[8] In the following month, on 21 April, he scored the winning goal against Le Havre in the preliminary rounds of the 1901 Challenge International du Nord.
[9] Together with Pierre Allemane, Paul Zeiger, the Matthey brothers (Fernand and Raoul), and captain Alfred Tunmer, Puget was a member of the Racing team that reached back-to-back finals of the USFSA Football Championship in 1902 and 1903, both of which ending in losses to RC Roubaix.
[4][10] In the former, he even scored his side's third goal in an eventual 4–3 loss in extra-time,[10] while in the latter final, he started as a forward in a 2–2 draw, but then missed the replay two weeks later, in which Racing lost 3–1.
[4] In the following year, the USFSA selected Puget as a reserve for the French squad that was going to compete in the football tournament of the 1908 Olympic Games, but he ended up not traveling to London.
[13] During the First World War, Puget was sent to the Western Front, where on 9 May 1915, he participated in the initial assault on the German "Labyrinth" stronghold, located near Neuville-Saint-Vaast, which failed with more than 700 dead who were hacked to pieces by machine guns.