Frank de Boer
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Frank de Boer | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Full name | Franciscus de Boer | |
Date of birth | May 15, 1970 (age 36) | |
Place of birth | Hoorn, Netherlands | |
Height | 179cm | |
Playing position | Defender | |
Club information | ||
Current club | Retired | |
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1988-1998 1998-2003 2003-2004 2004 2004-2006 |
Ajax Barcelona Galatasaray Rangers Al-Rayyan |
328 (29) 143 (5) 15 (1) 15 (2) - (-) |
National team2 | ||
1990-2004 | Netherlands | 112 (13) |
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Frank de Boer (born May 15, 1970 in Hoorn, Netherlands) is a Dutch football defender. He is the younger twin brother of Ronald de Boer.
Having represented his national team 112 times, he became the most capped player in the history of the Netherlands national team, until Edwin van der Sar surpassed him. De Boer made his debut for Holland in September 1990 against Italy.
He began his career as a left back at Ajax before switching to centre back, a position he made his own for many years in the national team. After winning both the Champions League and UEFA Cup while at Ajax, he then joined Barcelona where he was unable to repeat his earlier triumphs and suffered the ignominy of testing positive for the banned substance nandrolone. He briefly moved to Galatasaray in the summer of 2003 before joining Rangers in January 2004. He left Rangers in 2004 after Euro 2004 along with twin brother Ronald (his teammate at Ajax, Barcelona, and Rangers) to play the rest of his football career in Qatar with Al-Rayyan.
De Boer was a natural leader and held the captaincy of the Dutch national team until his retirement after Euro 2004. He is considered a talented defender and compensates lack of speed and pace with tenacity and extra work rate.
He ended his international career in disappointing fashion after an injury forced him to be replaced in a quarterfinal game with Sweden at Euro 2004. The injury ruled him out of the semifinal match with Portugal which the Netherlands lost 2-1 to go out of the tournament.
De Boer also played for the Netherlands in the 1994 and 1998 World Cups, Euro 92, Euro 2000 and Euro 2004. He had a memorable assist on Dennis Bergkamp's last-minute goal that beat Argentina in the quarterfinals of the 1998 World Cup.
Frank de Boer announced his retirement from football in April 2006. He is to take up a coaching role at his former club Ajax where he will take charge of the club's youth sector.
[edit] External links
Netherlands squad - 1994 FIFA World Cup Quarter-finalists | ||
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1 de Goeij | 2 F. de Boer | 3 Rijkaard | 4 Koeman | 5 Witschge | 6 Wouters | 7 Overmars | 8 Jonk | 9 R. de Boer | 10 Bergkamp | 11 Roy | 12 Bosman | 13 van der Sar | 14 van Gobbel | 15 Blind | 16 Numan | 17 Taument | 18 Valckx | 19 van Vossen | 20 Winter | 21 de Wolf | 22 Snelders | Coach: Advocaat |
Netherlands squad - 1998 FIFA World Cup Fourth Place | ||
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1 van der Sar | 2 Reiziger | 3 Stam | 4 F. de Boer | 5 Numan | 6 Jonk | 7 R. de Boer | 8 Bergkamp | 9 Kluivert | 10 Seedorf | 11 Cocu | 12 Zenden | 13 Ooijer | 14 Overmars | 15 Bogarde | 16 Davids | 17 van Hooijdonk | 18 de Goeij | 19 van Bronckhorst | 20 Winter | 21 Hasselbaink | 22 Hesp | Coach: Hiddink |
Categories: Articles to be expanded since January 2007 | All articles to be expanded | Dutch footballers | Netherlands international footballers | Ajax Amsterdam footballers | La Liga footballers | FC Barcelona footballers | Galatasaray players | Rangers F.C. players | Doping cases in football (soccer) | UEFA Euro 1992 players | UEFA Euro 2000 players | UEFA Euro 2004 players | FIFA World Cup 1994 players | FIFA World Cup 1998 players | Footballers with 100 or more caps | 1970 births | Living people | Twins