Lucien Laurent
Lucien Laurent (born
December 10,
1907 in
Saint-Maur-des-Fossés,
Val-de-Marne,
Ile-de-France near
Paris; died
April 11,
2005 in
Besançon) was a
French footballer, famous for scoring the first ever
World Cup goal.
Between
1921 and
1930, Laurent played for the semi-professional team
Cercle Athlétique de Paris, before being taken on by
Sochaux, then a works team for the car manufacturer
Peugeot, where he worked. As an
amateur player, he only received basic expenses from the
French Football Federation while at the
tournament in Uruguay.
It was in
Uruguay that Laurent made history by scoring the first ever World Cup goal: a volley in the 19th minute of a game against
Mexico on
July 13,
1930.
France won the game 4-1, but lost their remaining group matches to
Argentina and
Chile, and were thus eliminated. Laurent was ruled out of the third game due to injury.
Injury then also denied Laurent a place in the squad for the
1934 World Cup and he moved to
Rennes, playing for them until
1937, then for
RC Strasbourg until
1939. In all, Laurent played 10 times for France, but scored only one other goal.
When
World War II came, Laurent was called up to join the armed forces and was taken prisoner by the
Germans. He spent three years as a
POW, was released in
1943 and played the remaining three years of wartime football for
Besançon. In
1946, Laurent retired from playing and went on to become a trainer and youth coach. He was the only surviving member of the 1930 French team to see France lift the
1998 World Cup on home soil, and died seven years later at the age of 97.