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Netherlands national football team

  • ️Wed Sep 22 1982
 Netherlands
Shirt badge/Association crest
Nickname(s) Clockwork Orange
Holland
Oranje
The Flying Dutchmen
Association Koninklijke Nederlandse Voetbalbond — KNVB
Confederation UEFA (Europe)
Head coach Bert van Marwijk
Captain Mark van Bommel
Most caps Edwin van der Sar (130)
Top scorer Patrick Kluivert (40)
Home stadium Amsterdam Arena
De Kuip
Philips Stadion
FIFA code NED
FIFA ranking 2 [1]
Highest FIFA ranking 1 [2] (August 2011-September 2011)
Lowest FIFA ranking 25 (May 1998)
Elo ranking 2
Highest Elo ranking 1 (Mar 1911 – Mar 1912, Jun 1912, Aug 1920; Jun 1978, Jun 1988 – Jun 1990, Jun–Sep 1992, Jun 2002, Jun–Sep 2003, Oct 2005, Jun 2008, Jul 2010.)
Lowest Elo ranking 56 (October 1954)

Home colours

Away colours

First international
 Belgium 1–4 Netherlands Netherlands
(Antwerp, Belgium; 30 April 1905)
Biggest win
Netherlands Netherlands 11–0 San Marino 
(Eindhoven, Netherlands; 2 September 2011)
Biggest defeat
England England Am. 12–2 Netherlands Netherlands
(Darlington, England; 21 December 1907)[3]
World Cup
Appearances 9 (First in 1934)
Best result Runners-Up, 1974, 1978 and 2010
European Championship
Appearances 8 (First in 1976)
Best result Winners, 1988

Honours

Olympic medal record
Men's Football
Bronze 1908 London Team
Bronze 1912 Stockholm Team
Bronze 1920 Antwerp Team

The Netherlands National Football Team (Dutch: Nederlands nationaal voetbalelftal) represents the Netherlands in association football and is controlled by the Royal Dutch Football Association (KNVB), the governing body for football in the Netherlands. The team was first assembled in 1905.

The football team is colloquially referred to as 'Het Nederlands Elftal' (The Dutch Eleven), 'Holland', referring the Netherlands as a whole (although it is actually the name of a smaller region), and 'Oranje', a tribute to the House of Orange-Nassau. The Dutch hold the record for playing the most World Cup finals without ever winning the final. They finished second in the 1974, 1978, and 2010 World Cups, losing to West Germany, Argentina and Spain respectively. They won the European Championship in 1988. At the peak of their success in the 1970s, the team was famous for its mastery of Total Football and was nicknamed Clockwork Orange for its precision passing.

In August 2011, the team was ranked number 1 in the FIFA world rankings, thus becoming the second national football team, after Spain, to top the rankings without previously winning a World Cup. The Netherlands National Football Team remains one of the strongest football teams in Europe and the world.

History

Dutch squad for their first international match

The Netherlands played their first international match in Antwerp against Belgium on 30 April 1905. The players were selected by a five-member commission from the Dutch football association. After 90 minutes, the score was 1–1, but because the match was for a trophy (the "Coupe van den Abeele"), the game went into extra time, in which Eddy de Neve scored three times, making the score 1–4 for the Dutch side.[4]

The Netherlands made their first appearance at the World Cup final tournament in 1934. After a second appearance in 1938 it took till 1974 before they performed on the highest stage again.

Total Football in the 1970s

The 1970s saw the invention of Total Football (Dutch: Totaalvoetbal), pioneered by Feyenoord and Ajax and led by playmaker Johan Cruyff and national team coach Rinus Michels. The Dutch made huge strides, qualifying for two World Cup finals in the decade. The captain of the Brazilian team that won the 1970 FIFA World Cup, Carlos Alberto, went on to say "The only team I’ve seen that did things differently was Holland at the 1974 World Cup in Germany. Since then everything looks more or less the same to me…. Their ‘carousel’ style of play was amazing to watch and marvellous for the game."[5]

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. However, supported by the crowd, a converted penalty by Paul Breitner and the winner from Gerd Müller led to a victory for the Germans.

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

In 1978, the Netherlands again reached the final of a World Cup, only to be beaten by the host, this time 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 Johan Neeskens, Johnny Rep, Arie Haan, Ruud Krol, Wim Jansen, Jan Jongbloed, Wim Suurbier and Rob Rensenbrink from the 1974 selection. The Netherlands were less impressive in the group stages. They qualified 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. Unfortunately for the Dutch, Rensenbrink hit the Argentinian post in the last minute of normal time, with the score 1–1.

Failure:1982-86

Euro '80 was the last tournament for which the Total Football qualified, 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 the 1986 World Cup in succession. Qualification for Euro 1984 was within reach, but the Dutch ended the campaign on the same number of points as rivals Spain, and the same goal difference (+16). Spain advanced having scored two more goals. The failure to reach the 1986 World Cup was also very close. In a play off with neighbours Belgium, the Netherlands lost 1-0 in Brussels, but were leading 2-0 in the home leg in Rotterdam with a few minutes remaining. Belgium scored to end the tie 2-1, and overall play off 2-2. Belgium advanced on the away goal rule.

European Champions

Rinus Michels returned to coach the team for the Euro '88 tournament. After losing the first group match against the Soviet Union (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.[6] 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 for the next three years after almost a decade in the wilderness.

Despite high expectations as the team entered the 1990 World Cup, the 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 to be van Basten's last major tournament as he suffered a serious injury shortly after, eventually conceding defeat and retiring at the age of 30 in 1995.

In the 1994 World Cup, in the absence of the chronically injured van Basten and the striking Gullit, Dennis Bergkamp led the team with three goals and the Netherlands advanced to the quarter-finals, where they lost 3–2 to eventual champions Brazil.

1996–2004

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.

The Netherlands at Euro 96 in a match against Scotland.

In the 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 quarter-final, 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.[7] 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 third place match 2–1 to upstart Croatia. Soon after the World Cup exit manager Guus Hiddink resigned after two tournaments in charge and was replaced by legendary ex-midfielder Frank Rijkaard.

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 save in regulation time) to eliminate the Netherlands. Dennis Bergkamp, who failed to score during the tournament, retired from the national team after Euro 2000 (partly due to his fear of flying effectively ruling him out from the 2002 World Cup which was to be held in East Asia.) Coach Frank Rijkaard was widely criticized by the press after the defeat to the Italians as the Dutch had squandered several chances to kill the game. Rijkaard resigned, with Louis van Gaal taking over. Van Gaal is credited with initially bringing through the backbone of this Dutch side whilst manager of Ajax durting the mid ninieties, including Edwin van der Sar, Edgar Davids, Michael Reiziger, Clarence Seedorf, Marc Overmars, Patrick Kluivert and the de Boer twins.

Surprisingly the 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.

Dick Advocaat returned to coach the Netherlands for a second time and led the team to the semifinals of Euro 2004 but lost to Portugal and, after receiving criticism for his tactics and player changes, stepped down. This was to be the end for the many of the team's World Cup veterans (mostly made up of the Ajax generation of 1995.) 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.

2006–2010

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 Côte d'Ivoire (2–1) and drawing Argentina (0–0). Both Argentina and the Netherlands finished the group stage with seven 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 1–0 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.[8] 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.[9]

Netherlands – France at Euro 2008

The Netherlands began their Euro 2008 campaign with a win in Luxembourg on 2 September 2006. On 8 September 2007, the Oranje beat Bulgaria at the Amsterdam Arena on goals by Wesley Sneijder and Ruud van Nistelrooy. On 12 September 2007, the Netherlands won a hard fought victory against Albania, with van Nistelrooy scoring the winning goal in stoppage time. This win took the Dutch squad into second place in Group G, on par with Romania for points, but behind on goal differential. The Oranje were beaten 1–0 in Romania on 13 October 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 an 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.

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 Bern on 9 June 2008. This was the Netherlands' first victory over Italy since 1978. In their second group match against France on 13 June 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 by 3–1, despite a late 86th minute equalizer by Ruud van Nistelrooy.

Netherlands – Denmark at the 2010 World Cup

Under new coach Bert van Marwijk, the Dutch team went on to secure a 100 percent record in their World Cup 2010 qualification campaign, winning all eight games and becoming the first European team to qualify for the World Cup. The World Cup Draw in Cape Town on the 4 December 2009 saw the Dutch being placed alongside Denmark, Cameroon and Japan in Group E. On June 14 the Dutch won 2–0 against Denmark in their opener at the World Cup. On June 19 they then beat Japan 1–0 with a goal from Wesley Sneijder. They were the first team to qualify for the Round of 16 after a 2–1 victory from Denmark over Cameroon. In the first knockout round they faced Slovakia. At the end it was 2–1 victory after goals from Arjen Robben and Wesley Sneijder. The conceded goal came in injury time from a penalty taken by Róbert Vittek. They advanced to the semifinals with a 2–1 victory over the favoured Brazilians on July 2, 2010. Brazil, who had held a 1–0 lead at the half, was the favourite to win the cup, had never lost in 37 World Cup matches (35–0–2) in which they had held a halftime lead. The first Dutch goal was originally ruled an own goal by Felipe Melo, but was later officially changed to a goal by Wesley Sneijder. The second came from a corner kick headed into the net by Wesley Sneijder despite being the shortest player on the field. In the semi-final the Dutch beat Uruguay 3–2 to advance to their first World Cup final since 1978. The Dutch lost the final to Spain with a score of 1–0 after extra time in what was to be Giovanni van Bronckhorst's last match in professional football.

Euro 2012

The Netherlands in 2011.

The Dutch went on after the World Cup tournament and started with the full score of 24 points from 8 matches in the UEFA Euro 2012 qualifying campaign.[10]

In between the qualification matches, the team went on a trip to South America for rematches of the World Cup quarter and semi-finals against Brazil and Uruguay. Although the matches ended in draws, coach Bert van Marwijk saw it as "a good test for his players, to prove they were fit to overcome hostile circumstances also". "It was a very useful experience," Van Marwijk, "We could even have won these two matches and that is a compliment to the players."

On 2 September 2011 the Netherlands defeated San Marino 11–0, their biggest ever victory[11].

On 6 September 2011, the Dutch defeated Finland 2–0, ensuring a place at the Euro 2012, either as Group E winner or as the best runners-ups.

Main article: UEFA Euro 2012 qualifying Group E

Teamv · d · e

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Netherlands 10 9 0 1 37 8 +29 27
 Sweden 10 8 0 2 31 11 +20 24
 Hungary 10 6 1 3 22 14 +8 19
 Finland 10 3 1 6 16 16 0 10
 Moldova 10 3 0 7 12 16 −4 9
 San Marino 10 0 0 10 0 53 −53 0

2014 FIFA World Cup

On 30 July 2011 at the 2014 FIFA World Cup preliminary draw, The Netherlands were placed in Group D. They commence their qualifying campaign in late 2012 in a group that features contenders Turkey, Hungary and Romania. [12]

Teamv · d · e

Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Netherlands 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
 Turkey 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
 Hungary 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
 Romania 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
 Estonia 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
 Andorra 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Last 10 and known next games

Date Venue Opponent Competition Result
November 17, 2010 Amsterdam Arena,  Netherlands  Turkey Friendly match 1–0 W
February 9, 2011 Philips Stadion,  Netherlands  Austria Friendly match 3–1 W
March 25, 2011 Stadium Puskas Ferenc,  Hungary  Hungary ECQ2012 0–4 W
March 29, 2011 Amsterdam Arena,  Netherlands  Hungary ECQ2012 5–3 W
June 4, 2011 Estádio Serra Dourada,  Brazil  Brazil Friendly match 0–0 D
June 8, 2011 Estadio Centenario,  Uruguay  Uruguay Friendly match 1–1 D
September 2, 2011 Philips Stadion,  Netherlands  San Marino ECQ2012 11–0 W
September 6, 2011 Helsinki Olympic Stadium,  Finland  Finland ECQ2012 0–2 W
October 7, 2011 De Kuip,  Netherlands  Moldova ECQ2012 1–0 W
October 11, 2011 Råsunda Stadium,  Sweden  Sweden ECQ2012 3–2 L
November 11, 2011 Amsterdam Arena,  Netherlands  Switzerland Friendly match
November 15, 2011 HSH Nordbank Arena,  Germany  Germany Friendly match

KEY: ECQ2012 = UEFA Euro 2012 qualifying

Colours

The Netherlands national football team famously plays in bright orange shirts. 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 white, with two thin lines outlining a chevron containing the colours of the Dutch flag. Occasionally, orange socks are worn instead of light blue socks, such as in the qualifier against Scotland on March 28, 2009.

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

FIFA World Cup record

Year Round Position GP W D* L GS GA
Uruguay 1930 Did Not Enter
Italy 1934 Round 1 9th 1 0 0 1 2 3
France 1938 Round 1 14th 1 0 0 1 0 3
Brazil 1950 Did Not Enter
Switzerland 1954
Sweden 1958 Did Not Qualify
Chile 1962
England 1966
Mexico 1970
West Germany 1974 Final 2nd 7 5 1 1 15 3
Argentina 1978 Final 2nd 7 3 2 2 15 10
Spain 1982 Did Not Qualify
Mexico 1986
Italy 1990 Round of 16 15th 4 0 3 1 3 4
United States 1994 Quarter-Final 7th 5 3 0 2 8 6
France 1998 Semi-Final 4th 7 3 3* 1 13 7
South Korea Japan 2002 Did Not Qualify
Germany 2006 Round of 16 11th 4 2 1 1 3 2
South Africa 2010 Final 2nd 7 6 0 1 12 6
Brazil 2014 Qualifying
Russia 2018
Qatar 2022
Total 9/19 3 Finals 43 22 10 11 71 44

UEFA European Championship record

UEFA European Championship record
Year Round Position GP W D* L GS GA
France 1960 Did Not Enter
Spain 1964 Did Not Qualify
Italy 1968
Belgium 1972
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1976 Third Place 3rd 2 1 0 1 4 5
Italy 1980 Group Stage 5th 3 1 1 1 4 4
France 1984 Did Not Qualify
West Germany 1988 Champions 1st 5 4 0 1 8 3
Sweden 1992 Semi Final 3rd 4 2 2 0 6 3
England 1996 Quarter Final 8th 4 1 2 1 3 4
Belgium Netherlands 2000 Semi Final 3rd 5 4 1 0 13 3
Portugal 2004 Semi Final 4th 5 1 2 2 7 6
Austria Switzerland 2008 Quarter Final 6th 4 3 0 1 10 4
Poland Ukraine 2012 Qualified
France 2016 To Be Determined
Total Champions 9/14 32 17 8 7 55 32

Summer Olympics

Host nation(s) / Year Result GP W D* L GS GA
United Kingdom 1908 Third place 2 1 0 1 2 4
Sweden 1912 Third place 4 3 0 1 17 8
Belgium 1920 Third place 4 2 0 2 9 10
France 1924 Fourth place 5 2 1 2 11 7
Netherlands 1928 Round 1 1 0 0 1 0 2
United Kingdom 1948 First Round 2 1 0 1 6 5
Finland 1952 Preliminary Round 1 0 0 1 1 5
China 2008 Quarter Finals 4 1 2 1 4 4
Total 8/31 23 10 3 10 50 45
*Draws include knockout matches decided by penalty shootout.
**Gold background color indicates the tournament was won. Red border color indicates tournament was held on home soil.'

Coaching staff

Position Name Notes
Manager Netherlands Bert van Marwijk
Assistant Manager Netherlands Phillip Cocu
Assistant Manager Netherlands Ernest Faber
Goalkeeping Coach Netherlands Ruud Hesp
Fitness Coach
Physiotherapists
U-21 Manager Netherlands Cor Pot
U-19 Manager Netherlands Wim van Zwam
U-17 Manager Netherlands Albert Stuivenberg

Players

Current squad

The following players were named as part of the squad for the matches against Switzerland, on November 11, 2011, and Germany, on November 15, 2011.

Caps and goals as of October 7, 2011.

# Pos. Player Date of Birth (Age) Caps Goals Club
GK Maarten Stekelenburg September 22, 1982 (age 29) 42 0 Italy Roma
GK Michel Vorm October 20, 1983 (age 28) 9 0 Wales Swansea City
GK Tim Krul April 3, 1988 (age 23) 2 0 England Newcastle United
DF Joris Mathijsen April 5, 1980 (age 31) 76 3 Spain Málaga
DF John Heitinga (Vice-Captain) November 15, 1983 (age 27) 72 7 England Everton
DF Khalid Boulahrouz December 28, 1981 (age 29) 33 0 Germany VfB Stuttgart
DF Gregory van der Wiel February 3, 1988 (age 23) 28 0 Netherlands Ajax
DF Edson Braafheid April 8, 1983 (age 28) 8 0 Germany Hoffenheim
DF Ron Vlaar February 16, 1985 (age 26) 4 0 Netherlands Feyenoord
DF Vurnon Anita April 4, 1989 (age 22) 3 0 Netherlands Ajax
MF Rafael van der Vaart February 11, 1983 (age 28) 92 17 England Tottenham Hotspur
MF Wesley Sneijder June 9, 1984 (age 27) 78 23 Italy Internazionale
MF Mark van Bommel (Captain) April 22, 1977 (age 34) 72 10 Italy Milan
MF Nigel de Jong November 30, 1984 (age 26) 54 1 England Manchester City
MF Stijn Schaars January 11, 1984 (age 27) 15 0 Portugal Sporting
MF Kevin Strootman February 13, 1990 (age 21) 8 1 Netherlands PSV
MF Georginio Wijnaldum November 11, 1990 (age 20) 1 1 Netherlands PSV
FW Dirk Kuyt July 22, 1980 (age 31) 82 24 England Liverpool
FW Robin van Persie August 6, 1983 (age 28) 60 25 England Arsenal
FW Klaas-Jan Huntelaar August 12, 1983 (age 28) 48 30 Germany Schalke 04
FW Ryan Babel December 19, 1986 (age 24) 40 5 Germany Hoffenheim
FW Luuk de Jong August 27, 1990 (age 21) 4 1 Netherlands Twente
FW Derk Boerrigter October 16, 1986 (age 25) 0 0 Netherlands Ajax

Recent call-ups

The following players have been called up for the team in the last 12 months.

Pos. Player Date of Birth (Age) Caps Goals Club Latest Call-up
GK Jasper Cillessen April 22, 1989 (age 22) 0 0 Netherlands Ajax v.  Uruguay, June 8, 2011
GK Jelle ten Rouwelaar December 24, 1980 (age 30) 0 0 Netherlands NAC v.  Uruguay, June 8, 2011
GK Sander Boschker October 20, 1970 (age 41) 1 0 Netherlands Twente v.  Hungary, March 29, 2011
DF Erik Pieters July 8, 1988 (age 23) 14 0 Netherlands PSV v.  Sweden, October 11, 2011INJ
DF Hedwiges Maduro February 13, 1985 (age 26) 18 0 Spain Valencia v.  Moldova, October 7, 2011INJ
DF Peter Wisgerhof November 19, 1979 (age 31) 2 0 Netherlands Twente v.  Austria, February 9, 2011
MF Ibrahim Afellay April 2, 1986 (age 25) 36 3 Spain Barcelona v.  Moldova, October 7, 2011INJ
MF Demy de Zeeuw May 26, 1983 (age 28) 27 0 Russia Spartak Moscow v.  Brazil, June 4, 2011
MF Urby Emanuelson June 16, 1986 (age 25) 14 0 Italy Milan v.  Hungary, March 29, 2011
MF Royston Drenthe April 8, 1987 (age 24) 1 0 England Everton v.  Turkey, November 17, 2010
FW Jeremain Lens November 24, 1987 (age 23) 4 1 Netherlands PSV v.  Sweden, October 11, 2011
FW Arjen Robben January 23, 1984 (age 27) 53 15 Germany Bayern Munich v.  Moldova, October 7, 2011INJ
FW Ruud van Nistelrooy July 1, 1976 (age 35) 70 35 Spain Málaga v.  Hungary, March 29, 2011
Notes

INJ Player withdrew from the squad due to an injury.

Past managers

Individual all-time records

  Still active players are highlighted

Most capped players

# Player National career Matches Goals Total career
1. Edwin van der Sar 1995–2008 130 0 1988–2011
2. Frank de Boer 1990–2004 112 13 1988–2005
3. Giovanni van Bronckhorst 1996–2010 106 6 1993–2010
4. Phillip Cocu 1996–2006 101 10 1988–2008
5. Rafael van der Vaart 2001– 92 17 2000–
6. Clarence Seedorf 1994–2008 87 11 1992–
7. Marc Overmars 1993–2004 86 17 1990–2009
8. Aron Winter 1987–2000 84 6 1986–2003
9. Ruud Krol 1969–1983 83 4 1968–1986
10. Dirk Kuyt 2004– 82 24 1998–
11. Dennis Bergkamp 1990–2000 79 37 1986–2006
Patrick Kluivert 1994–2004 79 40 1994–2008
13. Ronald Koeman 1983–1994 78 14 1980–1997
Wesley Sneijder 2003– 78 23 2002–
15. Joris Mathijsen 2004– 76 3 1998–
16. Edgar Davids 1994–2005 74 6 1992–2010
17. Hans van Breukelen 1980–1992 73 0 1976–1994
Frank Rijkaard 1980–1994 73 10 1980–1995
19. Michael Reiziger 1994–2004 72 1 1990–2007
John Heitinga 2004– 72 7 2001–
Mark van Bommel 2000– 72 10 1992–
Last updated: 2 September 2011
Source: voetbalstats.nl (Dutch)

Most goals scored

# Player National career Goals Matches Average Total career
1. Patrick Kluivert 1994–2004 40 79 0.51 1994–2008
2. Dennis Bergkamp 1990–2000 37 79 0.47 1986–2006
3. Faas Wilkes 1946–1961 35 38 0.92 1940–1964
Ruud van Nistelrooy 1998– 35 70 0.50 1994–
5. Abe Lenstra 1940–1959 33 47 0.70 1935–1963
Johan Cruyff 1966–1977 33 48 0.69 1964–1984
7. Klaas-Jan Huntelaar 2006– 30 48 0.63 2002–
8. Bep Bakhuys 1928–1937 28 23 1.22 1925–1947
9. Kick Smit 1935–1946 26 29 0.90 1924–1950
10. Robin van Persie 2004– 25 60 0.42 2001–

Last updated: 12 October 2011
Source: voetbalstats.nl (Dutch)

Titles

See also

References

  1. ^ The Netherlands reached the top spot in the FIFA ranking on August 10, 2011. FIFA will publish the ranking on August 24.
  2. ^ http://www.fifa.com/associations/association=ned/ranking/gender=m/index.html
  3. ^ Note that this match is not considered to be a full international by the English FA, and does not appear in the records of the England team
  4. ^ "Netherlands: Full "A" internationals (1905–1910)". International Federation of Football History & Statistics. http://www.iffhs.de/?29da14a8db55291a14681bd4685fdcdc3bfcdc0aec28d6eda0a61c. Retrieved 15 May 2010.
  5. ^ "Tactics: Were Holland 1974 the last true innovators?". Football Further. 2010-07-14. http://www.tomwfootball.com/2010/10/15/tactics-were-holland-1974-the-last-true-innovators/. Retrieved 2010-10-18.
  6. ^ "Cheeseheads vs Krauts": 30 Years of Enmity, Ajax-USA.com, June 14, 2004
  7. ^ Phil Jones (1998-07-04). "The Netherlands pay back controversial loss to Argentina". sportsillustrated.cnn.com. http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/soccer/world/events/1998/worldcup/news/1998/07/04/philjones_04/. Retrieved 2007-08-22.
  8. ^ Stuart Watt (2006-06-26). "Portugal wins battle of Nuremberg". www.abc.net.au. http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200606/s1671528.htm. Retrieved 2007-08-22.
  9. ^ "Van Basten on right track". Football.co.uk. http://www.football.co.uk/holland/van_basten_on_right_track_230197.shtml. Retrieved 2007-08-22.
  10. ^ Kuyt kills off brave Hungary for Netherlands by Berend Scholten on UEFA.com
  11. ^ "San Marino on the end of record Netherlands win". Berend Scholten on UEFA.com. 2 September 2011. http://www.uefa.com/uefaeuro2012/matches/season=2012/round=15171/match=2002054/postmatch/report/index.html#san+marino+record+netherlands. Retrieved 2 September 2011.
  12. ^ http://www.fifa.com/worldcup/preliminarydraw/news/newsid=1483519/index.html

External links

Preceded by
1984France 
European Champions
1988 (First title)
Succeeded by
1992Denmark 
Awards
Preceded by
1999 Brazil 
FIFA Team of the Year
2000
Succeeded by
2001 Honduras 
 Links to related articles
v · UEFA European Football Championship · Champions

1960:  Soviet Union  · 1964:  Spain  · 1968:  Italy  · 1972:  West Germany  · 1976:  Czechoslovakia  · 1980:  West Germany  · 1984:  France  · 1988:  Netherlands  · 1992:  Denmark  · 1996:  Germany  · 2000:  France  · 2004:  Greece  · 2008:  Spain

v · d · eNetherlands national football team
General

History · Managers

Venues

Home venues

Statistics
Players

Alphabetical · By Year · World Cup & Euro Championship squads · Born outside Netherlands · Other categories

World Cup Finals

1934 · 1938 · 1974 · 1978 · 1990 · 1994 · 1998 · 2006 · 2010

UEFA Euro Finals

1976 · 1980 · 1988 · 1992 · 1996 · 2000 · 2004 · 2008

v · d · eInternational association football
FIFA · World Cup · Confederations Cup · U-20 World Cup · U-17 World Cup · Olympics · Minor tournaments · World Rankings · Player of the Year · FIFA Ballon d'Or · Teams · Debuts · Competitions · Federations · Codes
Asia
Africa
North,
Central America
and Caribbean
South America
Oceania
Europe
Non-FIFA
Games

All-Africa Games · Asian Games · CARIFTA Games · East Asian Games · Francophonie Games · IOIG · Lusophony Games · Mediterranean Games · Pan American Games · Pan Arab Games · Pacific Games · South Asian Games · Southeast Asian Games

See also International women's football.
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

v · d · eNetherlands national football team results
1980s

1980 · 1981 · 1982 · 1983 · 1984 · 1985 · 1986 · 1987 · 1988 · 1989

1990s

1990 · 1991 · 1992 · 1993 · 1994 · 1995 · 1996 · 1997 · 1998 · 1999

2000s

2000 · 2001 · 2002 · 2003 · 2004 · 2005 · 2006 · 2007 · 2008 · 2009 · 2010

v · d · eNational association football teams of Europe (UEFA)

Albania · Andorra · Armenia · Austria · Azerbaijan · Belarus · Belgium · Bosnia and Herzegovina · Bulgaria · Croatia · Cyprus · Czech Republic · Denmark · England · Estonia · Faroe Islands · Finland · France · Georgia · Germany · Greece · Hungary · Iceland · Ireland · Israel · Italy · Kazakhstan · Latvia · Liechtenstein · Lithuania · Luxembourg · Macedonia · Malta · Moldova · Montenegro · Netherlands · Northern Ireland · Norway · Poland · Portugal · Romania · Russia · San Marino · Scotland · Serbia · Slovakia · Slovenia · Spain · Sweden · Switzerland · Turkey · Ukraine · Wales

defunct: CIS · Czechoslovakia · GDR · Ireland (1882–1950) · Saarland · Soviet Union · Yugoslavia

v · d · e1934 FIFA World Cup finalists
Champions
Runners-up
Third place
Fourth place
Eliminated in the quarter-finals
Eliminated in the first round

Argentina · Belgium · Brazil · Egypt · France · Netherlands · Romania · United States

v · d · e1938 FIFA World Cup finalists
Champions
Runners-up
Third place
Fourth place
Eliminated in the quarter-finals
Eliminated in the first round

Austria · Belgium · Dutch East Indies · Germany · Netherlands · Norway · Poland · Romania

v · d · e1974 FIFA World Cup finalists
Champions
Runners-up

Netherlands

Third place
Fourth place
Eliminated in the second group stage
Eliminated in the first group stage

Australia · Bulgaria · Chile · Haiti · Italy · Scotland · Uruguay · Zaire

v · d · eUEFA Euro 1976 finalists
Champions
Runners-up
Third place

Netherlands

Fourth place
v · d · e1978 FIFA World Cup finalists
Champions
Runners-up

Netherlands

Third place
Fourth place
Eliminated in the second round
Eliminated in the group stage

France · Hungary · Iran · Mexico · Scotland · Spain · Sweden · Tunisia

v · d · eUEFA Euro 1980 finalists
Champions
Runners-up
Third place
Fourth place
Eliminated in group stage

England · Greece · Netherlands · Spain

v · d · eUEFA Euro 1988 finalists
Champions

Netherlands

Runners-up

Soviet Union

Eliminated in semi-finals
Eliminated in group stage
v · d · e1990 FIFA World Cup finalists
Champions
Runners-up
Third place
Fourth place
Eliminated in the quarter-finals
Eliminated in the round of 16

Belgium · Brazil · Colombia · Costa Rica · Netherlands · Romania · Spain · Uruguay

Eliminated in the group stage
v · d · eUEFA Euro 1992 finalists
Champions
Runners-up
Eliminated in semi-finals

Netherlands · Sweden

Eliminated in group stage
v · d · e1994 FIFA World Cup finalists
Champions
Runners-up
Third place
Fourth place
Eliminated in the quarter-finals

Germany · Netherlands · Romania · Spain

Eliminated in the round of 16
Eliminated in the group stage
v · d · eUEFA Euro 1996 finalists
Champions
Runners-up
Eliminated in semi-finals
Eliminated in quarter-finals

Croatia · Netherlands · Portugal · Spain

Eliminated in group stage
v · d · e1998 FIFA World Cup finalists
Champions
Runners-up
Third place
Fourth place

Netherlands

Eliminated in the quarter-finals
Eliminated in the round of 16
Eliminated in the group stage

Austria · Belgium · Bulgaria · Cameroon · Colombia · Iran · Jamaica · Japan · Korea Republic · Morocco · Scotland · Saudi Arabia · South Africa · Spain · Tunisia · United States

v · d · eUEFA Euro 2000 finalists
Champions
Runners-up
Eliminated in semi-finals

Netherlands · Portugal

Eliminated in quarter-finals
Eliminated in group stage
v · d · eUEFA Euro 2004 finalists
Champions
Runners-up
Eliminated in semi-finals

Czech Republic · Netherlands

Eliminated in quarter-finals
Eliminated in group stage
v · d · e2006 FIFA World Cup finalists
Champions
Runners-up
Third place
Fourth place
Eliminated in the quarter-finals
Eliminated in the round of 16

Australia · Ecuador · Ghana · Mexico · Netherlands · Spain · Sweden · Switzerland

Eliminated in the group stage
v · d · eUEFA Euro 2008 finalists
Champions
Runners-up
Eliminated in semi-finals
Eliminated in quarter-finals

Croatia · Italy · Netherlands · Portugal

Eliminated in group stage
v · d · e2010 FIFA World Cup finalists
Champions
Runners-up

Netherlands

Third place
Fourth place
Eliminated in the quarterfinals
Eliminated in the round of 16

Chile · England · Japan · Korea Republic · Mexico · Portugal · Slovakia · United States

Eliminated in group stage