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N.E.C. (football club)

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N.E.C.
Full name Nijmegen Eendracht Combinatie
Nickname(s) Eniesee
Short name N.E.C.
Founded November 15, 1900
Ground McDOS Goffertstadion
Nijmegen
(Capacity: 12,470)
Chairman Flag of the Netherlands Jan van Teeffelen
Manager Flag of the Netherlands Dwight Lodeweges
League Eredivisie
2008-09 Eredivisie, 11th
Website Club home page
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Home colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Away colours

N.E.C., short for Nijmegen Eendracht Combinatie, is a Dutch football club.

The oldest predecessor of the club, "Eendracht" (Dutch for unity), was established on November 15, 1900. In 1903, Eendracht merged with Nijmegen to form the Nijmegen Eendracht Combinatie. The team's home ground is the 12,500-seat McDOS Goffertstadion. They have often been wrongly referred to as NEC Nijmegen.

The club has not won any major tournaments to date, though they were runners-up in the KNVB Cup competition in 1973, 1983, 1994, and 2000; they played in the UEFA Cup tournaments in 1983, 2003, and 2008.

Fans and fireworks at N.E.C. versus Excelsior in 2008.
NEC and HKN-pub Goffertzicht near the stadium.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] General history

N.E.C. (Nijmegen Eendracht Combinatie or Nijmegen Unity Combination) is not the oldest football club in the Netherlands. Just forty football-clubs are existing longer. But N.E.C. is unique. It was known that the first football club was founded by 'ordinary' workers, real people, boys. Football was in 1900 already quite popular, but a football-club was a real elitist activity. Associations as UD (Deventer), Quick (Nijmegen), Sparta, Vitesse, etc. were also all created by the sons of wealthy industrialists, middle and other notables. [1]

[edit] Lower City

The founders of N.E.C. had a very different background. They were without exception from the old Nijmegen Lower City, the place where the poorest people lived was not much more than a slum. The boys from the Nijmegen-downtown were playing football every day. Not on a field, but on the street and preferably the Waalkade.

Unique was the fact that some of those guys on November 15, 1900 took the decision to own a football club there. They did it all themselves, without help from outside. They coined the name Eendracht and decided that every week for a fee of exactly 2 cents would be paid. For that money there could be purchased a new ball once in a while.

In the first years Eendracht only played games against teams from other parts of Nijmegen. The 'ploeggie' from the downtown area appeared to be playing good football. When in 1903 a Nijmegen Football Association was formed, Eendracht was the first champion and was thereby promoted to the Geldersche Football Association. The football at Eendracht became a serious matter, especially two years later after promotion to the second class of the KNVB.

The name N.E.C. was established in April 1910. Eendracht merged that year with a club called Nijmegen. Nijmegen had only two years and was founded by members of the above called Quick who felt absolutely no place in that elite club. The Nijmegen Eendracht Combination seemed a golden finding. The club had many, many good players and some good drivers too. [1]

[edit] Money

It took decades for the first big successes came. Indeed, only in 1936 promoted N.E.C. finally to First Class, what was the highest level. That N.E.C. had crept to reach the top had many causes, but the most important thing was money. Or rather, lack of money.

N.E.C. was a boys club of normal and hard-working people. There were no rich members who could do a gift, the expectorate fee was often a problem, especially during crises such as the First World War. N.E.C. kept holding warm relations with the local directors. Indeed, the leading figures in Nijmegen looked pretty down to N.E.C.[1]

[edit] Never First Classer

In the beginning of the twenties the situation became slightly better. N.E.C. bought land and moved to the Hazenkampseweg. Finally the club had his own sports complex. Above it, the memberships increased rapidly and N.E.C. became more popular. After that, there were following frustrating years. To promote to the first class, it was in those years not enough to become the championpion of the second class. There had always to be played decision matches. Although N.E.C. become champion in 1928, 1929, 1931 and 1934, the club was not promoted. The club was already called mockingly 'Never First Classer'. Until 1936, when N.E.C. finally took the last obstacle. They won the decision matches and reached the First Class.[1]

[edit] Golden Years

Immediately after the promotion there followed a period in with great sporting achievements. The question remains always how the honors of NEC were looking when the Second World War had not broken out at the stage that N.E.C. became a top-club.

N.E.C. won in 1939 the first East title and fought for the title of the Netherlands with the other four district champions. N.E.C. became third, behind Ajax and DWS from Amsterdam. During the war there could hardly played a football match, but after the liberation N.E.C. took the thread simply and became in 1946 again the champion of the East. In 1947 N.E.C. took this title again, in this year N.E.C. became again the third club in the Netherlands.[1]

[edit] Professional football

For N.E.C. the introduction of professional football in 1954 came just at the wrong moment. The club had internal problems, had a few less years behind and financially it was not too good. Netherlands called at this moment more than 80 paying clubs and the KNVB reorganized in this early years drowsy number this teams back. Each time the competitions were classified otherwise, N.E.C. fell ever further away. At the last minute N.E.C. was saved from a return to the amateurs. Just in the beginning of the sixties N.E.C. was gowing slowly upwards again.

A major reason was that the city of Nijmegen began to see the importance of a paid club like the Nijmegen Eendracht Combinatie. N.E.C. could finally count on financial support in 1963. In 1964 N.E.C. promoted to the first division again and three years later N.E.C. reached finally the First League.[1]

[edit] Full stadiums

Then followed some years whereat the Nijmegen-residents are still thinking back melancholy. The Goffert was full every game, season averages of 14,000 spectators were normal There was even a year (1970-1971) in which NEC had 18,000 viewers per game. N.E.C. floated at this time, primarily on the great youth and scouting.

Talented players were trained, played in the first team and, after a number of years they were sold for many money. Frans Thijssen and Jan Peters are in that respect the most famous players. N.E.C. although never won a prize, but was really famous at this time. But the first signs of decline came quickly. N.E.C. actually lived above his position, the budget came only around by selling players and a strong subsidy from the municipality.[1]

[edit] Lean years

The degradation of 1974 was a kind of warning. N.E.C. graduated a year later again and was also seventh in the league, but it was going wrong again at the beginning of the seventies.

No one could turn the tide, N.E.C. became in a spiral downwards. Each year the team fought against relegation and fewer spectators were watching the matches. N.E.C. was each yeat a top club in the first division or a tail club in the major league. The list is significant: relegation in 1983, promotion in 1985, relegation in 1986, promotion in 1989, relegation in 1991 and finally promotion in 1994. N.E.C. knew many difficult years and disappeared sometimes almost from professional football. In 1981 the club got only support from the town when the professionals and amateurs would be separated. In 1987 the club was bankrupt, but N.E.C. reamained existing just because 80 percent of all creditors waive their claims.

The chairman Henk van de Water formed the sponsor club OSRN on which N.E.C. got a little air. Just in the mid-nineties N.E.C. found the way up again. Three years long the club maintained at the last minute in the Eredivisie, but in 1998 N.E.C. surprised anyone with an 8th place. Meanwhile the prospects became good. The audience numbers were rising continuous, to the of 10,000. The sponsor club was growing out of its jacket and there was a nice future up ahead in the new Goffertstadion.[1]

[edit] The cup finals

N.E.C. never a real price, but the club reached the cup-final four times. Twice N.E.C. was the underdog, but on May 31, 1973, the club was the towering favorite. In De Kuip against NAC Breda it however went completely wrong. N.E.C., with coach Wiel Coerver and players such as Jan Peters, Frans Thijssen, Harrie Schellekens, Jan van Deinsen and Cas Janssens could not reach their expectations. Rather, by internal problems, there was an intern fight at N.E.C. and NAC Breda won 2-0.

In 1983 it was actually a miracle that N.E.C. reached the cup-final. The club from Nijmegen relegated that season, but reached (very difficult) the final. The opponent was Ajax, and the club from Amsterdam was in two matches clearly better. The Amsterdammers won two times 3 against 1.

In 1994 it was again remarkable that N.E.C. was in the final. Indeed, N.E.C. was a first-division club. But one with a very good team, a month later they promoted via the Nacompetitie. NEC, with players such as Lok, Hoekman, Van Wonderen, Van der Weerden and the rapid Bennie Dekker, was already surprising in the semi-finals. Ajax was beaten in De Meer 2-1. In De Kuip at Feyenoord, was N.E.C. nothing less than the Rotterdammers, but Feyenoord won with 2-1.

In the year of the 100-year anniversary of the club (2000) NEC reached again the cup-final. The competition prestations were not too good and hardly participation at the Nacompetitie was averted. The final against Roda JC for the 20,000 fans from Nijmegen was more or less a disappointment. N.E.C. lost with no chances 2-0. The semi-finals (profit after penalties against AZ Alkmaar) were a highlight for many fans.[1]

[edit] Nijmegen Europe Cup

In 1983, just in the darkest period of the club history, there was also a nice point in the history. N.E.C. played in the Europe Cup against Barcelona, while N.E.C. was at that time a mid-engine in the First Division.

N.E.C. lost in the spring the cup-final against Ajax and relegated also to the First Division. But because the Amsterdammers became also champion of the Netherlands, N.E.C. made the unique fact that a First Division club was registered for the Eurocup II tournament. This performance is never repeated again in the Netherlands.

In the first round of the European tournament N.E.C. defeted Norway's Brann Bergen. This was a very little club, but N.E.C. had some problems to defeat the club from Norway. In Nijmegen, it became 1-1 and two weeks later Michel Mommertz scored in Bergen the winning hit (0-1).

When a few days later the draw was been done for the second round, the complete city of Nijmegen stood on his head. Barcelona, the club that where Diego Maradonna and Bernd Schuster were playing came to Nijmegen! Both star players were on October 19 by injuries not at the pitch. But this was no big disappointment for the 25,000 spectators in the Goffertstadion. Certainly not because N.E.C. took the lead by hits from Anton Janssen and Michel Mommertz, 2-0! It was a thrill for Barcelona but they came back and eventually won 3-2. In Barcelona it was an easy game, which ended in 2-0 for the home team.

May 29, 2003 is classified as a historic day. For the first time in the existence of the club N.E.C. qualified on their own for the UEFA Cup. By the late hit from Jarda Simr N.E.C. finished on the 5th place in the Dutch Eredivisie. This led to unprecedented peak scenes; happy fans on the pitch in Waalwijk, an explosion of joy over 5,000 supporters in the Goffert who watched the game on a large video screen and it was followed by a great homage in the center of Nijmegen. There were more than 25,000 people at this celebration.[1]

[edit] 2008


This file is a candidate for speedy deletion. It may be deleted after Friday, 10 July 2009.

This file is a candidate for speedy deletion. It may be deleted after Friday, 10 July 2009.

In 2008 N.E.C. qualified for the third time in his history for European football. With this, Mario Been walked into the footsteps of former-coach Johan Neeskens. After a disappointing first half year of N.E.C., the club was at the bottom of the Eredivisie at a 17th place. But after this there was a remarkable resurrection from the Nijmegenaren. From January 2008 N.E.C. played great football and scored a lot of goals. Victory after victory resulted in an excellent 8th place in the Eredivisie. This prestation was rewarded by a participation at the play-offs for UEFA Cup. N.E.C. was also superior in the play-offs N.E.C. and beated Roda JC, FC Groningen and NAC Breda. Whith thirty-one undefeated mathes in a row a row with the 6-0 home victory at NAC Breda as a highlight, N.E.C. reached European football again. The return at Breda was a formality, but that game was also won. What followed was a great homage to many thousands of fans on the Goffertwei.[1]

The year of 2008 became even more successfull during the UEFA Cup. In the first round the club beated Dinamo Bucharest during two heartbreaking matches. After a 1-0 winning match it was enough to play 0-0 in Romania to reach the group-stage of the UEFA Cup. In this stage the club from Nijmegen was drawn agains big European clubs like Tottenham Hotspur, Udinese, Spartak Moscow and Dinamo Zagreb. All the experts gave the club zero chances to reach the next round, but N.E.C. did it! After a stunnising match against in Zagreb with a goal from Dinamo in the last minute, there stood a dissapointing 3-2 on the scoreboard. N.E.C. was the better team but gained zero points. Afther this, big English team Tottenham Hotspur came to the McDOS Goffertstadion and won with 0-1. The club from Nijmegen was on the bottom of the rank and was almost out of the tournament. But there was hope in the Netherlands after a 1-2 winning match against Spartak Moscow in Russia with a very important goal from Lasse Schöne. N.E.C. played his last match in Nijmegen against Udinese from Italy. To go to the next round, N.E.C. and Tottenham Hotspur had to win (from Spartak Moscow). Tottenham became behind and after 45 minutes there was a disappointing 0-0 at the scoreboard in Nijmegen. But in the 74th minute there was a sensational moment: Tottenham Hotspur came up and scored 2-1 against Spartak and Collins John scored in the same second the 1-0 for N.E.C. With a 2-0 from Jhon van Beukering (his third European goal of the season) the next round was reached!

The draw of the last 32 of the UEFA Cup made sure N.E.C. had to play against the big German club Hamburger SV. The fairytale of the club from Nijmegen was ended by the Germans when they won 0-3 in the Goffertstadion and 1-0 in Hamburg. With this story there became an end of the most successfull year in the club history. N.E.C. was awarded for their great play of football and their sociability. The supporters were also been valued in Europe, especially by Franz Beckenbauer who gave the N.E.C. fans a great compliment. He has never seen such a great ambiance by away-supporters and says against Premiere he has never seen so many away-fans at a club-match (4,500).[2]

[edit] Stadium

McDos Stadium de Goffert in 2008, 12,500 spectators.
Topsport and Innovationcentre De Goffert in 2011, probably 30,000 spectators.

N.E.C. plays its home matches in the De Goffert stadium (12,500 seats). The stadium was originally opened in 1939 and featured a cycling track between the pitch and the stands. In 2000, the rebuilt stadium was opened. The club wants to expand the stadium to 20,000 seats in 2011.

[edit] Rivals

Football club Vitesse of Arnhem is the main rival of NEC Nijmegen. The annual games between the two are called "de Gelderse derby". The rivalry has led to hooligans meeting after games that resulted in fights and public disorder.

[edit] Players & Staff

[edit] Current squad

[1] As of 21 May 2009.

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Hungary GK Gábor Babos
2 Flag of the Netherlands DF Ramon Zomer
3 Flag of the Netherlands DF Rens van Eijden
4 Flag of the Netherlands MF Dominique Kivuvu
5 Flag of Morocco DF Youssef El Akchaoui (captain)
6 Flag of the Netherlands DF Patrick Pothuizen
7 Flag of the Netherlands MF Rutger Worm
8 Flag of the Netherlands MF Lorenzo Davids
9 Flag of the Netherlands FW Jhon van Beukering
10 Flag of Denmark MF Lasse Schöne
13 Flag of the Netherlands DF Mark Otten
14 Flag of the Netherlands FW Rick ten Voorde
16 Flag of the Netherlands MF Bas Sibum
No. Position Player
17 Flag of Burundi FW Saidi Ntibazonkiza
18 Flag of Belgium FW Bjorn Vleminckx
19 Flag of the Netherlands DF Mitchell Burgzorg
20 Flag of the Netherlands MF John Goossens
21 Flag of Morocco FW Moestafa El Kabir
22 Flag of the Democratic Republic of the Congo FW Joël Tshibamba
23 Flag of Poland MF Arek Radomski
24 Flag of the Netherlands MF Joey Brock
25 Flag of the Netherlands GK Rein Baart
30 Flag of the Netherlands GK Nicholas Skverer
35 Flag of the Netherlands DF Bram Nuytinck
36 Flag of Germany MF Bastian Weiser

[edit] Incoming transfers 2009

No. Position Player
Coach Flag of the Netherlands Dwight Lodeweges (from PSV Eindhoven)
2 Flag of the Netherlands DF Ramon Zomer (from FC Twente)
20 Flag of the Netherlands FW John Goossens (from AFC Ajax)
35 Flag of the Netherlands DF Bram Nuytinck (from N.E.C., youth)
14 Flag of the Netherlands FW Rick ten Voorde (from FC Emmen)
3 Flag of the Netherlands DF Rens van Eijden (from PSV Eindhoven)
36 Flag of Germany MF Bastian Weiser (from N.E.C., youth)
30 Flag of the Netherlands GK Nicholas Skverer (from N.E.C., youth)
18 Flag of Belgium FW Bjorn Vleminckx (from KV Mechelen)

[edit] Outgoing transfers 09/10 season

No. Position Player
Coach Flag of the Netherlands Mario Been (to Feyenoord)
17 Flag of the Netherlands FW Collins John (to Fulham F.C.)
14 Flag of Morocco FW Rachid Bouaouzan (to Wigan Athletic F.C.)
21 Flag of Spain DF Dani Fernandez (to Feyenoord)
3 Flag of the Netherlands DF Milano Koenders (to AZ Alkmaar)
11 Flag of Denmark FW Dennis Rommedahl (to AFC Ajax)
15 Flag of the Netherlands MF Mark van den Boogaart (to unknown)
20 Flag of Morocco FW Karim Fachtali (to FC Oss, was on loan at FC Oss)
27 Flag of the Netherlands DF Dominique Scholten (to FC Oss, was on loan at FC Oss)
-- Flag of the Netherlands MF Ralph Dua (to FC Eindhoven)
39 Flag of the Netherlands MF Jean Black (to FC Eindhoven)
19 Flag of the Netherlands FW Tim Janssen (to Esbjerg fB)

[edit] Out on loan

No. Position Player
–– Flag of the Netherlands DF Joost Ebergen (on loan to FC Oss)

[edit] Reserve team

No. Position Player
40 Flag of the Netherlands GK Jasper Cillessen
-- Flag of the Netherlands Joey Klare
-- Flag of the Netherlands Antilles Shanon Carmelia
-- Flag of the Netherlands Sebastiaan Goderie
No. Position Player
-- Flag of the Netherlands Ryan van Dijk
-- Flag of the Netherlands Sherwin Grot
-- Flag of the Netherlands Shapoul Ali
-- Flag of the Netherlands Bram Langedijk

[edit] Staff and management

No. Position Player
Flag of the Netherlands Dwight Lodeweges (Manager)
Flag of the Netherlands Ron de Groot (Assistant manager/Team manager)
Flag of the Netherlands Wilfried Brookhuis (Assistant manager/Goalkeeping coach)
Flag of the Netherlands Jack de Gier (Headscout)
Flag of the Netherlands Ruud Makaay (Scout)
Flag of the Netherlands Ad Mellaard (Scout)
Flag of the Netherlands Henk Grim (Scout)
Flag of the Netherlands Carlos Aalbers (Technical Director)
Flag of the Netherlands Jacco Swart (Common Director)
Flag of the Netherlands Jan van Teeffelen (Chairman)

[edit] N.E.C. in Europe

Season Competition Round Country Club Score
1969/70 Intertoto Cup Group, match 1 Flag of Czechoslovakia MŠK Žilina 1-1, 1-2
Group, match 2 Flag of Sweden Örebro SK 0-0, 1-1
Group, match 3 Flag of Switzerland AC Bellinzona 2-0, 3-3
1978/79 Intertoto Cup Group, match 1 Flag of Belgium Antwerp FC 3-2, 0-2
Group, match 2 Flag of Germany MSV Duisburg 4-2, 0-6
Group, match 3 Flag of France FC Girondins de Bordeaux Total: 3-4
1983/84 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup First Round Flag of Norway Brann Bergen 1-1, 1-0
1/8 Finals Flag of Spain FC Barcelona 2-3, 0-2
1986/87 Intertoto Cup Group, match 1 Flag of Germany Fortuna Düsseldorf 4-3, 0-3
Group, match 2 Flag of Hungary MTK Hungária FC 0-3, 2-2
Group, match 3 Flag of Belgium R.F.C. de Liège 0-1, 1-1
2003/04 UEFA Cup First Round Flag of Poland Wisła Kraków 1-2, 1-2
2004/05 Intertoto Cup Second Round Flag of Ireland Cork City F.C. 0-0, 0-1
2008/09 UEFA Cup First Round Flag of Romania FC Dinamo Bucureşti 1-0, 0-0
Group Stage Flag of Croatia NK Dinamo Zagreb 2-3
Flag of England Tottenham Hotspur 0-1
Flag of Russia FC Spartak Moscow 2-1
Flag of Italy Udinese Calcio 2-0
Third Round Flag of Germany Hamburger SV 0-3, 0-1

[edit] N.E.C. records

Mario Been, one of N.E.C.'s most successful managers after a match against NAC Breda (6-0).
Former manager Johan Neeskens.
Date
Highest attendance (competition) 32,000 Against AFC Ajax 21-04-1968
Lowest attendance (competition) 1,000 Against Roda JC 14-05-1983
Biggest win 0-22 Against Overasseltse Boys 09-08-2008
Biggest win (competition) 0-7 Against FC Den Bosch '67 10-03-1973
Biggest loss (competition) 9-1 Against AFC Ajax 05-11-1967
Match with highest score (competition) 3-7 Against RBC Roosendaal 04-01-1967
Most wins on a row 10 04-04-2008 until 30-08-2008
Most defeats in a row 10 03-10-1971 until 14-11-1971
Most matches without defeat 31 24-02-2008 until 21-09-2008
Most matches without win 16 22-01-1978 until 02-09-1978
Most matches without goal 7 03-03-1968 until 19-05-1968
Most matches without goal against 7 21-10-2005 until 18-12-2005
Top goalscorer Hans Venneker 19 1967-1968
Most goals in a competition-match Cas Janssens 4, Against FC Den Bosch '67 10-03-1973
Youngest player (competition) Jan Peters 17 years, 0 months, 25 days
Highest competition-rank Eredivisie 5th Place 2002-2003
Lowest competition-rank Eerste Divisie 10th Place 1964-1965
Most matches (Eredivisie) Sije Visser 342
Most goals scored (Eredivisie) Frans Janssen 54

[edit] Achievements

2007-08
1972-73, 1982-83, 1993-94, 1999-00
1974-75
1938-39, 1945-46, 1946-47

[edit] Managers

[edit] Notable players

See also: NEC Nijmegen players

[edit] Man of the Year

Season Name
2000/2001 Flag of the Netherlands Danny Hesp
2001/2002 Flag of the Netherlands Robbie Wielaert
2002/2003 Flag of the Netherlands Robbie Wielaert
2003/2004 Flag of the Netherlands Dennis Gentenaar
2004/2005 Flag of the Netherlands Peter Wisgerhof
2005/2006 Flag of the Netherlands Romano Denneboom
2006/2007 Flag of Sweden Jonas Olsson
2007/2008 Flag of Morocco Youssef El-Akchaoui
2008/2009 Flag of Denmark Lasse Schöne

[edit] Topscorers by season

Season Name Goals
1994/1995 Flag of the Netherlands Jeffrey Kooistra 8
1995/1996 Flag of Finland Antti Sumiala 9
1996/1997 Flag of Finland Antti Sumiala 8
1997/1998 Flag of the Netherlands Emiel van Eijkeren 13
1998/1999 Flag of the Netherlands Jack de Gier 16
1999/2000 Flag of the Netherlands Jack de Gier 9
2000/2001 Flag of the Republic of Macedonia Gorgi Hristov 15
2001/2002 Flag of the Netherlands Frank Demouge 7
2002/2003 Flag of the Netherlands Youssouf Hersi 9
2003/2004 Flag of the Netherlands Youssouf Hersi 10
2004/2005 Flag of the Netherlands Saïd Boutahar 8
2005/2006 Flag of Poland Andrzej Niedzielan 10
2006/2007 Flag of the Netherlands Romano Denneboom 9
2007/2008 Flag of the Netherlands Jhon van Beukering 11
2008/2009 Flag of Morocco Youssef El-Akchaoui 6

[edit] Sponsors

N.E.C. home-shirt season 2008-2009.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "History at official N.E.C. website". N.E.C.]. http://www.nec-nijmegen.nl/layout.php?p=3&page=3. Retrieved on 2009-06-14. 
  2. ^ "Franz Beckenbauer about great ambiance N.E.C. Supporters". De Trouwe Honden. 2009-03-17. http://www.detrouwehonden.nl/dbid=106/tpl=1937. 

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