Netherlands national football team

Netherlands
Nickname(s) Holland
Oranje
Association Koninklijke Nederlandse Voetbal Bond — KNVB
Confederation UEFA (Europe)
Head coach Flag of the Netherlands Bert van Marwijk
Captain Giovanni van Bronckhorst
Most caps Edwin van der Sar (130)
Top scorer Patrick Kluivert (40)
Home stadium Amsterdam ArenA
Feijenoord Stadion
Philips Stadion
FIFA code NED
FIFA ranking 4
Highest FIFA ranking 2 (November 1993)
Lowest FIFA ranking 25 (May 1998)
Elo ranking 2
Highest Elo ranking 1 (1911–12, 1978, 1988–1990,
1992, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2008)
Lowest Elo ranking 56 (October 1954)
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Away colours
First international
Flag of Belgium Belgium 1 – 4 Netherlands Flag of the Netherlands
(Antwerp, Belgium; 30 April 1905)
Biggest win
Flag of the Netherlands Netherlands 9 – 0 Finland Flag of Finland
(Solna, Sweden; 4 July 1912)
Flag of the Netherlands Netherlands 9 – 0 Norway Flag of Norway
(Rotterdam, Netherlands; 1 November 1972)
Biggest defeat
Flag of England England Amateur 12 – 2 Netherlands Flag of the Netherlands
(Darlington, England; 21 December 1907)
World Cup
Appearances 8 (First in 1934)
Best result Runners-up, 1974 and 1978
European Championship
Appearances 8 (First in 1976)
Best result Winners, 1988

The Netherlands national football team is the national football team of the Netherlands and is controlled by the Royal Netherlands Football Association. It won Euro 88 and reached two consecutive World Cup finals in 1974 and 1978 but lost both finals to their respective host nations, West Germany and Argentina. At the peak of its success in the 1970s, the team was famous for its mastery of Total Football and was nicknamed "Clockwork Orange" for its precision passing. In many countries the team is colloquially referred to as "Holland".

Contents

History

The Netherlands made their first appearance at the World Cup final tournament in 1934, and after coming back in 1938, the Dutch national team entered the wilderness of world football.

The Dutch squad in 1934.

History to 1970

Not until a shift to a national league and full professionalism in the 1950s did the fortunes of the Netherlands improve at both club and international level. In the 1958 World Cup qualifiers, they finished 2 points behind Austria, having lost 3-2 in Vienna after leading 2-0. The team saw continuous improvement throughout the 1960s.

Total Football

They came out of this wilderness in the 1970s with the invention of Total Football (Dutch: Totaalvoetbal), pioneered by Ajax and led by playmaker Johan Cruijff and national team coach Rinus Michels. The Dutch made huge strides, qualifying for two World Cup finals in the decade.

In 1974, the Netherlands beat both Brazil and Argentina in the second group stage, reaching the final for the first time in their history. However, the team lost to West Germany in the final in Munich, despite having gone 1-0 up through Johan Neeskens' early penalty kick before any German had even touched the ball. The Dutch were trying to embarass the Germans at home while they were only up 1-0. This was their greatest mistake. Supported by the crowd, goals from Paul Breitner at the penalty spot and the late game-winner from Gerd Müller led to a victory for the Germans. In spite of losing the final, the "Clockwork Orange" and Johan Cruijff had already written a new page in football's history.

By comparison, Euro 76 was a disappointment. The Netherlands lost in the semi-finals to Czechoslovakia, as much because of infighting within the squad and because of coach George Knobel, as well as the skill of the eventual winners.

In 1978, the Netherlands again reached the final, only to be beaten by the hosts, Argentina. This side played without Johan Cruijff, Willem van Hanegem and Jan van Beveren, who refused to participate in the World Cup. It still contained players such as Johan Neeskens, Johnny Rep, Arie Haan, Ruud Krol and Rob Rensenbrink from the 1974 selection. This time the Netherlands were less impressive in the group stages, as they qualified only as runners-up, after a draw with Peru and a loss to Scotland. In the second group phase, however, the Netherlands topped a group including Italy and West Germany, setting up a final with Argentina. However, the Dutch finished as runners up for the second World Cup in a row as they ultimately lost 3-1 after two extra time goals from Argentina in the hostile environment in Buenos Aires. Agonisingly for the Dutch, Rensenbrink hit the Argentinian post in the last minute of normal time, with the score 1-1.

Euro 80 was the last tournament that the generation of Total Football qualified for, but they did not advance past the group stage, despite the tournament format being expanded that year. Veterans such as Krol and Rensenbrink retired soon afterwards and the Netherlands missed the 1982 World Cup, Euro 84 and 1986 World Cup in succession.

European Champions

Rinus Michels returned to coach the team for the Euro 88 tournament. After losing the first group match against the USSR (1-0), the Netherlands went on to qualify for the semi-final by defeating England 3-1 (with a hat-trick by the tournament's top scorer Marco van Basten), and Republic of Ireland (1-0). For many Dutch football supporters, the most important match in the tournament was the semi-final against West Germany, the host country, considered a revenge for the lost 1974 World Cup final (also in West Germany). Marco van Basten, who would later become national team coach, scored in the 89th minute of the game to sink the German side. The game is also remembered for its post-match shenanigans, including Ronald Koeman, who, in front of the German supporters, provocatively pretended to wipe his backside with the shirt of Olaf Thon as if it were toilet paper, an action Koeman later regretted.[1] The Netherlands won the final with a convincing victory over the USSR, a rematch on the round robin game, through a header by Ruud Gullit and a volley by Van Basten. This was the national team's first major tournament win and it restored them to the forefront of international football after almost a decade in wilderness.

Despite high expectations as the team entered the 1990 World Cup, that tournament was not a success. Van Basten failed to score, as he was frequently marked by opposing defenders, while Gullit was ineffective having not fully recovered from injury. The Dutch managed to advance despite drawing all three group games, meeting their arch-rivals West Germany in the round of 16. The match is most remembered for the spitting-incident involving Frank Rijkaard and Rudi Völler as the Netherlands lost 2-1.

The team subsequently reached the semi-finals in the Euro 92, which was noted for the emergence of Dennis Bergkamp, but they were eliminated by eventual champions Denmark, with Van Basten's kick in the penalty shootout being saved by Peter Schmeichel. This was also Van Basten's last major tournament, as he retired shortly after due to injury.

In the 1994 World Cup, Dennis Bergkamp led the team with 3 goals and the Netherlands advanced to the quarter-final, where they lost 3-2 to eventual champions Brazil.

1998 World Cup and Euro 2000

Dutch supporters

At Euro 96, after drawing 0-0 with Scotland and beating Switzerland 2-0, they faced the hosts England in the pool A decider, with both teams on 4 points. After 62 minutes, with Scotland beating Switzerland 1-0, The Netherlands were 4-0 down and looked like finishing third behind Scotland on goal difference and going out of the tournament, but Patrick Kluivert converted a Dennis Bergkamp assist and scored in the 78th minute to see the Dutch finish second on goals scored. They then played France in the quarter-finals, drawing 0-0 and being eliminated 5-4 on penalties.

In 1998 World Cup, Netherlands, whose team included Marc Overmars, Phillip Cocu, Edgar Davids, Frank de Boer, Ronald de Boer and Patrick Kluivert, met Argentina in the quarterfinal, a rematch of the 1978 final. Near the end of regular time, after an unsuccessful dive to draw a penalty, Argentinian Ariel Ortega head-butted Edwin van der Sar.[2] Ortega was sent off and the Netherlands won 2-1 after a Bergkamp goal in the 89th minute. Bergkamp's goal was famous because of its quality--he touched down a 60-yard (55 m) pass from Frank de Boer then reverse-flicked it inside Roberto Ayala and finally volleyed it past the Argentine goalkeeper. In the semi-final, the Netherlands took Brazil to a penalty shootout after a late Kluivert goal tied the match 1-1, but Brazil won the shootout 4-2 and advanced to the final. Netherlands lost the 3rd place match 2-1 to upstart Croatia.

Netherlands co-hosted Euro 2000 with Belgium and were one of the favourites coming into the tournament. Getting all three wins in the group stage, including a win over reigning World Cup champions France, they then crushed Yugoslavia 6-1 in the quarter-finals, with Kluivert getting a hat-trick. In the semi-finals, their opponents, Italy, went down to ten men in the first half and the Netherlands were awarded two penalty kicks but failed to convert either chance. Italian goalkeeper Francesco Toldo made two saves in the shootout (in addition to his penalty saves in regulation time) to eliminate the Netherlands. Coach Frank Rijkaard was widely criticized by the press as the Dutch had squandered several chances to kill the game and he resigned, with Louis van Gaal taking over. Dennis Bergkamp retired from the national team after Euro 2000, having failed to score during the tournament.

Recent

Netherlands at the 2006 World Cup

Netherlands failed to qualify for the 2002 World Cup, with crucial losses to Portugal and the Republic of Ireland, the latter of which eliminated them from the Finals tournament. Van Gaal resigned at the conclusion of the Netherlands' unsuccessful campaign.

Netherlands reached the semifinals of Euro 2004 but lost to Portugal. Coach Dick Advocaat was criticized for his tactics and player changes and stepped down after the tournament. Also, many of the team's World Cup veterans like Frank and Ronald de Boer, Edgar Davids, Clarence Seedorf, Marc Overmars, Jaap Stam, and Patrick Kluivert had either retired or were not selected for the upcoming World Cup by new coach Marco van Basten.

Training in Germany.

The Netherlands qualified for the 2006 World Cup in Germany and finished second in Group C after beating Serbia & Montenegro (1-0) and the Ivory Coast (2-1) and drawing Argentina (0-0). Both Argentina and the Netherlands finished the group stage with 7 points, but the Argentinians had a superior goal difference and finished first as a result. The Dutch were eliminated in the second round after losing 0-1 to Portugal, in a match that produced 16 yellow cards (which matched the World Cup record for most cautions in one game set in 2002) and set a new World Cup record of four red cards (two for either side) and was nicknamed "the Battle of Nuremberg" by the press[3]. Despite criticism surrounding his selection policy and the lack of attacking football from his team, Marco van Basten was offered a two-year extension to his contract by the Dutch FA, which would allow him to serve as national coach during Euro 2008 and the 2010 World Cup. The move was widely regarded as a vote of confidence in Van Basten and his assistants by the KNVB officials.[4]

The Netherlands began their Euro 2008 campaign with a win in Luxembourg on 2 September 2006. On September 8, 2007 the Oranje beat Bulgaria at the Amsterdam ArenA on goals by Wesley Sneijder and Ruud van Nistelrooy. On September 12, 2007, the Netherlands won a hard fought victory against Albania, with Ruud van Nistelrooy scoring the winning goal in stoppage time. This win takes the Dutch squad into second place in group G, on level with Romania for points, but behind on goal differential. The Oranje were beaten 1-0 in Romania on October 13, 2007, but four days later the Netherlands' 2-0 victory over Slovenia, while rivals Bulgaria could only draw in Albania, left the Dutch needing one win from their last two games, at home to Luxembourg and away to Belarus, to qualify for Euro 2008.

The Netherlands played their first game in 2008 against Croatia in Split. The team, without Ruud van Nistelrooy, Robin van Persie, Clarence Seedorf, Orlando Engelaar, and Arjen Robben, won the match 3-0. The first goal was scored by John Heitinga on a header, while Klaas-Jan Huntelaar scored the second goal on assist from Tim de Cler. The final goal came from Celtic striker Jan Vennegoor of Hesselink. The team used a new formation under Marco van Basten, scrapping the previously used 4-3-3 formation for a 4-2-3-1.

Euro 2008

The Dutch team was a participant in the 'Group of Death', together with France, Italy and Romania. They began Euro 2008 with a 3-0 win over World Cup Champion Italy in Berne on June 9, 2008. This was the Netherlands' first victory over Italy since 1978. In their second group match against France on June 13, 2008, the Netherlands won convincingly with a 4-1 score. The Dutch closed out an incredible group stage campaign with a 2-0 win over Romania. However, they lost in the quarter-final to former coach Guus Hiddink's Russia with 3-1, despite a late 86th minute equaliser by Ruud van Nistelrooy. The Russians ended the Dutch run with two goals in extra time.

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Flag of the Netherlands.svg Netherlands 3 3 0 0 9 1 +8 9
Flag of Italy.svg Italy 3 1 1 1 3 4 −1 4
Flag of Romania.svg Romania 3 0 2 1 1 3 −2 2
Flag of France.svg France 3 0 1 2 1 6 −5 1
2008-06-09
20:45
Netherlands Flag of the Netherlands.svg 3 – 0 Flag of Italy.svg Italy Stade de Suisse, Berne
Van Nistelrooy Scored in the 26th minute 26'
Sneijder Scored in the 31st minute 31'
Van Bronckhorst Scored in the 79th minute 79'

2008-06-13
20:45
Netherlands Flag of the Netherlands.svg 4 – 1 Flag of France.svg France Stade de Suisse, Berne
Kuyt Scored in the 9th minute 9'
Van Persie Scored in the 59th minute 59'
Robben Scored in the 72nd minute 72'
Sneijder Scored in the 90+2th minute 90+2'
Henry Scored in the 71st minute 71'

2008-06-17
20:45
Netherlands Flag of the Netherlands.svg 2 – 0 Flag of Romania.svg Romania Stade de Suisse, Berne
Huntelaar Scored in the 54th minute 54'
Van Persie Scored in the 87th minute 87'

2008-06-21
20:45
Netherlands Flag of the Netherlands.svg 1 – 3 Flag of Russia.svg Russia St. Jakob Park, Basel
Van Nistelrooy Scored in the 86th minute 86'
Pavlyuchenko Scored in the 56th minute 56'
Torbinsky Scored in the 112th minute 112'
Arshavin Scored in the 116th minute 116'

2010 World Cup qualification

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
Flag of the Netherlands.svg Netherlands 3 3 0 0 5 1 +4 9
Flag of Scotland.svg Scotland 3 1 1 1 2 2 0 4
Flag of Iceland.svg Iceland 4 1 1 2 4 6 −2 4
Flag of Macedonia.svg FYR Macedonia 3 1 0 2 2 3 −1 3
Flag of Norway.svg Norway 3 0 2 1 2 3 −1 2
  Flag of Iceland Flag of the Republic of Macedonia Flag of the Netherlands Flag of Norway Flag of Scotland
Iceland Flag of Iceland.svg 1 – 0 6 Jun 5 Sep 1 – 2
FYR Macedonia Flag of Macedonia.svg 10 Jun 1 – 2 6 Jun 1 – 0
Netherlands Flag of the Netherlands.svg 2 – 0 1 Apr 10 Jun 28 Mar
Norway Flag of Norway.svg 2 – 2 9 Sep 0 – 1 12 Aug
Scotland Flag of Scotland.svg 1 Apr 5 Sep 9 Sep 0 – 0

The Dutch begin their qualification for the 2010 World Cup under new manager Bert van Marwijk, in group 9 alongside Scotland, Iceland, Macedonia, and Norway. Their first series of games, in September and October 2008, against Macedonia, Iceland, and Norway were all victories with 2–1, 2–0, and 1–0 scorelines, respectively.

Strip

Coat of arms of the Netherlands
Dutch fans wearing the traditional orange colours of the national team at a 2006 World Cup match at the Gottlieb-Daimler-Stadion, Stuttgart.

The Netherlands national football plays in a bright orange shirt. Orange is the historic national colour of the Netherlands, originating from the coat of arms of the Dutch founding father William of Orange-Nassau. The top red band of the current flag was originally orange. The current Dutch away shirt is "nassau blue", with a small trim on the chest containing the colors of the Dutch flag.

Nike is the kit provider to the national team, a sponsorship that began in 1996 and is contracted to continue until at least 2018.


Competitive record

World Cup record

Year Round Position GP W D* L GS GA
Flag of Uruguay 1930 Did Not Enter - - - - - - -
Flag of Italy 1934 Round 1 9 1 0 0 1 2 3
Flag of France 1938 Round 1 14 1 0 0 1 0 3
Flag of Brazil 1950 Did Not Enter - - - - - - -
Flag of Switzerland 1954 Did Not Enter - - - - - - -
Flag of Sweden 1958 Did Not Qualify - - - - - - -
Flag of Chile 1962 Did Not Qualify - - - - - - -
Flag of England 1966 Did Not Qualify - - - - - - -
Flag of Mexico 1970 Did Not Qualify - - - - - - -
Flag of West Germany 1974 Final 2 7 5 1 1 15 3
Flag of Argentina 1978 Final 2 7 3 2 2 15 10
Flag of Spain 1982 Did Not Qualify - - - - - - -
Flag of Mexico 1986 Did Not Qualify - - - - - - -
Flag of Italy 1990 Round 2 15 4 0 3 1 3 4
Flag of the United States 1994 Quarter-Finals 7 5 3 0 2 8 6
Flag of France 1998 Semi-Finals 4 7 3 3* 1 13 7
Flag of South KoreaFlag of Japan 2002 Did Not Qualify - - - - - - -
Flag of Germany 2006 Round 2 11 4 2 1 1 3 2
Flag of South Africa 2010 - - - - - - - -
Flag of Brazil 2014 - - - - - - - -
Total 8/18 2 Finals 36 16 10 10 59 38

European Championship record

Year Round GP W D* L GS GA
Flag of France 1960 Did not Enter - - - - - -
Flag of Spain 1964 Did not qualify - - - - - -
Flag of Italy 1968 Did not qualify - - - - - -
Flag of Belgium 1972 Did not qualify - - - - - -
Flag of Yugoslavia 1976 Third place 2 1 0 1 4 5
Flag of Italy 1980 Round 1 3 1 1 1 4 4
Flag of France 1984 Did not qualify - - - - - -
Flag of West Germany 1988 Champions 5 4 0 1 8 3
Flag of Sweden 1992 Semi-Final 4 2 2* 0 6 3
Flag of England 1996 Quarter-Finals 4 1 2* 1 3 4
Flag of BelgiumFlag of the Netherlands 2000 Semi-Final 5 4 1* 0 13 3
Flag of Portugal 2004 Semi-Final 5 1 2* 2 7 6
Flag of AustriaFlag of Switzerland 2008 Quarter-Finals 4 3 0 1 10 4
Flag of PolandFlag of Ukraine 2012 - - - - - - -
Total 1 Title 32 17 8 7 55 32

Summer Olympics

Olympic medal record
Men’s Football
Bronze 1920 Antwerp Team
Bronze 1912 Stockholm Team
Bronze 1908 London Team
*Draws include knockout matches decided by penalty shootout.
**Gold background color indicates that the tournament was won. Red border color indicates tournament was held on home soil.

Current squad

Squad by national team manager Bert van Marwijk for the FIFA WC qualifiers against Iceland and Norway.[1]

Caps and goals as of 12 October 2008

No. Pos. Player DoB (Age) Caps Goals Club
GK Henk Timmer December 3, 1971 (1971-12-03) (age 37) 6 0 Flag of the Netherlands Feyenoord
GK Michel Vorm October 20, 1983 (1983-10-20) (age 26) 1 0 Flag of the Netherlands FC Utrecht
DF Khalid Boulahrouz December 28, 1981 (1981-12-28) (age 27) 26 0 Flag of Germany VfB Stuttgart
DF Giovanni van Bronckhorst (captain) February 5, 1975 (1975-02-05) (age 34) 87 5 Flag of the Netherlands Feyenoord
DF Tim de Cler November 8, 1978 (1978-11-08) (age 30) 17 0 Flag of the Netherlands Feyenoord
DF John Heitinga November 15, 1983 (1983-11-15) (age 25) 43 6 Flag of Spain Atlético de Madrid
DF Jan Kromkamp August 17, 1980 (1980-08-17) (age 29) 11 0 Flag of the Netherlands PSV Eindhoven
DF Dirk Marcellis April 13, 1988 (1988-04-13) (age 21) 2 0 Flag of the Netherlands PSV Eindhoven
DF Joris Mathijsen April 5, 1980 (1980-04-05) (age 29) 41 3 Flag of Germany Hamburg
DF André Ooijer July 11, 1974 (1974-07-11) (age 35) 46 2 Flag of England Blackburn Rovers
MF Ibrahim Afellay April 2, 1986 (1986-04-02) (age 23) 14 0 Flag of the Netherlands PSV Eindhoven
MF Mark van Bommel April 22, 1977 (1977-04-22) (age 32) 46 8 Flag of Germany Bayern Munchen
MF Orlando Engelaar August 24, 1979 (1979-08-24) (age 30) 11 0 Flag of Germany Schalke 04
MF Nigel de Jong November 30, 1984 (1984-11-30) (age 24) 30 0 Flag of Germany Hamburg
MF Wesley Sneijder June 9, 1984 (1984-06-09) (age 25) 51 11 Flag of Spain Real Madrid
MF Rafael van der Vaart February 11, 1983 (1983-02-11) (age 26) 64 13 Flag of Spain Real Madrid
MF Demy de Zeeuw March 26, 1983 (1983-03-26) (age 26) 19 0 Flag of the Netherlands AZ Alkmaar
FW Ryan Babel December 19, 1986 (1986-12-19) (age 22) 29 5 Flag of England Liverpool
FW Dirk Kuyt July 22, 1980 (1980-07-22) (age 29) 48 9 Flag of England Liverpool
FW Robin van Persie August 6, 1983 (1983-08-06) (age 26) 33 12 Flag of England Arsenal

Recent call-ups

The following players have all recently been called up to the Netherlands squad. Bracket shows last call-up time.

No. Pos. Player DoB (Age) Caps Goals Club
GK Maarten Stekelenburg September 22, 1982 (1982-09-22) (age 27) 15 0 Flag of the Netherlands AFC Ajax (WC 2010 qual. v. Macedonia, 10 September 2008)
GK Piet Velthuizen November 3, 1986 (1986-11-03) (age 22) 0 0 Flag of the Netherlands Vitesse (Friendly v. Austria, 26 March 2008)
GK Boy Waterman January 24, 1984 (1984-01-24) (age 25) 0 0 Flag of the Netherlands AZ (Euro 2008 qual. v. Slovenia, 17 October 2007)
GK Sander Boschker October 20, 1970 (1970-10-20) (age 39) 0 0 Flag of the Netherlands FC Twente (Euro 2008 provisional squad)
DF Khalid Boulahrouz December 28, 1981 (1981-12-28) (age 27) 27 0 Flag of Germany VfB Stuttgart (WC 2010 qual. v. Macedonia, 10 September 2008)
DF Urby Emanuelson June 16, 1986 (1986-06-16) (age 23) 11 0 Flag of the Netherlands Ajax (Friendly v. Austria, May 2008)
DF Wilfred Bouma June 15, 1978 (1978-06-15) (age 31) 35 2 Flag of England Aston Villa (Euro 2008)
DF Mario Melchiot November 4, 1976 (1976-11-04) (age 32) 22 0 Flag of England Wigan Athletic (Euro 2008)
MF Denny Landzaat May 6, 1976 (1976-05-06) (age 33) 38 1 Flag of the Netherlands Feyenoord (Friendly v. Ukraine, 24 May 2008)
MF David Mendes da Silva August 4, 1982 (1982-08-04) (age 27) 1 0 Flag of the Netherlands AZ (Friendly v. Croatia, 6 February 2008)
MF Clarence Seedorf April 1, 1976 (1976-04-01) (age 33) 87 11 Flag of Italy AC Milan (Euro 2008 preliminary squad)
FW Danny Koevermans November 1, 1978 (1978-11-01) (age 30) 4 1 Flag of the Netherlands PSV (Euro 2008 qual. v. Belarus, 21 October 2007)

Previous squads

FIFA World Cup squads
  • 2006 FIFA World Cup squads - Netherlands
  • 1998 FIFA World Cup squads - Netherlands
  • 1994 FIFA World Cup squads - Netherlands
  • 1990 FIFA World Cup squads - Netherlands
  • 1978 FIFA World Cup squads - Netherlands
  • 1974 FIFA World Cup squads - Netherlands
  • 1938 FIFA World Cup squads - Netherlands
  • 1934 FIFA World Cup squads - Netherlands
UEFA European Football Championship squads
  • 2008 European Football Championship squads - Netherlands
  • 2004 European Football Championship squads - Netherlands
  • 2000 European Football Championship squads - Netherlands
  • 1996 European Football Championship squads - Netherlands
  • 1992 European Football Championship squads - Netherlands
  • 1988 European Football Championship squads - Netherlands
  • 1980 European Football Championship squads - Netherlands
  • 1976 European Football Championship squads - Netherlands

Past managers

  • Flag of the Netherlands Cees van Hasselt 1905-1908
  • Flag of England Edgar Chadwick 1908-1913
  • Flag of England Jimmy Hogan 1910
  • Flag of England Tom Bradshaw 1913
  • Flag of Scotland Billy Hunter 1914
  • Flag of England Jack Reynolds 1919
  • Flag of England Fred Warburton 1919-1923
  • Flag of England Jim Waites 1921
  • Flag of England Bob Glendenning 1923
  • Flag of England Billy Townley 1924
  • Flag of England J.E. Bollington 1924
  • Flag of England Bob Glendenning 1925-1940
  • Flag of Germany Karel Kaufman 1946
  • Flag of England Jesse Carver 1947-1948
  • Flag of England Tom Sneddon 1948
  • Flag of Germany Karel Kaufman 1949
  • Flag of the Netherlands Jaap van der Leck 1949-1954
  • Flag of Germany Karel Kaufman 1954-1955
  • Flag of Austria Friedrich Donenfeld 1955
  • Flag of Austria Max Merkel 1955-1956
  • Flag of Austria Heinrich Müller 1956
  • Flag of Austria Friedrich Donenfeld 1956-1957
  • Flag of England George Hardwick 1957
  • Flag of Romania Elek Schwartz 1957-1964
  • Flag of England Denis Neville 1964-1966
  • Flag of Germany Georg Kessler 1966-1970
  • Flag of Czechoslovakia František Fadrhonc 1970-1974
  • Flag of the Netherlands Rinus Michels 1974
  • Flag of the Netherlands George Knobel 1974-1976
  • Flag of the Netherlands Jan Zwartkruis 1976-1977
  • Flag of Austria Ernst Happel 1977-1978
  • Flag of the Netherlands Jan Zwartkruis 1978-1981
  • Flag of the Netherlands Rob Baan 1981
  • Flag of the Netherlands Kees Rijvers 1981
  • Flag of the Netherlands Rob Baan 1981
  • Flag of the Netherlands Kees Rijvers 1981-1984
  • Flag of the Netherlands Rinus Michels 1984-1985
  • Flag of the Netherlands Leo Beenhakker 1985-1986
  • Flag of the Netherlands Rinus Michels 1986-1988
  • Flag of the Netherlands Thijs Libregts 1988-1990
  • Flag of the Netherlands Nol de Ruiter 1990
  • Flag of the Netherlands Leo Beenhakker 1990
  • Flag of the Netherlands Rinus Michels 1990-1992
  • Flag of the Netherlands Dick Advocaat 1992-1995
  • Flag of the Netherlands Guus Hiddink 1995-1998
  • Flag of the Netherlands Jan Rab 1997
  • Flag of the Netherlands Frank Rijkaard 1998-2000
  • Flag of the Netherlands Louis van Gaal 2000-2002
  • Flag of the Netherlands Ruud Krol 2002
  • Flag of the Netherlands Dick Advocaat 2002-2004
  • Flag of the Netherlands Marco van Basten 2004-2008
  • Flag of the Netherlands Bert van Marwijk 2008-current

Players

Notable past players

Listed according to when they debuted for Netherlands (year in parentheses):

  • Bok de Korver (1905)
  • Jan van Breda Kolff (1911)
  • Harry Dénis (1919)
  • Puck van Heel (1925)
  • Wim Anderiesen (1926)
  • Bep Bakhuys (1928)
  • Leen Vente (1933)
  • Kick Smit (1935)
  • Abe Lenstra (1940)
  • Faas Wilkes (1946)
  • Kees Rijvers (1946)
  • Roel Wiersma (1954)
  • Cor van der Hart (1955)
  • Coen Moulijn (1956)
  • Sjaak Swart (1960)
  • Jan Jongbloed (1962)
  • Piet Keizer (1962)
  • Rinus Israel (1964)
  • Johan Cruijff (1966)
  • Willy van der Kuijlen (1966)
  • Wim Suurbier (1966)
  • Jan van Beveren (1967)
  • Wim Jansen (1967)
  • Willem van Hanegem (1968)
  • Rob Rensenbrink (1968)
  • Ruud Krol (1969)
  • Johan Neeskens (1970)
  • Barry Hulshoff (1971)
  • Piet Schrijvers (1971)
  • Arie Haan (1972)
  • René van de Kerkhof (1973)
  • Johnny Rep (1973)
  • Ruud Geels (1974)
  • Willy van de Kerkhof (1974)
  • Kees Kist (1975)
  • Ernie Brandts (1977)
  • Hugo Hovenkamp (1977)
  • Tscheu La Ling (1977)
  • John Metgod (1978)
  • Arnold Mühren (1978)
  • Dick Nanninga (1978)
  • Piet Wildschut (1978)
  • Michel van de Korput (1979)
  • Huub Stevens (1979)
  • Simon Tahamata (1979)
  • Bennie Wijnstekers (1979)
  • Joop Hiele (1980)
  • Hans van Breukelen (1980)
  • Ronald Spelbos (1980)
  • Ruud Gullit (1981)
  • Wim Kieft (1981)
  • Frank Rijkaard (1981)
  • René van der Gijp (1982)
  • Gerald Vanenburg (1982)
  • Jan Wouters (1982)
  • Marco van Basten (1983)
  • Erwin Koeman (1983)
  • Ronald Koeman (1983)
  • Sonny Silooy (1983)
  • Adri van Tiggelen (1983)
  • Danny Blind (1986)
  • John Bosman (1986)
  • John van 't Schip (1986)
  • Berry van Aerle (1987)
  • Aron Winter (1987)
  • Bryan Roy (1989)

Most capped players

As of October 19, 2008, the ten players with the most caps for the Netherlands are:

# Name Career Caps Goals
1. Edwin van der Sar 1995 - 2008 130 0
2. Frank de Boer 1990 - 2004 112 13
3. Phillip Cocu 1996 - 2006 101 10
4. Clarence Seedorf 1994 - present 87 11
5. Marc Overmars 1993 - 2004 86 17
6. Giovanni Van Bronckhorst 1996 - present 86 5
7. Aron Winter 1987 - 2000 84 6
8. Ruud Krol 1969 - 1983 83 4
9. Patrick Kluivert 1994 - 2004 79 40
Dennis Bergkamp 1990 - 2000 79 37

Players in Bold are still active, at international level.

Top goalscorers

As of November 11, 2008, the ten players with the most goals for the Netherlands are:[5]

# Player Career Goals (Caps) Avg/game
1. Patrick Kluivert 1994 - 2004 40 (79) 0.51
2. Dennis Bergkamp 1990 - 2000 37 (79) 0.47
3. Faas Wilkes 1946 - 1961 35 (38) 0.92
4. Abe Lenstra 1940 - 1959 33 (47) 0.70
Johan Cruijff 1966 - 1977 33 (48) 0.69
Ruud van Nistelrooy 1998 - 2008 33 (64) 0.51
7. Bep Bakhuys 1928 - 1937 28 (23) 1.22
8. Kick Smit 1935 - 1946 26 (29) 0.90
9. Marco van Basten 1983 - 1992 24 (58) 0.41
10. Leen Vente 1933 - 1940 19 (21) 0.90

National B team

The KVNB re-instated the national B team in October 2008 after an absence of 20 years, this because the U21 national squad failed to make the 2009 UEFA European Under-21 Championship. It will be led by Johan Neeskens and Dennis Bergkamp will be his assistant.[6]

National B Squad is :

No. Pos. Player DoB (Age) Caps Goals Club
GK Kenneth Vermeer January 10, 1986 (1986-01-10) (age 23) Flag of the Netherlands Ajax
GK Piet Velthuizen November 3, 1986 (1986-11-03) (age 22) Flag of the Netherlands Vitesse
DF Gianni Zuiverloon December 30, 1986 (1986-12-30) (age 22) Flag of England West Bromwich Albion
DF Ryan Donk March 30, 1986 (1986-03-30) (age 23) Flag of England West Bromwich Albion
DF Rens van Eijden March 3, 1988 (1988-03-03) (age 21) Flag of the Netherlands PSV
DF Robbie Wielaert December 29, 1978 (1978-12-29) (age 30) Flag of the Netherlands FC Twente
DF Edson Braafheid April 8, 1983 (1983-04-08) (age 26) Flag of the Netherlands FC Twente
DF Kevin Hofland June 7, 1979 (1979-06-07) (age 30) Flag of the Netherlands Feyenoord
MF Wout Brama August 21, 1986 (1986-08-21) (age 23) Flag of the Netherlands FC Twente
MF Royston Drenthe April 8, 1987 (1987-04-08) (age 22) Flag of Spain Real Madrid
MF Siem de Jong January 28, 1989 (1989-01-28) (age 20) Flag of the Netherlands Ajax
MF Stefan Nijland August 10, 1988 (1988-08-10) (age 21) Flag of the Netherlands PSV
MF Marcel Meeuwis May 11, 1988 (1988-05-11) (age 21) Flag of the Netherlands Roda JC
MF Stijn Schaars January 11, 1984 (1984-01-11) (age 25) Flag of the Netherlands AZ
FW Roy Beerens December 22, 1987 (1987-12-22) (age 21) Flag of the Netherlands SC Heerenveen
FW Eljero Elia February 13, 1987 (1987-02-13) (age 22) Flag of the Netherlands FC Twente
FW Ricky van Wolfswinkel January 27, 1989 (1989-01-27) (age 20) Flag of the Netherlands Vitesse

References

  1. "Cheeseheads vs Krauts": 30 Years of Enmity, Ajax-USA.com, June 14, 2004
  2. Phil Jones (1998-07-04). "The Netherlands pay back controversial loss to Argentina". sportsillustrated.cnn.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
  3. Stuart Watt (2006-06-26). "Portugal wins battle of Nuremberg". www.abc.net.au. Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
  4. "Van Basten on right track". Football.co.uk. Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
  5. "Topscorers Nederlands Elftal". Retrieved on 13-11-2008.
  6. "Neeskens to lead Netherlands B team", UEFA.com (25 October 2008). Retrieved on 12 November 2008. 

See also

  • List of Netherlands international footballers
  • Netherlands national under-21 football team
  • Netherlands women's national football team
  • Royal Netherlands Football Association
  • Aruba national football team
  • Netherlands Antilles national football team
  • Sint Maarten national football team

External links

Titles

Preceded by
1984 - France Flag of France.svg
European Champions
1988 (First title)
Succeeded by
1992 - Denmark Flag of Denmark.svg