Showing posts with label Netherlands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Netherlands. Show all posts

Monday, 25 July 2011

Mitsubishi Forklift Stadion (Almere City v FC Lisse)

Last week I spent five days in the Netherlands for my work. I stayed in the Bastion Hotel in Amsterdam/Amstel which is a 30-minute walk from the Amsterdam ArenA. However Ajax were not playing any home matches last week but of course I had to see at least one game, preferably in a stadium I had not visited yet. It turned out Jupiler League side Almere City were playing a pre-season friendly at home against Topklasse side FC Lisse. At first there was some confusion as the Almere City website listed the fixture as FC Lisse-Almere City but later the club confirmed to me on Twitter that the game was to be played at the Mitsubishi Forklift Stadion, the home of Almere City.

I left my hotel at about 5:45pm and had to walk through a rain shower of biblical proportions. Despite carrying an umbrella I arrived soaking wet at Duivendrecht train station about twenty minutes later. I then had to buy my train ticket to Almere (€9.80 return). This is not as straightforward as it sounds since in the Netherlands even larger stations like Duivendrecht do not have a ticket office meaning all tickets have to be bought from a ticket machine. This would normally not be a problem for me however most of these machine only accept Dutch bankcards (and I do not have a Dutch bank account) and no cash or foreign debit or credit cards. Luckily there was one machine that also accepted cash but to make things more complicated you cannot pay with banknotes, only coins are accepted. As I already knew this I had made sure I carried enough €2 coins to last me through my five-day stay.

I jumped on the 6:10pm train to Almere and got off at Almere Parkwijk at 6:38pm. The Almere City website said kick-off was at 7pm which meant I was probably going to miss the start but I was not too concerned about that. I was happy too see that there was no sign of the torrential rain I had endured in Amsterdam only thirty minutes earlier and I made my way to the stadium. Despite its population of almost 200,000 Almere is a very new town: the first house was completed in 1976 and it only became a municipality in 1984. The town is situated in the province of Flevoland, which completely consists of reclaimed land. The new province was not introduced to professional football until 2005 when FC Omniworld were admitted to the Jupiler League. They were renamed Almere City in 2010 and are as far as I know the only football club in the Netherlands with 'City' in their name.

It has not been plain sailing for the Flevolanders since they were admitted to the second tier of the Dutch league pyramid. Their highest position in the Jupiler League was 13th place in 2008. In 2009 they ended bottom of the league in 20th position. As there was no relegation at that time the club stayed in the Jupiler League. The season after they fared slightly better and finished in 14th place. Last season they were bottom of the league once more. By now there were only 18 teams in the Jupiler League after the relegation of FC Oss to the newly-formed Topklasse and the demise of HFC Haarlem in 2010. It looked like Almere City were going to be the second team to be relegated from the Jupiler League but when RBC Roosendaal folded at the end of the season it became clear that Almere would have a professional football club for at least one more season.

I arrived at the ground just after 7pm and was pleasantly suprised when I found out I did not have to pay to get inside. Unfortunately however I had to wait for another thirty minutes to see some football as kick-off was at 7:30pm and not the advertised 7pm. About 150 people had found their way to the stadium, which holds about 3,000. City have struggled to attract a significant support to regular league games as well. Crowds of just over 1,000 are common and the situation is similar to that of the Scottish Football League teams in the 'new towns' of Cumbernauld and Livingston. Many people living in these towns were born elsewhere and have taken their football team allegiances with them as well. Whereas people in Cumbernauld support Celtic or Rangers rather than Clyde, Ajax are a far more popular club in Almere than City.

When the action on the pitch finally got underway it seemed Almere City were a lot stronger than the men from Lisse even though the two teams would normally have played in the same league in the 2011/12 season. Somehow Almere were not able to find the net until Paul de Lange scored from the spot after Mikhail Rosheuvel had been brought down. Almost immediately after the opening goal the referee blew his whistle: half time.

I then did something I normally do not do: I left the stadium before the second half started. I had not found the football too exciting and I thought about the relatively long journey back to the hotel ahead of me (combined with an early start at work the next morning). The fact I had not paid to get into the stadium made the decision to leave a little bit easier. When I arrived back in my hotel room just after 10pm I found out that Almere City had won the match 4-0.


Approaching the Mitsubishi Forklift Stadion.


There is a small stand behind one of the goals. This stand housed the Ultras Almere (look closely...).


A larger stand along the east side of the stadium.


A covered terrace along the west side.


No stand behind the other goal.


Paul de Lange's spot-kick just before half-time.


The plaque says: 'professional football: it's possible in Almere.'


'Playing football is not allowed.' A sign you do not expect to find inside a football stadium.


Wednesday 20th July 2011
Friendly
Almere City 4 FC lisse 0
Goals: De Lange 45, Ribeiro 50, Burgzorg 58, Felixvaal 87.
Att: 150

Sunday, 17 April 2011

Koning Willem II Stadion (Willem II v Roda JC Kerkrade)

On Saturday 2nd April, whilst in the Netherlands for a few days, I paid my first visit to the Koning Willem II Stadion, the home ground of Willem II. I had been at Helmond Sport the night before but this game was my main reason for visiting my home country twee weeks ago. For some reason I had not been at Willem II before and the club from Tilburg now look certs for relegation to the Jupiler League.

Willem II were close to the drop a few times in recent seasons, but when they finished second bottom in 2006 and 2010 they managed to stay up by winning the promotion/relegation play-offs. It seems very unlikely now that the Tricolores will even reach the safety net of the play-offs as the bottom team in the league will always be relegated. This will be a loss to the Eredivisie: Willem II have been playing in the Dutch top flight for 23 consecutive seasons now and were runners-up in 1999. This meant qualification for the 1999/2000 UEFA Champions' League. The Tilburg side also qualified for the 1998/99 and 2004/05 UEFA Cup tournaments. The fans have remained loyal and the game against Roda was still visited by 12,000 supporters.

As there are still quite a few grounds in the Netherlands that I have not visited I tend to prefer Roda JC away games. Travelling to Eredivisie away games is different from away days in Scotland however. For most games you cannot just hop on a train or drive to the away team's town, visit a few of the local pubs and walk to the ground. Instead you have to get a so-called combi ticket: you book a seat on a supporters' bus and you will get you match ticket when you are on the bus. The bus will then drop you off at the away end.

Again I travelled by 'combi' bus two weeks ago. Eight buses filled with Roda fans made the journey to Tilburg. This is an unusually high number as these trips are not everyone's cup of tea. You are not exactly treated like royalty upon arrival at the away ground, although some clubs are friendlier than others. I remember being treated to free coffee and rolls at Heracles Almelo but the reception at Willem II was unwelcoming even by Dutch standards. Kick-off was scheduled for 7:45pm and we arrived at the Koning Willem II Stadion at 7:30pm. Plenty of time to get everyone in in time you would think however all Roda fans were supposed to enter the stadium through a single gate and everyone was being searched (normal in the Netherlands), one person at a time (not normal, especially considering the number of stewards at the gate). The steward, or rather 'stewards' as I was searched twice, did not appear to be able to speak and did not even give me the obligatory 'Enjoy the game.' All this carry-on meant I was in my seat ten minutes after kick-off. No programme sellers to be seen either, which is a certain way to get me really annoyed. However Willem II redeemed themselves here when I was sent a programme through the mail last week after I had sent the club an email about it.

Luckily I had not missed much much of the action but there was plenty to come. After half an hour Roda defender Pa-Modou Kah fouled Jan-Arie van der Heijden. Referee Richard Liesveld did not hesitate and pointed to the spot. Andreas Lasnik converted the penalty and the home team were 1-0 up at the interval.

In the second half both teams really went to town. Only minutes into the second half Kah redeemed himself and scored the equaliser. The Norwegian could consider himself lucky he was still on the pitch at that time as Liesveld had not booked him for the second time after a reckless foul in the first half. Eight minutes later Bart Biemans scored 2-1 and Willem II were in the lead once more. Five minutes later Morton Skoubo equalised again. Another two minutes later Ruud Vormer put the men from Kerkrade in the lead for the first time on the night. Dave de Fauw scored 4-2 with 15 minutes left on the clock and Roda seemed to have secured the three points. However Lasnik pulled one back for the Tricolores: 3-4. Ruud Vormer then scored his second of the night before Maceo Rigters scored the final goal of the night 4-5.

This result meant that Willem II could not escape the bottom-three anymore and some of the Willem II fans turned out to be bad losers. Objects were thrown into the direction of the away end but we now know that the large netting is not just there to obstruct the away fans' view. Somehow however some 'supporters' managed to open a fence and got access to the away stand and missiles were thrown once more. A few of the Roda fans were hit and, typically, a few of them were young girls who will probably not be allowed to go to an away game again. After the game I heard some of the Willem II fans had felt 'provoked' by taunts from the Roda fans referring to what now seemed like certain relegation for the Tilburg side. Apparently they had forgotten about their own chants two years ago when Roda were staring relegation in the face.

After being pelted with pointy metal objects at FC Den Bosch a few years ago I had already decided I will never take my wife to an away game in Holland again. Police and stewards were nowhere to be seen and it cannot be a surprise that away games in the Eredivisie are basically only visited by young men (I still count myself amongst them...) as families, women and people who, probably rightly, feel they are to old for this s*** will not bother. It is often said: 'if you treat people like animals, they are more likely to behave like them.' I think that definitely holds true in these circumstances. Some individuals, on both sides, would have embarrassed the monkeys at Edinburgh Zoo.

Still, you make the best of it. Roda had won another three points and are now on their way to the play-offs for a Europa League spot. I also had a great time with my Dutch mates, whom I do not see that often, the weather had been great and I am already looking forward to the next away trip, perhaps in six months' time or so.


We arrived at the ground fifteen minutes before kick-off.


A long queue at the away end. Everyone was searched one by one.


This picture of me being welcomed by the Willem II stewards was taken by my mate. Note how only one person was searched at a time. This did not prevent the next steward from apparently not noticing I had already been searched and I was submitted to the same procedure once again.


I had not come across this on my travels before but not all stands at Willem II have names. I call this one the 'South Stand.' Note the large netting.


The Eretribune or Main Stand.


Another stand without a name. Let's call it the 'East Stand'.


The Kingside Stand is the stand populated by the more fanatical supporters. Stands in Dutch stadium are often called 'sides' when they are in fact 'ends', see also the Bunnik Side at FC Utrecht.


The 'South Stand' after the game.


The Kingside Stand.


The East Stand.


The Eretribune.


Saturday 2nd April 2011
Eredivisie
Willem II 4 Roda JC Kerkrade 5
Willem II: Lasnik 30 pen, Biemans 57, Lasnik 80, Rigters 90.
Roda JC: Kah 49, Skoubo 62, Vormer 64, De Fauw 75, Vormer 83.
Att: 12,000

Saturday, 9 April 2011

Lavans Stadion (Stadion De Braak) (Helmond Sport v FC Emmen)

Last weekend I was in the Netherlands for a short football trip. The 'main event' was going to be Willem II v Roda JC (report to follow soon!) on the Saturday but I had decided to also see a match in the Jupiler League, the second tier in Dutch football. The Jupiler League teams all play their games on Friday nights. I usually stay at my parents' in the town of Heerlen when I am over and this somewhat limits the teams I can see as I usually travel by train and Heerlen is tucked away in a southeastern corner of the Netherlands, near the Belgian and German borders. This means I cannot go to grounds that are too far away because I would not be able to catch a train back, which basically rules out clubs like Veendam, Go Ahead Eagles, Cambuur and AGOVV. Helmond, near Eindhoven, is one of the towns with a representative in the Jupiler League that are near enough to travel back and forth to on a Friday night.

A return ticket from Heerlen to Helmond cost me €32, which I thought was quite dear for a journey roughly the equivalent of Glasgow-Edinburgh. After an hour I arrived at Eindhoven station where I had to change and after a 10-minute journey I got off at Helmond. The walk to the stadium took me about 25 minutes. Helmond Sport's home ground used to be called 'De Braak' but was renamed 'Lavans Stadion' last year for sponsorship reasons. Upon arrival at the ground I took a few pictures and bought my ticket for the North Stand, which only set me back €9.50. There was a healthy crowd of well over 3,000 inside the 4,100-capacity stadium but the atmosphere was quite subdued as is the norm in this league. Nevertheless the lads on the North Stand were putting in a good effort now and then.

Helmond Sport are one of these quintessential Jupiler League teams. I could not remember them ever playing in the Eredivisie but, according to Wikipedia, they had a short spell in the top tier during the 1982/83 and 1983/84 seasons. Helmond have been reasonably successful so far this season, sitting in third place, and a place in the promotion play-offs looks as good as certain. Tonight's opponents Emmen have never played at the highest level. They only started playing professional football in 1985 but were close to promotion a few times in the late nineties and early noughties. The last few seasons, including the present one, have been rather disappointing for the Emmen fans.

Presumably the Helmond fans had expected a win tonight but it was not to be. Eldridge Rojer scored the opening goal for Emmen in the sixteenth minute. Marc Höcher equalised fifteen minutes later and the half-time score of 1-1 seemed fair. In the second half Helmond upped the ante but were unable to find the net until Ilja van Leerdam scored 2-1 minutes before time. Since Emmen player Jeffrey de Visscher had received a second booking five minutes previously the three points seemed to be in the bag for Helmond. Emmen were not giving up however and Randy Wolters stunned Helmond four minutes before time with the equaliser. I have to say goalie Wouter van der Steen, who replaced the injured Robert van Westerop, looked suspect for both goals.

After an entertaining game I made my way back to the train station and was back at my parents' before midnight.


The Noordtribune or North Stand was built in 2000.


The Oosttribune or East Stand.


The Westtribune or West Stand.


Again the Noordtribune.


The Oosttribune.


The Emmen fans can be seen in the faraway corner. The lads on the pitch were taking part in some competition where they had to shoot a crate off the crossbar in two attempts. I think three of them actually managed to do so, I have no idea what the prize was.


Both teams entering the pitch.


There is no stand in the southern end of the ground. There used to be terraces but these were demolished in the 1990s.


The Noordtribune seen from my seat.


This injury-time free-kick did not go in and the night ended disappointingly for Helmond.


Friday 1st April 2011
Jupiler League
Helmond Sport 2 FC Emmen 2
Helmond: Höcher 30, Van Leerdam 82.
Emmen: Rojer 16, Wolters 86.
Att: 3,117

Wednesday, 6 April 2011

Haarlem-stadion (HFC Haarlem)

Last weekend I was in the Netherlands again. Apart from seeing my family, my main purpose of this trip was the Willem II v Roda JC game on Saturday. After having arrived at Schiphol Airport my first stop was the city of Haarlem, where I had planned to visit Haarlem-stadion, the former home of HFC Haarlem. Haarlem, founded in 1889, played their final match on 22nd January 2010, a 3-0 defeat by Excelsior at Stadion Woudestein in Rotterdam. Three days later the club were declared bankrupt. The stadium is a twenty-minute walk from Bloemendaal train station. Unfortunately it was absolutely pouring and I arrived at the ground soaking wet. I was delighted the gate to the stadium was open but because of the horrendous weather I did not take as many pictures as I would have done on a sunny day.

Haarlemsche Football Club Haarlem won the Dutch Cup twice, in 1902 and 1912. In 1946, before the introduction of professional football in the Netherlands, they were crowned champions of the Netherlands. After the start of the professional era in the 1950s Haarlem played a rather meaningless part. Their relative heydays were the 1970s and 1980s during which Haarlem played mostly in the Eredivisie, the Dutch top flight, and even managed, with a squad that included a 19-year-old Ruud Gullit, to finish in fourth place in 1982. This meant qualification for the UEFA Cup. Belgian side AA Gent were eliminated in the first round and the opponents in the second round were Spartak Moscow. Although Spartak won both legs, the events on the pitch were, although only in hindsight, overshadowed by what happened in the stands of Spartak's ground, the Lenin Stadium (now Luzhniki Stadium).

The Luzhniki Disaster was a human stampede in which, according to the official statistics, 67 Russian fans were killed. Many estimates of the actual death count are much higher however, some estimate as many as 340 were killed in this stadium disaster. The Soviet authorities tried to keep a lid on the tragedy and it was not until much later, after Gorbachev had become leader of the Soviet Union, that it was talked about openly in the Russian press. Initially the authorities, as was often the case and not just in the Soviet Union, blamed the football fans for the disaster. It was not until much later that a completely different picture was painted. Some Spartak fans were throwing snow balls at policemen who were stationed inside the ground. The large football crowd acted as a relatively secure cloak of anonymity and provided some people with a rare chance to have a bit of fun at the expense of the authorities. The police were not amused however and after the game they closed off several exits to make it easier to find the culprits on their way out. Not surprisingly the police were never held responsible for the tragedy. The stadium manager, who had only been in the job for a couple of months, was made a scapegoat and spent 18 months in a labour camp. The Haarlem players who played in Moscow only found out about the disaster years later.

In 1984 Haarlem ended the season in fourth place once more although this time fourth place did not mean qualification for Europe. In 1990 the Roodbroeken ('Red Shorts') were relegated to the First Division from which they never managed to escape. Even though they even finished bottom of this league a few times, relegation from the Dutch First Division was not possible at the time, a set-up followers of the Scottish Third Division will be familiar with. It was decided that from the 2009/10 season two First Division teams would be relegated to the newly formed Topklasse and Haarlem were 'favourites' to be one of the first two clubs in almost forty years to make the drop from the second tier in Dutch football. Instead they became the first club to disappear from Dutch professional football altogether since both FC Wageningen and VCV Zeeland folded in 1992.

Only months after the demise of the club amateur side Nieuwe Haarlemsche Football Club Haarlem was founded. They merged shortly after with HFC Kennemerland. Haarlem-Kennemerland, who now call Haarlem-stadion their home ground, currently play in the Tweede Klasse, the sixth tier in the Dutch league pyramid.


The overgrown terrace in the east end of the ground had already been closed for a while.


The Kick Smit Tribune. Kick Smit (1911-1974) was a Haarlem player who was capped 29 times and scored 26 goals for the Netherlands. He represented the country at the 1934 and 1938 World Cup finals.


The Noordtribune or North Stand.


View from the Oosttribune or East Terrace. The Westtribune was demolished only a few months ago.


Again the East Terrace.

Friday, 8 October 2010

Gemeentelijk Sportpark Kaalheide (Roda JC)

I was visiting my parents in the Netherlands last weekend and decided to take some pictures of Gemeentelijk Sportpark (=Municipal Sports Ground) Kaalheide. Fortunately the gate was open and I could walk into the ground without any problems.

Gemeentelijk Sportpark Kaalheide was opened in 1950 and was Roda JC's home ground until 2000 when the Pride of the South moved to the 19,600 capacity all-seater Parkstad Limburg Stadion. It is situated in the town of Kerkrade, a small town in the most southern part of the Netherlands near the German border, only 6 miles from the German city of Aachen.

Roda JC were only founded in 1962, the result of the merger of Roda Sport and Rapid JC. In 1973 Roda JC were promoted to the Dutch top flight, the Eredivisie, and they have never been relegated since, although it took a penalty shoot-out win in the play-off finals at Cambuur Leeuwarden in 2009 to secure a slot in the Eredivisie for last season.

I started visiting Kaalheide during the 1994/95 season. Roda were at their best at that time. They only lost two league games in the whole season and finished the season in runner-up spot behind European champions Ajax. For the 1995/96 season I bought my first season ticket and I remained a season ticket holder until I moved to Scotland in 2001.

Kaalheide was built as a multi-functional stadium and was (and still is) used as an athletics venue as well. This was a common concept in the Netherlands, and the rest of the continent for that matter. The running track around the pitch ensured that the terraces behind the goals were a fair distance from the pitch and this, combined with the fact that these terraces were uncovered, contributed to a widespread dislike of them by both home and away supporters. Luckily the home supporters had an alternative.


The picture above was taken in either November or December 1998 from the North Terrace, a roofed terrace where the more fanatical supporters used to congregate. It looks like Roda won and my guess is that this was the derby against MVV of Maastricht on 27th November 1998 (2-1). The Main Stand, which was renovated as late as 1992 can be seen in the background. The two ends behind the goals were not covered and these terraces were generally not very popular. Away supporters were allocated one half of the West Terrace until the late nineties. Later the away fans were moved to the East Terrace to make it easier to segregate the opposing supporters' groups outside the ground.

The official capacity changed over the years and was considered to be around 15-16,000 in the late nineties however sell-outs have always been rare at Kaalheide. A record crowd of 23,000 saw Roda JC lose to Anderlecht (2-3) in the second leg of the first round of the UEFA Cup on 26 September 1976 (3-5 aggregate). This is still a record for a Roda home game.

Unlike many other older stadiums in the Netherlands Kaalheide is still in use, both as an athletics venue and as a football ground: it is Roda's training ground and the reserve team play their games at Kaalheide. The North Stand was however demolished in 2005 because it had fallen into disrepair and was in danger of collapsing.


The Main Stand was renovated as recently as 1992.


The West Terrace.


The roofed terrace which ran along the nothern side of the pitch was demolished in 2005.


The East Terrace.


Again the uncovered West Terrace.


The grass bank that replaced the old North Terrace.


The Main Stand seen from the West Terrace.


The Main Stand.


These two pictures I took when Roda were still playing at Kaalheide around 1999 or 2000...


...I cannot remember the occasion!

Stair Park (Stranraer v East Stirlingshire)

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