Eullaffroy played professional football with Troyes AC from 1982 to 1991.[3] He was selected to the team of the century by the fans and set a record after scoring the fastest goal in club history.
Managerial career
College level
Eullaffroy began his managerial career in his native France with the Stade de Reims and Troyes AC youth academies.[4] In 2005, he moved abroad to Canada where he began to manage the McGill Redmen, where he coached the team for three years.[5][6] During his tenure with McGill, he was named the Coach of the Year for all three seasons.
Canadian Soccer League
In 2009, he was appointed head coach for Trois-Rivières Attak in the Canadian Soccer League.[7] In his first season with the Attak, he led the club to their second National Division title.[8] In the postseason the club reached the CSL Championship finals match where the Attak won in penalties against International Division champions the Serbian White Eagles.[9] For his achievements with the Attak in his debut season he was awarded the league's Coach of the Year award.[10] The following year Trois-Rivières ceased operations due to the ended cooperation as the farm team for the Montreal Impact, in which the ownership waived their player's rights and opened their territory for the benefit of the Montreal Impact Academy.[11]
On March 23, 2010, Eullaffroy was appointed the head coach for the Montreal Impact Academy.[12] He led Montreal to the championship final in the 2012 season but was defeated by divisional champions Toronto Croatia.[13]
Montreal Impact
In 2013, he served as the Montreal Impact assistant coach under head coach Marco Schällibaum in the Major League Soccer.[14] In 2014, he was named the academy director for the Montreal Impact academy.[15] On November 17, 2014, Eullaffroy was hired as the head coach for the expansion franchise FC Montreal which began play in 2015 in the USL Pro.[16][17][18]
On July 3, 2020, Montreal dismissed him from his post as the academy's director.[19][20]
Quebec soccer
In 2022, he ventured into the administrative side of soccer as the performance manager for the Quebec Soccer Federation.[21]
Africa
After several years in the Canadian province of Quebec, he landed an administrative role with Senegalese side Dakar Sacré-Cœur as their technical director.[22]
^Téotonio, Jean-François (18 December 2023). "Philippe Eullaffroy et la teranga sénégalaise" [Philippe Eullaffroy and the Senegalese teranga]. La Presse (in Canadian French). Retrieved 10 April 2024.