[4] The only French players who started for the Paris team were the founders of Club Français, Eugène Fraysse and Charles Bernat.
[6] On 12 December 1898, a German national selection competed in a football match for the first time, beating the White Rovers 7–0, and on the next day, 13 December, the Germans faced a selection of the best Parisian players from the USFSA,[7][8] which included five players from Club Français (defenders Sid Wood and Bernat and forwards Fraysse, Grandjean and Jack Wood), four players from Standard AC (goalkeeper Arnull, midfielder J. Hicks, and forwards O. Hicks and Meggs), one from Paris Star (defender Barnold), and one from Racing (midfielder Alfred Tunmer).
[9] In the 1912 match, Paris fielded the likes of Pierre Chayriguès, Eugène Maës, Gaston Barreau, Henri Vialmonteil, and René Fenouillière.
[1][11] This match was held two months after All Saints' Day of 1913, in which both federations organized a match at the same time, with the LFA team facing the London League in Saint-Ouen, while the USFSA selection faced the amateurs' team of English Wanderers in Auteuil, and this choice proves the acuteness of the rivalry between the federations.
[1] In the build-up for a match against Belgium on 25 January 1914, France played a warm-up game against a selection of the foreigner players in Paris, which included both 7 "Liguists" (LFA) and 4 "Unionists" (USFSA), being made-up of 6 Swiss, 3 British, 1 Hungarian, and a Franco-Italian; it ended in a goalless draw.