2022 WORLD CUP - DAY 17 - QUARTER-FINALS - NETHERLANDS VS ARGENTINA 2:4

Argentina reaches semi-finals after penalty shootout

9 Dec 2022
2022 WORLD CUP - DAY 13 - LAST SIXTEEN - NETHERLANDS VS USA 3:1

Netherlands reaches quarter-finals

3 Dec 2022
2022 WORLD CUP - DAY 09 - GROUP A - NETHERLANDS VS QATAR 2:0

Netherlands reaches the last sixteen

29 Nov 2022
2022 WORLD CUP - DAY 05 - GROUP A - NETHERLANDS VS ECUADOR 1:1

a draw between Netherlands and Ecuador

25 Nov 2022
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Clarence Seedorf previously had brief managerial spells at AC Milan, Shenzen in China and Deportivo La Coruna.

4 Aug 2018
FIFA RANKING - June 2018

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13 Jun 2018
STARS IN EUROPE - SOUTH AFRICA - CLUB - Thulani Serero joins Vitesse Arnhem

Serero joins Dutch club Vitesse Arnhem.

14 Jun 2017
STARS IN EUROPE - CAMEROON - CLUB - Onana commits future to Ajax until 2021

Onana was one of seven players to snub this year's Africa Cup.

16 May 2017
STARS IN ASIA - NETHERLANDS - CLUB - Coach - Seedorf takes over at Shenzhen FC

Former Milan boss Clarence Seedorf named coach at Chinese side Shenzhen FC.

10 Jul 2016

Frank Rijkaard
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 03/2015


Personal information
Full name

Franklin Edmundo Rijkaard
Date of birth
30 September 1962
Place of birth
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Height
1.90 m (6 ft 3 in)

Playing position
Defensive midfielder, Centre back


SENIOR CAREER*


Ajax
1980-1987
205x apps / 47x goals

Sporting CP
1987-1988
0x apps / 0x goals

→ Real Zaragoza (loan)
1987-1988
11x apps / 0x goals

Milan
1988-1993
142x apps / 16x goals

Ajax
1993-1995
56x apps / 12x goals

Total

414x apps / 75x goals

 


National team

Netherlands
1981-1994
73x apps / 10x goals

 

Teams managed


Netherlands
1998-2000

Sparta Rotterdam
2001-2002

Barcelona
2003-2008

Galatasaray
2009-2010

Saudi Arabia
2011-2013

 

(* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only)


Franklin Edmundo Rijkaard, born 30 September 1962), is a Dutch football manager and former player. 

Rijkaard has played for Ajax, Real Zaragoza and Milan, and represented his national side 73 times, scoring 10 goals. 

In his coaching career, he has been at the helm of the Dutch national side, Sparta Rotterdam, Barcelona, Galatasaray and Saudi Arabia. 

In 2010, Rijkaard was described by British broadsheet The Daily Telegraph as having been "a stylish player of faultless pedigree".

A complete, tenacious, and consistent midfielder, throughout his career he was praised by pundits for his physical and athletic attributes, his work rate, positioning, his acute tactical intelligence and decision making, as well as his outstanding ability to read the game.

Rijkaard was also a strong tackler, who was adept at starting attacking plays once he won back possession. 

He also possessed a powerful shot.

He is regarded as one of the best defensive midfielders in footballing history and one of the best players of his generation.

 

PLAYING CAREER 

 

AJAX 

Rijkaard was born in Amsterdam. 

His mother is Dutch and his father is Surinamese.

Rijkaard was just 17 when Ajax coach Leo Beenhakker gave him his senior squad debut 23 August 1980. 

He made an immediate impact, scoring the 3:0 goal in a 4:2 away victory over Go Ahead Eagles, the first league match in the 1980–81 season. 

He would play another 23 games for Ajax in his first season, netting a total of 4 goals. 

In 1981-82 he won his first league championship with Ajax, and went on to successfully defend that title in the following season. 

Rijkaard stayed at Ajax for seven and a half seasons, as a central defender (1981-82, 1982-83, 1984-85), a right midfielder and a central midfielder (1985-86). 

During this period he won the Dutch league championship three times (1981-82, 1982-83, 1984-85) and the Dutch Cup three times (1982-83, 1985-86, 1986-87). 

In the 1986-87 season he won the Cup Winners' Cup with Ajax (Final: Ajax 1:0 Lokomotive Leipzig). 

In September 1987, what would have been Rijkaard's third season (1987-88) under Dutch football legend Johan Cruyff as head coach, Rijkaard stormed off the training field and vowed never to play under him again. 

He was signed by the Portuguese club Sporting CP, but he signed too late to be eligible to play in any competition. 

He was immediately loaned out to Spanish team Real Zaragoza, but upon completing his first season at Zaragoza, was signed by Italian side Milan.


MILAN 

Rijkaard played for five seasons at Milan.

It was coach Arrigo Sacchi who saw Rijkaard as playing a pivotal role at Milan and transformed the central defender into a world class holding midfielder, where the Dutchman's aggressive and firm style would go on to influence the likes of Patrick Vieira to replicate in future years. 

Playing alongside fellow country-men Marco van Basten and Ruud Gullit, Rijkaard won the European Cup twice (in 1989 against Steaua Bucureşti and 1990, against Benfica) and the domestic Serie A championship twice. In the 1990 European Cup Final he scored the only goal to win the cup for Milan.

 

RETURN TO AJAX

After five seasons in Italy, Rijkaard returned to Ajax in 1993. 

With Louis van Gaal at the helm, Rijkaard and Danny Blind formed the experienced defensive core of the Ajax team that won the first two of three consecutive Dutch Championships. 

Ajax were the unbeaten champions of the Netherlands in the 1994-95 season, and carried that success into Europe. 

In his final game, Rijkaard won the Champions League, with a 1:0 victory over Milan in the 1995 final at the Ernst Happel Stadion in Vienna. 

He was named in the FIFA 100, Pelé's list of the 125 World's Greatest Footballers.

 

INTERNATIONAL CAREER 

On the international stage, Rijkaard made his debut for the Netherlands in 1981. 

He was part of the Dutch side that won Euro 1988 with a 2:0 win in the final over the Soviet Union, playing at center-back alongside Ronald Koeman. 

He won a total of 73 caps and scored 10 goals. 

Rijkaard also played for the Netherlands during the 1990 and 1994 World Cups and at Euro 1992.

 

THE SPITTING INCIDENT

Rijkaard was the cause of an incident with Rudi Völler when West Germany played the Netherlands in the 1990 World Cup. 

Rijkaard was booked for a tackle on Völler and, as Rijkaard took up position for the free kick, he spat in Völler's hair. Völler complained to the referee and was booked as well. 

From the resulting free kick, Völler then went to the ground, according to himself to avoid a collision with Dutch keeper Hans van Breukelen, while others, notably Rijkaard and van Breukelen, saw it as a dive in hopes for a penalty. 

Van Breukelen was angry at this but Rijkaard again confronted Völler by twisting his ear and stamping on his foot. 

Both Völler and Rijkaard were sent off but Rijkaard again spat in Völler's hair as they left the pitch. 

The German press nicknamed him "Llama" for his spitting.

Rijkaard would later apologise for his behaviour to Völler, who accepted.

At Euro 1992, Rijkaard scored a late equalizer for the Netherlands in a 2:2 draw with Denmark at the semi final stage but the Dutch went out on penalties. 

He made his final appearance for the Netherlands in the 3:2 defeat against eventual winners Brazil in the quarter-finals of the 1994 FIFA World Cup.

 

MANAGERIAL CAREER


EARLY YEARS

Rijkaard's coaching career began when he was appointed manager of the Netherlands national football team in 1998. 

He had previously served as an assistant coach, along with Johan Neeskens and Ronald Koeman under the managerial tenure of Guus Hiddink. 

At the time, he was not taken seriously as a manager because of his inexperience, but he was able to guide his national side to the Euro 2000 semi-finals. 

During the group phase, the Netherlands national football team won slowly but surely and managed to get 3 victories, 1:0 against the Czech Republic, 3:0 against Denmark, and 3:2 against France. 

In the quarter-final, his side produced the biggest win of the competition, a 6:1 result against Yugoslavia. 

The Netherlands played some of the best football of the tournament but lost their semi-final match to Italy on penalties, and Rijkaard resigned immediately.

During the 2001-02 season, he became manager of Sparta Rotterdam in the Dutch Eredivisie, the oldest professional team in the country. 

Rijkaard enjoyed the down-to-earth atmosphere, although the club was not financially strong.

Under his leadership, the club was relegated to the second division for the first time in its history, and he was fired as a consequence.

 

BARCELONA

FIRST YEARS

Rijkaard was not out of a coaching role for long, and less than a year after leaving Sparta Rotterdam, he was appointed manager of Barcelona for the 2003-04 season. 

The season would prove to be a watershed for the club, but not without initial instability. 

Rijkaard arrived at the club as it entered a new phase, having elected a new President in Joan Laporta and a new managerial board, but with fans unhappy that Laporta had let English midfielder David Beckham snub the chance to join the club. 

For Rijkaard, the team he inherited, with the exception of new superstar signing Ronaldinho (who was the club's second choice after Beckham), also consisted of many underachieving players from the old guard and era that failed to meet the club and its fans' demands to match arch rival Real Madrid's success in the early 2000s (decade), having not won a trophy since 1999.

Rijkaard had a disappointing start at Barcelona that saw some sections of the club's fans call for his resignation, and he drew flak from the media when the team lost to Real Madrid in December 2003. 

Rijkaard's resilience won through and from 2004 onwards, he achieved a massive turnaround, as the team went from strength to strength. 

Barcelona finished runners-up in La Liga in 2003-04, having been close to the relegation zone at one point in the earlier stages of the season. 

Rijkaard then took Barcelona to the next level as he phased out the old guard and rebuilt a new-look side around Ronaldinho, with new players like Deco, Samuel Eto'o, Rafael Márquez and Ludovic Giuly, along with the latest promotion of some young players from the previous era trained in the club's youth teams (i.e. Víctor Valdés, Carles Puyol, Xavi, Messi and Andrés Iniesta). 

He eventually succeeded in turning around the fortunes of the club, with the strong support of Laporta, and within the next couple of years finally managed to win La Liga both in 2004-05 and in 2005-06.


CHAMPIONS LEAGUE TITLE AND AFTER

He became the first Barcelona coach to have won twice at Real Madrid's stadium Santiago Bernabéu, an achievement which even successful managers like Johan Cruijff, Louis van Gaal and Luis Aragonés were unable to accomplish. 

His no nonsense policy on and off the field, and the sparkling football played by his team, won him many plaudits and Rijkaard was among the five nominated coaches for UEFA's Team of the Year 2005. 

On 8 March 2006 he was also honoured by UEFA for his contributions to the European Cup Competition throughout his career as player and manager.

Rijkaard also achieved success on the European stage winning the 2005-06 Champions League with a 2:1 win against Arsenal in the final. 

Barcelona had been losing 1:0 for most of the match before his late tactical substitutions proved the decisive factor, as the introduction of Henrik Larsson and Juliano Belletti contributed directly to Barcelona's two goals. 

The win made him the fifth individual to have won the European Cup both as a player and as a manager, alongside Miguel Muñoz, Giovanni Trapattoni, Johan Cruijff, and Carlo Ancelotti, a feat later achieved also by his eventual successor, Josep Guardiola. 

After losing to Manchester United in the semifinal of the 2007-08 UEFA Champions League, Rijkaard was asked whether he would quit at the end of the season seeing as though he had not won anything for two successive seasons. 

Rijkaard replied: "I have no intention of leaving. 

It would be different if the players were saying it is time for me to go but that is not the case." 

On 1 May 2008, it was reported that Rijkaard allegedly confided to a colleague that he would be stepping down as Barcelona manager at the end of the season. 

But 24 hours later Rijkaard stated in a press conference that he had no intention of leaving Barcelona.

On 8 May 2008, the day after Barcelona's dismal 4:1 defeat to arch rivals Real Madrid, Barcelona's president Joan Laporta announced that at the end of the 2007-2008 season, Rijkaard would no longer be head coach of the first team. 

Laporta made the announcement after a board meeting; Rijkaard was succeeded by Pep Guardiola.

Joan Laporta made it clear that Rijkaard's achievements "made history" and praised him for his time at the club.

 

GALATASARAY

On 5 June 2009, Rijkaard signed a two-year contract to manage the Turkish Süper Lig team Galatasaray, following the resignation of Bülent Korkmaz two days earlier. 

He was sacked on 19 October 2010 and was replaced with Gheorghe Hagi.

 

SAUDI ARABIA

On 28 June 2011, It was announced that Rijkaard would be head coach of the Saudi Arabian national football team after a deal with Saudi Arabia Football Federation.

Saudi Arabia were eliminated in the third round of 2014 FIFA World Cup qualification after a 4:2 away defeat to Australia in their last match on 29 February, finishing third in their group. 

2013 Gulf Cup of Nations was the second competition for Rijkaard with Saudi Arabian national football team and the string of bad results continued. 

Saudi Arabian national football team left the competition at the group stage after losing 2:0 against Iraq, a 2:0 win against Yemen and 1:0 defeat against Kuwait. 

On 16 January 2013 Frank Rijkaard was dismissed as the Saudi Arabia head-coach, under a confidential contractual termination penalty clause, following their exit in the 2013 Gulf Cup of Nations.

 

MONTEVERDE ACADEMY

In 2013, Florida prep school Montverde Academy hired Rijkaard as their Advisor of Player Development.

 

COACHING PHILOSPHY AND STYLE 

As a coach, Rijkaard's essential philosophy is to guide his team towards playing attack-minded football as a cohesive unit. 

In doing this, he believes a team can achieve the dual objectives of winning games and ensuring the audience's enjoyment of the spectacle. 

This follows in the best coaching traditions of Rijkaard's countrymen and forebears Rinus Michels and Johan Cruijff. 

In this light, it is notable that Michels coached both Cruijff and Rijkaard during their respective participations with the Dutch national team, and that Cruijff himself went on to coach Rijkaard. 

Nonetheless, Rijkaard believes in working within a contemporary football context and is not out to imitate the styles and tactics of past masters.

In his own words: 

“you gain many impressions from the past.

You still have it in your mind when you become a coach, and if something happens you can recall how it was dealt with.

But I strongly believe that you cannot copy anyone.

The decisions that a great coach made years ago will not necessarily work today.”

Rijkaard has evidently learned to curb the quick temper of his playing days and is often a portrait of calm and stability in training and along the touchline. 

He rarely courts controversy in the media and is more apt now to promote a positive environment and let his team's play speak for itself when faced with intense rivalry or criticism.

The tactics used during his tenure as manager of Barcelona best exemplify Rijkaard's commitment to playing stylish attacking football. 

During the team's 2004-05 and 2005-06 campaigns, the coach frequently fielded a 4–3–3 formation, a system which encouraged the creativity of the players in the front third of the field and created optimal interplay between the midfielders and forwards during attacks. 

Within this system the four defenders also tended to play in a relatively high position on the pitch to support the midfield which frequently advanced to participate in the attack. 

The team generally focuses on maintaining possession in the opponents' half of the field, applying pressure in order to force the opposition to make errors in defense and offensive counter-attacking. 

With regards to man-management and motivation, Rijkaard rejects the notion of a "star system" and promotes the idea that every one of his players is a valuable member of the team.

He rarely praises one individual over another in the squad, although he has been known to acknowledge the outstanding contributions of a player within the context of a team performance.