Charles Géronimi
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| Personal information | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Full name | Charles Jean Louis Géronimi | ||
| Date of birth | 8 February 1895 | ||
| Place of birth | Villepreux, Seine-et-Oise, France | ||
| Date of death | 9 November 1918 (aged 23) | ||
| Place of death | Souilly, Meuse, France | ||
| Position | Midfielder | ||
| Senior career* | |||
| Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
| 1910–1914 | AF Garenne-Colombes | ||
| International career | |||
| 1914 | France | 1 | (1) |
| * Club domestic league appearances and goals | |||
Charles Jean Louis Géronimi (8 February 1895 – 9 November 1918) was a French footballer who played as a midfielder for AF Garenne-Colombes and the French national team in the early 1910s.[1][2][3][4][5]
Charles Géronimi was born in Villepreux in the former Seine-et-Oise department (currently Yvelines) on 8 February 1895, to a father of Corsican origin, a soldier who became director of an orphanage.[1]
Playing career
Together with his older brother Georges and Jean Rigal, Géronimi practiced so-called outdoor sports in the modest patronage of Abbé Marchand, the Association Fraternelle de la Garenne-Colombes (AFGC), doing so purely for the pleasure of it, unrelated to official status, since the AFGC could not claim to win any championship.[1] Faithful to the entirely amateur spirit that reigned in the "patros", he only knew this one club.[1] His brother was even the club's treasurer for a long time, until 1939, while Charles was an accountant in a company selling textiles.[1]
Throughout the early 1910s, players from the patronages began to be driven out from the French national team to the point that not a single one remained for the friendly match against Belgium in January 1914,[1] but for the friendly against Luxembourg on 8 February 1914, two players from the patronages were urgently recalled, Géronimi, who was celebrating his 19th birthday, and Maurice Olivier from Étoile des deux lacs, and they were the last two because the humiliating 5–4 defeat was unfairly blamed on them, even though Géronimi scored his side's third goal, which gave the French the lead just before the break.[1][2][3][6][7] His brother Georges also had one cap for the France national team in 1911, and it also ended in a loss, 2–5 to Switzerland.[1] Similarly, the Renaux brothers (André and Charles also had only one cap each.[1]