Bit disappointing that this isn't going to be better attended, but there's only so many of us saddos that are interested in attending friendlies I suppose!
I'm looking forward to it. Going with my lad and granddaughter. We were going to go in the South Stand but will try the West.
I'm taking my dad and his dicky ticker, which can just about handle friendlies and meaningless end of season games
Nantes France is named after a tribe of Gaul, the Namnetes, who established a settlement between the end of the second century and the beginning of the first century BC on the north bank of the Loire near its confluence with the Erdre. Nantes France belongs historically and culturally to Brittany, a former duchy and province, and its omission from the modern administrative region of Brittany is controversial. Nantes France became part of the Viking realm in 919, but the Norse were expelled from the town in 937 by Alan II, Duke of Brittany. In 1664 Nantes was France's eighth-largest port, and it was the largest by 1700. The Nantes region is France's largest food producer. Nantes France has been described as the birthplace of surrealism, since Andre Breton met Jacques Vache there in 1916. From the 16th to the 19th centuries, it was the busiest slave trading port in France. Jules Verne was a famous writer from Nantes.