After three defeats in three official matches, OGC Nice are going through a turbulent period. Between criticism of head coach Franck Haise, growing supporter unrest and uncertainty surrounding INEOSโs ownership, the Niรงois have begun their season in a heavy and tense atmosphere.
The campaign has barely started, yet Le Gym have already suffered three setbacks. Beaten twice by Benfica in the Champions League qualifying round (0โ2 home and away), Nice then lost 1โ0 to Toulouse on Saturday in their opening Ligue 1 fixture. A grim sequence that recalls the 1965โ1966 season, the last time the club opened a campaign with three consecutive defeats.
On the pitch, Nice lacked efficiency and commitment. Summer signing Yehvann Diouf did not hide his frustration:
โWe managed to show a different face in the second half. We played with more intensity, and from the only real chance we conceded, we conceded a goal and lost the match. We lacked efficiency in both penalty areas. Obviously, it hurts โ weโre gutted.โ
At the post-match press conference, Franck Haise was blunt. The coach openly criticised his squadโs overall attitude:
โWeโre not at our best. In the first half, we were missing a lot of things. Itโs technically insufficient, but itโs also insufficient in terms of overall commitment. Some players are a long way off the required level.โ
His anger did not stop there.
โLosing matches isnโt a problem โ as long as it doesnโt happen too often. What matters most is what we put into a match. [โฆ] The absolute minimum is total commitment from the first second to the last. I even wondered whether I should change three or four players at half-time.โ
Haise also pointed to the limits of a squad weakened by injuries and a late transfer window:
โIโm not going to panic after the first league match. But in the short term, what I see is that weโre lacking in many areas. [โฆ] Those who are here have to do more โ and do better.โ
Despite a more convincing second half, Nice were unable to turn the match around. The whistles heard at the Allianz Riviera reflected a tense atmosphere as early as August.
A Protest That Goes Beyond the Pitch
The sporting crisis is compounded by a deeper rift between supporters and the clubโs ownership. On Saturday, even before kick-off, the Populaire Sud supportersโ group released a statement criticising the new kits, deemed disconnected from the clubโs identity. The tone was unequivocal:
โYou are a disgrace to us.โ
After the defeat, the whistles further reinforced the sense of a growing disconnect with the fanbase. The following day, the protest escalated with a petition calling for INEOS to leave, the group having owned the club since 2019. More than 1,300 signatures were gathered within just a few hours.
The petition was launched by Loris De Gregorio, founder of the Nice Stadium Supporters community. According to him, the break is profound:
โWe were all in favour of INEOSโs arrival in 2019. There were good things at the beginning, but today thereโs no direction, no investment. Since the takeover of Manchester United in 2023, itโs clear that Jim Ratcliffe doesnโt care about OGC Nice. When he said in March that he doesnโt even watch Niceโs matches, thatโs disrespectful and worrying.โ
Anger has also spilled over onto social media.
โThe majority of us agree: INEOS out! Ratcliffe, Bocquet and their crew out,โ wrote one supporter, Jonathan. Others are hoping for a return of former president Jean-Pierre Rivรจre, who is due to officially step down tomorrow.
Officially, the club is not for sale. However, criticism is focusing heavily on economic policy. According to several sources, INEOS reduced the clubโs budget by 15% this summer. Despite more than โฌ70 million generated from several major player sales, Nice are said to have spent only around โฌ20 million on new signings โ arrivals widely viewed as insufficient to remain competitive.
The petition denounces โa catastrophic transfer window, without direction, without vision.โ Its authors believe the club has become a secondary concern for Jim Ratcliffe, now focused on Manchester United. Their conclusion is blunt:
โThe solution is obvious: find a buyer as soon as possible, if it hasnโt already been done โ and get out.โ
For now, INEOS has not responded. The clubโs leadership remains silent as the anger continues to grow.
A Heavy Atmosphere as Early as August
Between disappointing results on the pitch, harsh words from the coach, protests in the stands and uncertainty over the ownerโs long-term strategy, OGC Nice are navigating through turbulent waters.
Franck Haise has called on his players to โlift their headsโ and promised strong decisions in the coming weeks:
โThereโs only work. Iโll have choices to make, there will be changes because some players need to do much better and much more. But I canโt change the entire team either.โ
In the short term, Nice must react on the field to avoid sinking further. That includes a positive home result against Auxerre this Saturday at 7 p.m. But the issue goes beyond immediate results. It also depends on recruitment that matches the ambitions expressed at the end of last season.
At this stage, it is the future of the INEOS project at Nice itself that has become the central point of debate.

