As the MHSC approaches a more than decisive meeting in the coming hours, at a press conference, Jean-Louis Gasset launched an appeal to the little pailladin people not to abandon his team:
“You have to stay positive, you have to always believe in it and keep working. We are not rewarded, in the image. I feel like I’ve seen a lot of scripts in my career but this one is still new. I told them, it will pass, it will come. We must continue. Everyone works very well. We benefit from what we did during the break where we caught up a little. I told you, we are better physically. It was seen. On the other hand, non-success, bad luck, everything that a team at the bottom of the table experiences during a certain period, we are entitled to it…
We must continue not to lower our heads, and above all, stay united. This is a call to supporters. We are at the start of 2025, I know that the end of 2024 was severe with the Puy match being dismal but it was an accident, it’s done. Here we are in the objective, we are playing against a team above us, which manages the championship better than us since it has 16 points, a good record in terms of maintaining. Let’s try to get closer by winning. »
It’s obviously not too late to go to La Mosson and get your ticket, everyone at the Stadium!
Continuing his discussions with the press, Jean-Louis Gasset obviously mentioned the need to win against the SCO:
“If it was a final, it would be for one last match, if you win, you take the trophy. There, after Angers, there will be half a championship left. This is the last match, for us, in our objective of saying that we must beat the teams which are in our mini-championship, it is the first building stone that will have to be laid in 2025. But it We will have to do it together, so that no one forgets it. We will have time later to look for the culprits. It’s up to me to find the solutions.
I don’t think La Mosson will turn against us. These are intelligent people who, like us, suffer. I can guarantee you, between the unknowns and the uncertainties of everyday life, we suffer. I think the supporters will still be with us, they know it’s a turning point. If we still want to have hope of survival, we must beat Angers, finish the first leg phase with 12 points, which is not much, and say to ourselves that we will have to make a practically European half-championship by winning a match on two. But it’s possible. I can guarantee you that little by little, people are returning to work, we are not far away, we need that little click. I hope, with our supporters, that it will be Sunday.”