[1] According to French football historian Georges Duhamel, the likes of Caizac, Georges Garnier, Lucien Huteau, and Fernand Canelle, were members of the small group of middle school students from the Parisian Lycée Chaptal who, in early 1893, founded a club called created Etoile Sportive Parisiennne, one of the first football clubs in the French capital, which set up on the pitch at the Château de Madrid in the Bois de Boulogne.
[4] In the French newspaper Les Sports athlétiques, Caizac gave a summary of the match that he himself played as the captain of Neuilly, stating that his side did not field all of its regular players, as several members of the first team did not deign to travel because of the rain, so they were replaced by members of the second team, and after conceding six goals in the first half, most of the Neuilly players stopped playing in the second.
[5] At the start of the 1894–95 season, Neuilly notably met Standard AC on three consecutive Sundays on the pitch of the Seine Velodrome, conceding between 12 and 23 goals each time.
[6] Two months later, in March, Neuilly was one of the eight teams that contested the 1895 USFSA Championship, beating CP Asnières 2–1 in the quarter-finals after extra-time; however, the Asnières club complained to the USFSA commission, stating that the winning goal had been scored "due to darkness", but Caizac, Neuilly's secretary and member of that commission, intervened in favour of his club and the result was thus confirmed.
[9] This federation was opened to several sports, and likewise, on 2 March 1901, Caizac refereed a FSAPF Cross country running competition.