptcy and, as a result, was ordered by a
tribunal to sell its biggest earners and enter a policy of
austerity. In the 1980s, the city's municipality gained a majority stake in the club. In 1994, Rennes returned to Division 1 and entered a period of stability mainly due to the utilisation of the club's youth academy. Instead of entering bidding wars for players, Rennes groomed its youngsters and inserted them onto the senior team when coaches felt they were ready. This strategy proved successful with players such as
Sylvain Wiltord,
Jocelyn Gourvennec, and
Ulrich Le Pen. In 1998, the club was sold by the municipality to retail
magnate François Pinault. Pinault invested a substantial amount of funding into the club and sought to increase Rennes' production of youth talent by constructing a
training centre, which was completed in 2000. Pinault also paid for a completed re-construction of the stadium and also invested in the transfer market, recruiting several players from South America, most notably Brazilian forward
Lucas Severino, whom Rennes paid a record €21 million for in 2000. The results were immediate in the decade from 2000 to 2010, with Rennes appearing in UEFA-sanctioned European competitions in five of the ten seasons. In youth production, the club produced several youth talents such as
Yann M'Vila,
Yacine Brahimi,
Jimmy Briand and
Abdoulaye Diallo, among others. In league competition, Rennes tied its best finish ever in the league by finishing fourth in
2004–05. Two seasons later, the club accomplished this feat again. In 2009, Rennes reached the
Coupe de France final for the fourth time in its history. In the final, Rennes faced Breton rival
Guingamp and was the heavy favourite. Despite taking the lead in the second half, however, Rennes was defeated 2–1 after Guingamp scored two goals in a ten-minute span. In 2014, Rennes made the
Coupe de France final and once again their opponent was
Guingamp. In a tense final, Rennes lost the match to their fierce rivals 2–0. In the
2017–18 Ligue 1 season, Rennes had one of their best campaigns in recent memory, finishing 5th and qualifying to the UEFA Europa League for the 2018–19 season. In the following season, the
2018–19 season, Rennes had irregular form in the league, finishing tenth, but claimed its third Coupe de France win on 27 April, rallying back from two goals down to beat
Paris Saint-Germain 6–5 on penalties in the
final. The French Cup winners for the last four years were heavy favourites to beat Rennes having already been crowned Ligue 1 champions for the 2018–19 season on 21 April. The club also had a great Europa League campaign, where they reached the round of 16 after finishing second in the group stage. In the round of 32, they beat
Real Betis 6–4 on aggregate, and in the round of 16, they were matched up with
Arsenal. In the first leg on 7 March, Rennes recorded a historic 3–1 victory at home. In the second leg however, eventual finalists Arsenal won 3–0 in
London and eliminated the French club. In the
2019–20 season, Rennes finished third in Ligue 1 and qualified for
2020–21 UEFA Champions League for the first time in their history. == Stadium ==