
Bordeaux and Saint-Etienne both suffered Ligue 1 opening day defeats on Sunday as French football was still suffering the shockwaves of Marcelo Bielsa's resignation as Marseille coach.
At the Nouveau Stade de Bordeaux, Willy Sagnol's men were 10 minutes from victory before Nicolas De Preville cancelled out Wahbi Khazri's 41st minute opener and Theoson Jordan Siebatcheu grabbed a dramatic 88th minute winner for Reims.
At Toulouse, Loic Perrin gave Saint-Etienne a 17th minute lead before the home side turned matters around.
Martin Braithwaite levelled the match 10 minutes after Perrin's opener before star striker Wissam Ben Yedder put away the winner, eight minutes into the second half.
Toulouse finished the match with 10 men when Aleksandar Pesic was shown a straight red card with four minutes left.
Meanwhile, Bielsa's shock exit at Marseille after Saturday's opening 1-0 defeat at home to Caen sparked a bitter war of words between the Argentine and his former employers.
Former European champions Marseille accused the Argentine of trying to hold them hostage over his new contract.
A strongly-worded club statement claimed: "Marseille possess a sufficiently rich history to refuse to surrender to the rule of one man".
The French giants insisted they wouldn't be "held prisoner by a man who places his personal interests high above those of the club".
The attack on the man known as 'El Loco' (the mad man) came less than 24 hours after he had delivered what captain Steve Mandanda described as his "hammer blow".
Bielsa blamed last minute changes to his contract for the decision which left Marseille president Vincent Labrune dumbfounded.
"I am, like all the supporters, dazed by Marcelo Bielsa's shock decision," Labrune declared in a statement.
"However, we take note of this decision which places the club in a difficult place having started the new season with a home defeat."
He confirmed that one of Bielsa's assistants, Franck Passi, would step up as caretaker coach pending a permanent replacement.
The club and owner Margarita Louis-Dreyfus assured fans they would "take all necessary measures in the coming days to enable Marseille to enjoy a season to the height of its expectations".
Bielsa, who had been in charge since May 2014, wrote in his resignation letter: "I am sad and frustrated.
"I cannot accept the situation of instability at the club.
"We had reached an agreement on a contract extension for 2016-2017, which was missing just a signature."
Bielsa said he had met Wednesday with the club's chief executive Philippe Perez and Igor Levin, Louis-Dreyfus's lawyer.
"They wanted to change the contract," he complained.
"I took this final decision as working together requires a minimum of trust, which we do not have."
Bielsa, who guided Chile to the last 16 at the 2010 World Cup, was at pains to point out his abrupt exit had nothing to do with money, revealing he had turned down a new deal multiplying his salary threefold.
And he said he'd been patient with the club, despite uncertainty in the way they had conducted themselves in the close-season transfer market.
Champions Paris Saint-Germain opened the Ligue 1 season on Friday with a hard fought 1-0 win at Lille.
Source: AFP
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