en-academic.com

FC Dordrecht

  • ️Thu Aug 16 1883
FC Dordrecht
FC Dordrecht.png
Full name Football Club Dordrecht
Nickname(s) Schapenkoppen (Sheep heads)
Founded August 16, 1883; 128 years ago
Ground GN Bouw Stadion,
Dordrecht
(Capacity: 4,100)
Chairman Netherlands Ad Heijsman
Manager Netherlands Theo Bos
League Eerste Divisie
2010–11 Eerste Divisie, 11th

Home colours

Away colours

FC Dordrecht is a football club from the city of Dordrecht in the Netherlands, currently playing in the Eerste Divisie.

History

Founded on 16 August 1883 as Dordrechtsche Football Club (DFC), it became a professional club in 1954 upon the introduction of professional football to the Netherlands. The next significant event was in 1972, at which time the professional and amateur branches of DFC Dordrecht severed their ties. The amateur branch remained DFC Dordrecht, while its professional counterpart became simply FC Dordrecht. Following their reorganisation in 1979 (which led to a change in name to Drechtsteden'79 (DS'79) - referring to the region Drechtsteden), the club was promoted to the Eredivisie in 1983. This however was not to last and was immediately followed by a relegation back to the Eerste Divisie. They went back up to the Eredivisie in 1988/1989 season.

In 1990, another investor gave the club its third name of Dordrecht'90. The club just missed promotion to the Eredivisie in 1991, but was finally admitted when Dordrecht'90 surprisingly merged with neighbouring Schiedamse Voetbal Vereniging (SVV) of Schiedam. The club used the name of SVV/Dordrecht'90 for two seasons, but in 1993, the 'SVV' was dropped and the club was renamed Dordrecht'90. Finally in 2002, the club was again renamed, to the name it bore from 1972 to 1979: FC Dordrecht and that is how the name stands today. For a number of years it was one of the clubs with the lowest average attendance of all Dutch professional teams.[1] Undoubtedly the most famous player to wear a Dordrecht shirt was Johan Cruijff, who played 3 friendly matches for the club in January 1981.

Honours

  • KNVB Cup
    • Winner: 1914, 1932
    • Runners-up: 1913, 1943

Current squad

As of 1 August 2011

For recent transfers, see List of Dutch football transfers summer 2011

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

No. Position Player
Netherlands GK Stef Doedée
Netherlands GK Nick van der Ploeg
Netherlands DF Mawouna Amevor
Netherlands DF Casper van Beers (on loan from Willem II)
Netherlands DF Tom Beugelsdijk (on loan from ADO Den Haag)
Netherlands DF Roderick Gielisse (on loan from ADO Den Haag)
Netherlands DF Josimar Lima (on loan from Willem II)
Netherlands DF Kevin Patijn
Netherlands DF Johan Versluis
Netherlands MF Nick Coster
Netherlands MF Giorgio Achterberg (on loan from ADO Den Haag)
Turkey MF Serhat Köksal (on loan from ADO Den Haag)
No. Position Player
Netherlands MF Donny van der Dussen (on loan from ADO Den Haag)
Netherlands MF Wilmer Kousemaker
Netherlands MF Danny Post
Netherlands MF Jeffrey Rijsdijk
Netherlands MF Björn Vlasbom
Curaçao FW Shayron Curiel
Netherlands FW Santy Hulst
Netherlands FW Renaldo Jongebloet
Cape Verde FW Cecilio Lopes (captain)
Netherlands FW Jesse Mayele
Netherlands FW Jermaine van Pijkeren
Netherlands FW Kevin Tano (on loan from ADO Den Haag)

References

  1. ^ Historical attendances Archived 2 February 2011 at WebCite

External links

v · d · eFC Dordrechtmanagers

Weisz (1938–40) · de Smit (1954–55) · Schwartz (1955–56) · Veg (1956–58) · Rybicki (1958–60) · Humenberger (1960–XX) · Veldhuis (19XX–XX) · de Smit (19XX–62) · Bens (1962–64) · de Visser (1964–66) · de Wit (1966–XX) · van den Bosch (19XX–67) · de Wit (1967–68) · Kraay (1968–69) · de Visser (1969–71) · Veg (1971–72) · Janse (1972–XX) · Dolaard (19XX–73) · Alleman (1973–XX) · van den Bosch (19XX–77) · van Eck (1975–77) · Rab (1977–79) · van Daal (1979–81) · Petescu (1981–82) · Dorjee (1982–84) · Körver (1984–XX) · Kistemaker (19XX–85) · Versluys (1985–86) · Kistemaker (1986–89) · Drost (1989–90) · Verèl (1990–91) · Advocaat (1991) · van Velzen (1991) · Verèl (1991–92) · Berger (1992–93) · Van Zoghel (1993–94) · Versleijen (1994–95) · Schoenmaker (1995–96) · Verbeek (1996–00) · Van den Ham (2000–02) · Van Eck (2002–03) · Verbeek (2003–05) · Boogers (2005) · de Koning (2005) · Koolhof (2005–06) · Kruys (2006–10) · Lee (2010–11) · Bos (2011–)

v · d · eEerste Divisie · 2011–12
Clubs

Almere · AGOVV · Cambuur · Den Bosch · Dordrecht · Eindhoven · Emmen · Fortuna Sittard · Go Ahead Eagles · Helmond Sport · MVV · Oss · Sparta · Telstar · Veendam · Volendam · Willem II · Zwolle

v · d · eDivision 2/Eerste Divisie Seasons

1956–57 · 1957–58 · 1958–59 · 1959–60 · 1960–61 · 1961–62 · 1962–63 · 1963–64 · 1964–65 · 1965–66 · 1966–67 · 1967–68 · 1968–69 · 1969–70 · 1970–71 · 1971–72 · 1972–73 · 1973–74 · 1974–75 · 1975–76 · 1976–77 · 1977–78 · 1978–79 · 1979–80 · 1980–81 · 1981–82 · 1982–83 · 1983–84 · 1984–85 · 1985–86 · 1986–87 · 1987–88 · 1988–89 · 1989–90 · 1990–91 · 1991–92 · 1992–93 · 1993–94 · 1994–95 · 1995–96 · 1996–97 · 1997–98 · 1998–99 · 1999–2000 · 2000–01 · 2001–02 · 2002–03 · 2003–04 · 2004–05 · 2005–06 · 2006–07 · 2007–08 · 2008–09 · 2009–10 · 2010-11 · 2011-12

v · d · eFootball in the Netherlands
Overview

Football Association · League system · Clubs · Stadiums · Champions · Players · Managers · Referees · Footballer of the Year

International

Men

Netherlands · U-21 · U-19 · U-17 · Variants (Beach · Futsal)

Women

Leagues

Men

Eredivisie · Eerste Divisie · Tweede Divisie (defunct) · Topklasse · Hoofdklasse · Eerste Klasse · Tweede Klasse · Derde Klasse · Vierde Klasse · Vijfde Klasse · Zesde Klasse · Zevende Klasse

Women

Eredivisie · Topklasse · Hoofdklasse

Cups

Men

Women