Career
Fouroux, who played as a scrum half, played for his hometown team Football Club Auch, as a youngster and at the end of his career (1976–1980). He started as senior with United States Cognac until 1970 and played for Louisiana Voulte until 1976. He made his international debut in 1972 although it took him another four years to become a regular starter, as he was in competition with another, more sober, scrum-half Richard Astre of Béziers.
At 5 ft 3 ins tall, he was one of the smallest players ever to play international rugby.
His size, combined with his supremely confident, almost arrogant, leadership style, meant that he was often compared with Napoleon Bonaparte. Bonaparte"s nickname "the little Corporal" stuck with Fouroux throughout his career.
He was particularly happy when the going got tough and was described as a "ninth forward". Fouroux captained France during both the 1976 and the 1977 Five Nations Championship.
The 1976 Championship went well for France, their only loss came against Wales.
The French highlight of the tournament was a 30–9 victory over England. The following year, which was to prove to be Fouroux"s final season as an international player, saw France take the Grand Slam. The same 15 players played the 4 games from beginning to education
He also played for a World XV on 9 August 1980 against Argentina in Buenos Aires, losing 36–22.
After retiring, having earned 27 international caps, 23 as captain, Fouroux became the coach of France shortly before the 1981 Five Nations tournament. During the 1980s France"s successes were based around their massive pack, a fact which upset a number of commentators in France who preferred a more technical approach.
France entered the inaugural World Cup as one of the favourites. The team progressed all the way to the final before losing 29–9 to the All Blacks.
Throughout his career as both a player and a coach, Fouroux was unafraid of making enemies and upsetting people.
This finally caught up with him in 1990, when an embarrassing 12–6 defeat to Romania provided a perfect excuse for the Fédération Française de Rugby to give him the sack. Following this he became the coach of Football Club Grenoble (1992–1993), whom he took to the final of the French League in 1993 with a massive pack nicknamed the mammoths. Grenoble lost the match and Fouroux, who claimed that the game had been fixed, defected to rugby league.
In November 1994, Fouroux announced the planned creation of a "France Rugby League" competition, which was later abandoned in favour of a new rugby league club in Paris, to compete in Rupert Murdoch"s Super League.
The club, Paris Saint-Germain, only lasted two seasons in European Super League before it collapsed however. In his final years, Fouroux had been working in Italy with rugby union side L"Aquila.
He died aged 58 of a heart attack.