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Netherlands Antilles national football team

  • ️Thu Oct 01 2009
Netherlands Antilles
Shirt badge/Association crest
Association Nederlands Antilliaanse
Voetbal Unie
Confederation CONCACAF (North America)
Head coach Remko Bicentini
Captain Robin Nelisse
Home stadium Stadion Ergilio Hato
FIFA code ANT
FIFA ranking 151
Highest FIFA ranking 118 (July 1995)
Lowest FIFA ranking 188 (December 2003)
Elo ranking 171
Highest Elo ranking 41 (March 1963)
Lowest Elo ranking 174 (October 2009, October 2010)

Home colours

Away colours

First international
Netherlands Curacao 3 - 1 Dutch GuianaNetherlands
(Curaçao; July 23, 1934)
Last International
Netherlands Antilles Neth. Antilles 2 - 2 Suriname 
(Willemstad, 31 October 2010)
Biggest win
Netherlands Antilles Neth. Antilles 15 - 0 Puerto Rico Puerto Rico
(Venezuela; January 15, 1959)
Biggest defeat
Netherlands Netherlands 8 - 0 Neth. Antilles Netherlands Antilles
(Amsterdam, Netherlands; September 5, 1962)
Mexico Mexico 8 - 0 Neth. Antilles Netherlands Antilles
(Port-au-Prince, Haiti; December 8, 1973)
CONCACAF Championship
& Gold Cup
Appearances 4 (First in 1963)
Best result Third, 1963, 1969

The Netherlands Antilles national football team was the national team of the former Netherlands Antilles and was controlled by the Nederlands Antilliaanse Voetbal Unie. The NAVU consisted of Curaçao and Bonaire. Aruba split in 1986 and has its own team.

The Netherlands Antilles team never qualified for the FIFA World Cup. The country managed to come third in the CONCACAF championships of 1963 and 1969; for four days in March 1963 they could have been regarded as unofficial World Champions, beating Mexico 2-1 before losing to Costa Rica 0-1.

History

Under the name Curaçao, the team played its first international game in 1934 (against Suriname, which was then still part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands as well) and continued to use the name Curaçao until the qualifications for the World Championships of 1958,[1] although the name of the area had changed from "Territory of Curaçao" to "Netherlands Antilles" in 1948. In order to boost the competence of the team's players, in 1968 an agreement was nearly reached which would allow the Netherlands Antilles to play in the Combined Counties Football League in the lower divisions of the English football pyramid. The move would have seen the team adopting a home ground in the Netherlands as a base and travelling to play English teams as a regular team, albeit one without promotion or relegation prospects. However, the idea was shelved after initial promise due to cost concerns for most amateur teams.[2]

Dissolution of country

The Netherlands Antilles was dissolved as a unified political entity on October 10, 2010, and the five constituent islands took on new constitutional statuses within the Kingdom of the Netherlands,[3] forming 2 new countries (Curaçao and Sint Maarten) and 3 new special municipalities of the Netherlands.

At the time of the dissolution, the team was about to compete in the qualification tournament for the 2010 Caribbean Championship, and finally competed under an obsolete country name. Sint Maarten national football team is already a member of CONCACAF, but not of FIFA. The Curaçao national football team took the place of the Netherlands Antilles as a FIFA member.[4]

World Cup record

2010 Qualifying

Round 1

Team 1 agg. Team 2 Leg 1 Leg 2
 Nicaragua 0-3  Netherlands Antilles 0-1 0-2

Round 2

Team 1 agg. Team 2 Leg 1 Leg 2
 Haiti 1-0  Netherlands Antilles 0-0 1-0

CONCACAF Championship record

  • 1963 - 3rd place
  • 1965 - 5th place
  • 1967 - Did not qualify
  • 1969 - 3rd place
  • 1971 - Withdrew
  • 1973 - 6th place
  • 1977 to 1989 - Did not qualify

Gold Cup record

  • 1991 - Did not enter
  • 1993 - Withdrew
  • 1996 to 2000 - Did not qualify
  • 2002 - Did not enter
  • 2003 - Did not qualify
  • 2005 - Withdrew
  • 2007 to 2011 - Did not qualify

Pan American Games record

Managers

v · d · eNetherlands Antilles national football teammanagers

Dacunha (1957–1965) · Zwartkruis (1978–81) · Verbeek (2004) · Silee (2005–07) · Looyen (2008) · Bicentini (2009–10)

See also

References

  1. ^ "History of the FIFA worldcup preliminary competition (By year)". FIFA. 19 September 2007. http://www.fifa.com/mm/document/fifafacts/mcwc/fifaworldcuppreliminaryhistory_byyear__13876.pdf. Retrieved 22 December 2010.
  2. ^ Dave Russell, Football and the English: A Social History of Association Football, (London, 1997), pp. 78-79
  3. ^ "Antillen opgeheven op 10-10-2010" (in Dutch). NOS. 2009-10-01. http://www.nos.nl/nosjournaal/artikelen/2009/10/1/011009_antillen.html. Retrieved 2009-10-01.
  4. ^ http://www.fifa.com/associations/association=cuw/index.html Curaçao page on FIFA.com

External links

v · Football in the Netherlands Antilles
National teams

Men

National team · Olympic (U-23) · U-20 · U-17

Women

National team · Olympic (U-23) · U-20 · U-17

League system
Domestic cups
Awards

Footballer of the Year · Top scorers

Lists

All-time Table · Champions · Clubs · International footballers · Foreign players · Venues

Men's clubs · Women's clubs · Men's players · Women's players · Expatriate players · Managers · Referees · Venues · Seasons · Records

v · d · eNational association football teams of North America, Central America, and the Caribbean (CONCACAF)
North America
Central America
Caribbean
Defunct

Netherlands Antilles

1: North American member but affiliated to CFU. · 2: Located in South America but affiliated to CONCACAF and CFU. · 3:Full CONCACAF member, but not affiliated to FIFA.

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
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North,
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and Caribbean
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Non-FIFA
Games

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See also International women's football.