Jean-Louis Gasset (9 December 1953 – 26 December 2025) was a French professional football manager and player. As a player, he played as a midfielder, spending ten years at his hometown club Montpellier.

Career

Born in Montpellier, Gasset played ten years at his hometown club Montpellier.

He led Montpellier to victory in the UEFA Intertoto Cup in 1999. He then coached Caen and Istres. He was assistant to Luis Fernández at Paris Saint-Germain and Spain's Espanyol.

Gasset was the main assistant of Laurent Blanc as manager of Bordeaux, the France national team and PSG from 2007 to 2016, notably conducting the training sessions.

He had the top job at Montpellier again for the second half of the 2016–17 season, finishing 15th. He then became Óscar García's right-hand man at Saint-Étienne, and succeeded the Spaniard in December 2017, just an hour before a 2–1 loss at Guingamp.

Gasset as manager of Montpellier in 2017

In June 2018, having turned Saint-Étienne's season around to finish sixth, missing out on the UEFA Europa League on goal difference to Bordeaux, Gasset was given another year in the job. A year later, having come fourth and secured a place in that European competition, he resigned due to disputes with the board over transfer budgets.

Gasset was hired by Bordeaux on 12 August 2020, after Paulo Sousa's exit. On 27 July 2021 he left the club.

On 20 May 2022, Gasset was appointed coach of Ivory Coast, succeeding Patrice Beaumelle, whose contract expired on 6 April 2022. He handed his resignation on 24 January 2024, following a poor performance at the group stages of the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations on home soil. Emerse Faé then led the team to the title.

On 20 February 2024, Gasset became the head coach of Marseille, following the dismissal of Gennaro Gattuso.

On 7 April 2025, Gasset left Montpellier by mutual consent as the club sat last in Ligue 1.

Death

Gasset died on 26 December 2025, at the age of 72.

Managerial statistics

Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamFromToRecord
GWDLWin %
Montpellier1 July 199830 November 199968241727035.29
Caen1 September 200030 June 20013412814035.29
Istres17 January 200516 September 200649151420030.61
Montpellier30 January 201723 May 2017165110031.25
Saint-Étienne20 December 201730 June 201962311417050.00
Bordeaux10 August 202027 July 20213913620033.33
Ivory Coast20 May 202224 January 2024181134061.11
Marseille20 February 202419 May 202419937047.37
Montpellier22 October 20247 April 2025203215015.00
Total33012470136037.58

Honours

Player

Montpellier

Coach

Montpellier

External links