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Sportclub Heerenveen (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈspɔrtklʏp ˌɦeːrə(ɱ)ˈveːn]; West Frisian: Sportklub It Hearrenfean) is a Dutch professional football club from Heerenveen. They currently play in the Eredivisie, the top level of football in the Netherlands. The club is known for its Frisian identity.[2]

Heerenveen
Full nameSportclub Heerenveen
Nickname(s)De Superfriezen (The Super Frisians)
Founded20 July 1920; 103 years ago (1920-07-20)
GroundAbe Lenstra Stadion
Capacity26,100[1]
ChairmanDennis Gijsman
Head coachRobin van Persie
LeagueEredivisie
2023–24Eredivisie, 11th of 18
WebsiteClub website

Home colours

Away colours

Third colours

Current season

History

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Sportclub Heerenveen was founded on 20 July 1920 in the town of Heerenveen, Friesland, as Athleta.[3] It changed name twice, first to Spartaan and then to v.v. Heerenveen in 1922.[3] While the Netherlands was occupied by Germany, Heerenveen won three successive North of the Netherlands championships, and following the end of World War II it went on to win the same title six times in a row; the club's dominance partly ascribed to the presence of Abe Lenstra.[3] During this period, Lenstra led Heerenveen to a famous victory over Ajax in one of the most noted games in Dutch domestic football history.[4] Trailing 5–1 with 25 minutes remaining, the Frisian team inexplicably fought back for a 6–5 victory.[4]

During the 1950s, Heerenveen regional dominance faded and after Dutch football turned professional Lenstra left to join Sportclub Enschede, before the club he departed was relegated to the Tweede Divisie.[3] By the end of the decade, Heerenveen was in the Eerste Divisie, but found itself relegated again.[3] In 1969–70, the Frisian club won the Tweede Divisie to return to the Eerste Divisie and for two seasons in the 1970s, the club was close to achieving promotion to the top-flight Eredivisie.[3] By 1974, the club was in financial trouble and to ensure its survival it was split into amateur and professional sections on 1 June 1977, the professional part being renamed sc Heerenveen.[3]

In the 1980s, Heerenveen twice made the promotion playoffs, but were unsuccessful both times.[3] It finally reached the Eredivisie in 1990, becoming the first Frisian club to reach the top level, at the expense of near-neighbours Cambuur.[4] The achievement was overseen by Frisian coach Foppe de Haan. Heerenveen's first season in the Netherlands' top division was not at all successful and it was relegated, before returning in 1993, though they reached the final of the KNVB Cup while still an Eerste Divisie club.[4] Having established itself as a top-flight club, Heerenveen moved to a new stadium, named after their most celebrated player, the Abe Lenstra Stadion, and reached the final of the KNVB Cup for a second time.[4] The 1998 semi-final in the cup competition was lost to Ajax. Because Ajax and the other finalist, PSV, had both qualified for the cup final, a decision match was needed to fill in the vacant spot for the next season's UEFA Cup Winners' Cup. Heerenveen had to play against the other losing semi-finalist, Twente. Heerenveen won that match in which Ruud van Nistelrooy scored his last goal for Heerenveen. The match ended 3–1.[citation needed]

Heerenveen became regular competitors in the UEFA Cup, and in 1999–2000 finished second in the Eredivisie, its highest ever finish, and qualified for the 2000–01 UEFA Champions League.[3]

The club was led from 1983 until September 2006 by president Riemer van der Velde, the longest tenure of any president with a professional club in the Netherlands.[citation needed] As the results of recent transfers that include Klaas-Jan Huntelaar, Afonso Alves, Michael Bradley, Miralem Sulejmani, Petter Hansson and Danijel Pranjić (and earlier players like Jon Dahl Tomasson, Marcus Allbäck, Erik Edman, Ruud van Nistelrooy, Igor Korneev and Daniel Jensen), Heerenveen is one of the most financially secure Eredivisie clubs. A 2010 report by the Dutch football association showed that Heerenveen is the only Eredivisie club that has a financially secure budget.[5] Under the tenure of Trond Sollied, Heerenveen won its first KNVB Cup, also its first ever major trophy. Trond Sollied, however, was sacked on 31 August 2009 due to a weak opening of the season and a conflict with the board.[citation needed]

On 17 May 2009, the club defeated Twente 5–4 in a penalty shoot-out to win the Dutch Cup for the first time after a 2–2 draw in the final, with Gerald Sibon scoring the winning penalty.[6] On 13 February 2012, it was announced that Marco van Basten would replace Ron Jans, who had led Heerenveen for two years, as team manager for the 2012–13 season.[citation needed]

Stadium

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Home of Heerenveen, Abe Lenstra Stadion

The club plays its home matches at the Abe Lenstra Stadium, which opened in 1994 and holds 26,100 people. Before that, the team played at a ground with the same name elsewhere in the town, but it could not meet the increasing popularity of the club. Throughout the years, the club developed several plans to further expand the stadium. One of the plans was to extend at least one side stand towards the pitch, as seen in English football stadiums. Due to deteriorating league results and financial limitedness, however, those plans were shelved. It is uncertain whether or not the club will ever carry them out. Before the move to the Abe Lenstra Stadion, Heerenveen played at the Sportpark Noord. The club's training facilities are regarded as world class, which is said to be a major factor in their recruitment of younger players. The name of the clubs facilities is sportpark Skoatterwâld [nl]. The facilities are shared with VV Heerenveen and sc Heerenveen (women).

Colours, crest and anthem

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The crest on the club emblem is the symbol of the flag of Friesland. The flag of Friesland is based on the arms of the 15th century. The stripes and seeblatt shapes represent the districts of Friesland.

A unique tradition in the Dutch Eredivisie is that the Frisian national anthem is played and sung before every domestic match. UEFA does not allow this tradition in European matches. Nevertheless, the anthem is sung by the supporters anyway.

Rivalry

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SC Cambuur

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Heerenveen retain a very fierce rivalry with SC Cambuur. One of the reasons of the rivalry is the short distance between the two clubs. Because of that the clubs often refer to each other as DKV which stands for Dertig Kilometer Verderop (Thirty Kilometers Away) so that they do not have to mention each other's names. However, the biggest and also the most confusing reason is the background of the clubs. Many people who aren't involved in the rivalry find it difficult to understand. Most of the Heerenveen fans are from small villages from the entire province (and even outside it) and are very proud of their Frisian identity. Since the 80's the club have been expressing this Frisian pride to the rest of the Netherlands. The Frisian flag, the Frisian anthem, all Frisian symbols were linked to the club, which made Heerenveen the face of Frisia. Because of this Cambuur slowly disappeared in the shadow of Heerenveen, as a reaction to this Cambuur fans started distancing themselves from the Frisian identity. Nowadays Cambuur do not consider themselves Frisian even though they are from the capital of the province. They now call themselves Leeuwarders aka people from the city. Heerenveen fans are mockingly called boeren (farmers) because Heerenveen isn't a city and the fans mainly live in small villages. Because of the successes of Heerenveen and the meager performances of Cambuur including almost going bankrupt, the rivalry was almost forgotten. When Cambuur got promoted back to the Eredivisie in 2013 by winning the 2012/13 season of the Jupiler League the rivalry got revived. Before the meeting on 29 September 2013 the game hadn't been played for 13 years, giving Cambuur a great opportunity to prove themselves. Heerenveen won that game 2–1. The away game later in the season was won 3–1 by Cambuur.

FC Groningen

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The absence of Cambuur caused FC Groningen to be the nearest Eredivisie team and soon it became rivals with Heerenveen. Strikingly, both northern sides used to maintain more or less of a friendship in the past. Therefore, this Northern Derby rivalry is only based on geographical location. Because most Heerenveen fans have always considered Cambuur as main rivals, this derby is often referred to as a surrogate derby. Traditionally, the winner claims the title Pride of the North. Days before the game, Heerenveen and Groningen fans tease each other by means of playful actions, usually with no violence. Heerenveen fans once stole the centre spot from the Oosterpark stadium [nl], and raised the Frisian flag at the Martinitoren, the highest tower in Groningen, combined with a banner saying "SCH op eenzame hoogte" (SCH on lonely height).[7] The front yard of a Groningen chairman once got filled with rubble from a construction site. This was because the construction of the Euroborg had to be halted due to a major design mistake. Groningen fans countered by painting a statue of all-time Heerenveen hero Abe Lenstra green and white, the colours of Groningen.[8] They also transformed a viaduct near Heerenveen to green and white.

A year later, in the 2001–02 season, Groningen fans awarded Heerenveen player Anthony Lurling the title of "Biggest cheat of the season" and handed him therefore a sewing machine. In that same week the town signs of Heerenveen were changed to "Hoerenveen It Sucks" (Whore-veen) by the Groningen supporters. The following season, Groningen fans teased the Heerenveen following again, this time by establishing a border post on the border of Groningen and Friesland.[9]

Honours

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Domestic results

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Historical chart of league performance

Below is a table with sc Heerenveen's domestic results since the introduction of the Eredivisie in 1956.

European competition

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SC Heerenveen played 16 seasons in one of the European club football competitions.

score marked with * = first played match
Season Competition Round Opposition Home Away
1995 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group 4   Næstved BK 2–1
  Ton Pentre 7–0
  Békéscsaba Előre 4–0
  União de Leiria 0–1
Round of 16   Farul Constanța 4–0
Quarter-finals   Bordeaux 0–2
1996 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group 5   Sligo Rovers 0–0
  Lillestrøm 0–1
  Nantes 1–3
  FBK Kaunas 3–1
1997 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group 1   FC Dinamo-93 Minsk 0–1
  Polonia Warsaw 0–0
  MSV Duisburg 0–2
  Aalborg BK 8–2
1998–99 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup First round   Amica Wronki 3-1 * 1–0
Second round   Varteks 2–1 * 2–4 (a.e.t.)
1999 UEFA Intertoto Cup Third round   Hammarby IF 2-0 * 2–0
Semi-finals   West Ham United 0–1 0–1 *
2000–01 UEFA Champions League Group C   Valencia 0–1 1–1
  Lyon 0–2 1–3
  Olympiacos 1–0 0–2
2001 UEFA Intertoto Cup Second round   Liepājas Metalurgs 6–1 2–3 *
Third round   Basel 2–3 1–2 *
2002–03 UEFA Cup First round   Național București 2–0 0–3 *
2003 UEFA Intertoto Cup Third round   Lierse 4–1 * 1–0
Semi-finals   Koper 2–0 * 0–1
Finals   Villarreal 1–2 * 0–0
2004–05 UEFA Cup First round   Maccabi Petah Tikva 5–0 n.p. [1] *
Group G   Benfica 2–4
  VfB Stuttgart 1–0
  Dinamo Zagreb 2–2
  Beveren 1–0
Third round   Newcastle United 1–2 * 1–2
2005–06 UEFA Cup First round   Baník Ostrava 5–0 0–2 *
Group F   Dinamo București 0–0
  CSKA Moscow 0–0
  Marseille 0–1
  Levski Sofia 2–1
Third round   Steaua București 1–3 * 1–0
2006–07 UEFA Cup First round   Vitória de Setúbal 0–0 3–0 [2] *
Group D   Osasuna 0–0
  Odense 0–2
  Parma 1–2
  Lens 1–0
2007–08 UEFA Cup First round   Helsingborgs IF 5-3 * 1–5
2008-09 UEFA Cup First round   Vitória de Setúbal 5–2 1–1 [3] *
Group E   Milan 1–3
  VfL Wolfsburg 1–5
  Braga 1–2
  Portsmouth 0–3
2009–10 UEFA Europa League Play-off round   PAOK 1–1 (a) * 0–0
Group D   Sporting CP 2–3 1–1
  Hertha BSC 2–3 1–0
  Ventspils 5–0 0–0
2012–13 UEFA Europa League Third Q-round   Rapid București 4–0 * 0–1
Play-off round   Molde 1-2 0-2 *
^1 Due to safety concerns in Israel, the first leg was cancelled by UEFA.
^2 Played in Estádio José Alvalade, Lisbon.

Current squad

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As of 20 June 2024[10]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF   NED Denzel Hall
3 DF   NED Sam Kersten
5 DF   POL Paweł Bochniewicz (captain)
6 MF   GER Amara Condé
7 FW   SUR Ché Nunnely
8 MF   NED Luuk Brouwers
9 FW   NOR Daniel Karlsbakk
10 MF   NOR Osame Sahraoui
11 FW   GER Mats Köhlert
13 GK   NED Mickey van der Hart
14 MF   NED Levi Smans
No. Pos. Nation Player
15 DF   IRQ Hussein Ali
18 FW   MDA Ion Nicolaescu
19 MF   SWE Simon Olsson
21 MF   NED Espen Van Ee
22 GK   NED Bernt Klaverboer
23 GK   NED Jan Bekkema
24 FW   IRQ Danilo Al-Saed
27 DF   SRB Mateja Milovanović
28 MF   NED Melle Witteveen
44 GK   NED Andries Noppert
45 DF   NOR Oliver Braude

Notable former players

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Players listed below have had junior and/or senior international cap(s) for their respective countries before, while and/or after playing at Heerenveen.

  •   Thomas Prager
  •   Sven Kums
  •   Brian Vandenbussche
  •   Afonso Alves
  •   Paulo Henrique
  •   Ivan Tsvetkov
  •   Tristan Borges
  •   Rob Friend
  •   Will Johnson
  •   Cecilio Lopes
  •   Danijel Pranjić
  •   Martin Lejsal
  •   Michal Papadopulos
  •   Michal Švec
  •   Kristian Bak Nielsen
  •   Daniel Jensen
  •   Allan K. Jepsen
  •   Hjalte Nørregaard
  •   Marc Nygaard
  •   Jakob Poulsen
  •   Lasse Schöne
  •   Ole Tobiasen
  •   Jon Dahl Tomasson
  •   Sergei Mošnikov
  •   Hannu Haarala
  •   Mika Nurmela
  •   Juska Savolainen
  •   Niklas Tarvajärvi
  •   Mika Väyrynen
  •   Mark Uth
  •   Matthew Amoah
  •   Georgios Samaras
  •   Lesly Fellinga
  •   Arnór Smárason
  •   Alfred Finnbogason
  •   Reza Ghoochannejhad
  •   Bonaventure Kalou
  •   Yuki Kobayashi
  •   Ibrahim Drešević
  •   Arbër Zeneli
  •   Samir Fazli
  •   Mile Krstev
  •   Goran Popov
  •   Oussama Assaidi
  •   Ali Elkhattabi
  •   Abdelkarim Kissi
  •   Khalid Sinouh
  •   Oussama Tannane
  •   Hakim Ziyech
  •   Mario Been
  •   Roy Beerens
  •   Paul Bosvelt
  •   Michel Breuer
  •   Arnold Bruggink
  •   Jerry de Jong
  •   Marten de Roon
  •   Romano Denneboom
  •   Bas Dost
  •   Denzel Dumfries
  •   Johan Hansma
  •   Germ Hofma
  •   Klaas-Jan Huntelaar
  •   Daryl Janmaat
  •   Kees Kist
  •   Martin Koeman
  •   Abe Lenstra
  •   Henny Meijer
  •   Luciano Narsingh
  •   Andries Noppert
  •   Stijn Schaars
  •   Gerald Sibon
  •   Victor Sikora
  •   Daley Sinkgraven
  •   Jerry St. Juste
  •   Jeffrey Talan
  •   Henk Timmer
  •   René van der Gijp
  •   Milan van Ewijk
  •   Ruud van Nistelrooy
  •   Henk Veerman
  •   Joey Veerman
  •   Michel Vlap
  •   Uğur Yıldırım
  •   Emmanuel Ebiede
  •   Henry Onwuzuruike
  •   Daniel Berg Hestad
  •   Tarik Elyounoussi
  •   Christian Grindheim
  •   Thomas Holm
  •   Martin Ødegaard
  •   Radosław Matusiak
  •   Arkadiusz Radomski
  •   Tomasz Rząsa
  •   Ioan Andone
  •   Rodion Cămătaru
  •   Florin Constantinovici
  •   Dumitru Mitriță
  •   Igor Korneev
  •   Filip Đuričić
  •   Igor Đurić
  •   Miralem Sulejmani
  •   Hans Vonk
  •   Marcus Allbäck
  •   Erik Edman
  •   Viktor Elm
  •   Petter Hansson
  •   Sam Larsson
  •   Lasse Nilsson
  •   Amin Sarr
  •   Stefan Selaković
  •   Michael Bradley
  •   Robbie Rogers
  •   Radoslav Samardžić
  • Club staff

    edit
    Position Staff
    Head Coach   Robin van Persie
    Assistant Coach   Peter Reekers
      Brian Pinas
    First-Team Coach   Paul Simonis
    First-Team Goalkeeper Coach   Harmen Kuperus
    Rehab Coach   Jeroen Smit
    Video Analyst   Yöri Bosschaart
    Chief Scout   Peter Maas
    Scout   André Hanssen
      Søren Frederiksen
      Dirk Jan Derksen
    Youth Chief Scout   Marten van der Kamp
    Physiotherapist   Erik ten Voorde
      Johnny de Vries
    Masseur   Thom van der Heide
    Performance Manager   Nico Romeijn
    Kit Manager   Catrinus Stoker
      Benny Hulzinga
    Strategic Advisor   Karel Brandsma
    Academy Manager   Marcel van Buuren

    Coaching history

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  •   Sjoerd van Zuylen (1930–32)
  •   Sid Castle (1932)
  •   Otto Pinter (1932–33)
  •   Dirk Steenbergen (1934)
  •   Theo Eikenaar (1934–36)
  •   Sid Castle (1936–38)
  •   Piet Smit (1938–39)
  •   Anton Dalhuysen (1939–45)
  •   Otto Bonsema (1945)
  •   Abe Lenstra (1946–47)
  •   Piet van der Munnik (1947–51)
  •   Bob Kelly (1951–55)
  •   Volgert Ris (1955–58)
  •   Siem Plooijer (1958–61)
  •   Arie de Vroet (1961–63)
  •   Evert Mur (1963–65)
  •   László Zalai (1965–66)
  •   Ron Groenewoud (1966–67)
  •   Evert Teunissen (1967–69)
  •   Bas Paauwe Jr. (1969–71)
  •   Meg de Jongh (1971–73)
  •   Laszlo Zalai [nl] (1973–78)
  •   Jan Teunissen (1978–80)
  •   Hylke Kerkstra (interim) (1980)
  •   Henk van Brussel (1980–85)
  •   Foppe de Haan (1985–88)
  •   Ted Immers (1988–89)
  •   Ab Gritter (1989–90)
  •   Fritz Korbach (1 July 1990 – 30 June 1992)
  •   Foppe de Haan (18 October 1992 – 30 June 2004)
  •   Gertjan Verbeek (1 July 2004 – 30 June 2008)[11]
  •   Trond Sollied (1 July 2008 – 31 August 2009)
  •   Jan de Jonge (31 August 2009 – 3 February 2010)
  •   Jan Everse (int.) (5 February 2010 – 30 June 2010)
  •   Ron Jans (1 July 2010 – 30 June 2012)
  •   Marco van Basten (1 July 2012 – 30 June 2014)
  •   Dwight Lodeweges (1 July 2014 – 20 October 2015)
  •   Foppe de Haan (int.) (20 October 2015 – 30 June 2016)
  •   Jurgen Streppel (1 July 2016 – 30 June 2018)
  •   Jan Olde Riekerink (1 July 2018 – 10 April 2019)
  •   Johnny Jansen (10 April 2019 – 24 January 2022)
  •   Ole Tobiasen (int.) (4 February 2022 – 30 June 2022)
  •   Kees van Wonderen (1 July 2022 – 17 May 2024)
  •   Robin van Persie (17 May 2024 – )
  •  
    Foppe de Haan – manager from 1992 until 2004 and from 2015 until 2016 (int.).

    Match statistics

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    All competitions
    Eredivisie
    Champions League
    European Cup II
    UEFA Cup
    Intertoto Cup

    Women's team

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    In 2007, SC Heerenveen created a women's football team, which competes in the Vrouwen Eredivisie, and between 2012 and 2015 in the BeNe League. While it has ranked mostly in the table's bottom positions, in 2011 it reached the national cup's final, lost against AZ. Vivianne Miedema and Sherida Spitse started their professional career at Heerenveen.

    See also

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    References

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    1. ^ "Abe Lenstra stadion".
  • ^ Willis, Craig; Hughes, Will; Bober, Sergiusz. "ECMI Minorities Blog. National and Linguistic Minorities in the Context of Professional Football across Europe: Five Examples from Non-kin State Situations". ECMI. Retrieved 14 March 2023.
  • ^ a b c d e f g h i "The history of Heerenveen". www.sc-heerenveen.nl. Archived from the original on 10 December 2008. Retrieved 1 December 2008.
  • ^ a b c d e "sc Heerenveen: EVERY DUTCHMAN'S SECOND FAVORITE TEAM". www.ajax-usa.com. Archived from the original on 12 August 2009. Retrieved 1 December 2008.
  • ^ "Financiële problemen voor profclubs". RTL Nieuws. 2 August 2010. Archived from the original on 5 August 2010. Retrieved 2 August 2010.
  • ^ "Heerenveen prevail in Dutch final shoot-out". Uefa.com. 17 May 2009. Retrieved 18 May 2009.
  • ^ "Frisian flag in Groningen". sc-heerenveen.nl. Archived from the original on 30 June 2017. Retrieved 27 March 2018.
  • ^ "The painted statue". trotsvanhetnoorden.nl. Archived from the original on 26 September 2018. Retrieved 27 March 2018.
  • ^ "Trots van het Noorden". www.trotsvanhetnoorden.nl. Archived from the original on 4 August 2017. Retrieved 13 February 2018.
  • ^ "Selectie". Archived from the original on 14 May 2017. Retrieved 21 April 2017.
  • ^ van Cuilenborg, C. (Ed.) (2007). Voetbal international, seizoengids 2007–2008. (p. 92). Amsterdam: WP Sport Media BV.
  • edit

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    Last edited on 13 July 2024, at 18:07  





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    This page was last edited on 13 July 2024, at 18:07 (UTC).

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