[4] Together with Carlos de Candamo, René Cavally, and Frantz Reichel, Pallissaux helped the RCF win the inaugural edition of the French Rugby Union Championship in 1892, which was the first interclub championship for non-school associations, scoring one questionable try in the final to help his side to a 4–3 win over Henri Amand's Stade Français in the final.
[10] On 31 January 1889, Pallissaux, already a running champion, was one of the Racing members who together with those of Stade Français created the Union des Sociétés Françaises de Sports Athlétiques (USFSA), whose first president, Georges de Saint-Clair, was forced to leave Paris abruptly for family reasons in 1890, so it fell to Pallissaux, Reichel, and Coubertin to continue his work, and while the latter, who was named the new secretary general, published the first French monthly review on athletics, La Revue athlétique, Pallisseaux and Paul Champ published the first issue of the weekly Les Sports Athlétiques.
[12] At the spring of 1893, Pallissaux, then a treasurer of the Racing Club, proposed to hold a congress in Paris "for the study and propagation of the principles of amateurism", which was approved by the USFSA Council, so three commissioners were charged with organizing it, including his friend Coubertin, who took advantage of this opportunity to go abroad to convince his peers of the usefulness of the congress and spread his Olympic message.
[18] After the match, he rushed to some of his countrymen to find out their opinions on the result of the game, including Lucien Huteau and Eugène Fraysse, one of the founders of CF.
[18] He finished his chronicle by stating: "we hope for more favorable weather, an interesting game and finally a French victory [against the English] for the next match".