HFC Haarlem

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HFC Haarlem

HFC Haarlem logo.svg
Full name
Haarlemsche Football Club Haarlem
Nickname(s)
Roodbroeken (Red shorts)
Founded
October 1, 1889
Dissolved
January 25, 2010
Ground
Haarlem Stadion,
Haarlem, Netherlands

Ground Capacity

3,442

Ground Coordinates

52°24′37″N 4°38′56″E / 52.41028°N 4.64889°E / 52.41028; 4.64889

















Home colours














Away colours



HFC Haarlem was a Dutch football club from the city of Haarlem, established in 1889 and dissolved in 2010. The club won the Dutch national title in 1946 and reached five Cup finals, winning in 1902 and 1912. Haarlem reached the second round of the 1982–83 UEFA Cup, losing to Spartak Moscow of the Soviet Union.


Haarlem was declared bankrupt on January 25, 2010, and excluded from professional football with immediate effect. Haarlem played its last professional match on January 22, 2010, a 3–0 away loss to Excelsior.


In April 2010, three months after its exclusion from professional football, HFC Haarlem completed a fusion with amateur Tweede Klasse club HFC Kennemerland, the new club being named Haarlem Kennemerland. The team played in Tweede Klasse A Saturday Division, West District I in its debut season.[1][2]




Contents





  • 1 History

    • 1.1 Ajax-partnership


    • 1.2 Bankruptcy



  • 2 Honours


  • 3 1982–83 UEFA Cup


  • 4 Results


  • 5 Former managers


  • 6 References


  • 7 External links




History


The club was founded on October 1, 1889. Haarlem won the Dutch national title in 1946 and reached five Dutch cup finals, winning in 1902 and 1912 and losing in 1911, 1914 and 1950. Haarlem won the title in the Eerste Divisie in 1972, 1976 and 1981. In 1982, HFC Haarlem, featuring a young Ruud Gullit, qualified for UEFA Cup football, in which they were eliminated by Spartak Moscow in the second round (the match hosted by Spartak is known in Russia because of the Luzhniki disaster that occurred in the stadium after the game). In 1990, Haarlem was relegated to the Eerste Divisie again, in which they played until January 25, 2010.



Ajax-partnership


On August 10, 2009, Haarlem and AFC Ajax announced a partnership.[3] They decided Ajax would loan 1 to 4 players to Haarlem every season, it also meant Ajax would get a say in Haarlem-transfers, and would deploy employees to Haarlem, Cock Jol, brother of Martin Jol supervised the Ajax-Haarlem project.



Bankruptcy


On January 25, 2010, however, Haarlem was declared bankrupt and was thus according to Dutch league rules excluded from competition, with all its previous results in the ongoing competition expunged.[4] The club in its current form ceased to exist, with all its players (and staff) becoming free agents.


In February 2010, HFC Haarlem was reinstated as a new amateur club, who also took the naming and logo rights from the old version.[5] This club then started talks for a potential merger with amateur Tweede Klasse Haarlem-based side HFC Kennemerland,[6] which was announced to have been completed on April 27; the new club will be called Haarlem Kennemerland, and will play home games at Haarlem Stadion, thus continuing the legacy of the old HFC Haarlem.[1][2]



Honours



  • Eredivisie

    • Winner: 1946


  • KNVB Cup

    • Winner: 1902, 1912


    • Runners-up: 1911, 1914, 1950



  • Eerste Divisie

    • Winner: 1972, 1976, 1981


  • Tweede Divisie

    • Winner: 1961, 1963, 1967

  • Promoted to Eredivisie

    • Promotion: 1969


1982–83 UEFA Cup



September 15, 1982
First Round
First Leg








HFC Haarlem
2–1

AA Gent

Gerrie Kleton 37'
Martin Haar 73'


Kiyiaki Tokodi 78' (pen)

Haarlem Stadion, Haarlem

Attendance: 11.800

Referee: Ib Nielsen (DEN)





September 29, 1982
First Round
Second Leg








AA Gent
3–3

HFC Haarlem
Aad Koudijzer 23', 60'
Cees Schapendonk 29'


Joop Böckling 3'
Gerrie Kleton 67'
Piet Keur 90'

Jules Otten Stadion, Ghent

Attendance: 9.604

Referee: Osmo Orakangas (FIN)





October 20, 1982
Second Round
First Leg








Spartak Moscow
2–0

HFC Haarlem

Edgar Gess 17'
Sergei Shvetsov 90'



Luzhniki Stadium, Moscow

Attendance: 15,000

Referee: Eduard Sostarić (YUG)






November 3, 1982
Second Round
Second Leg








HFC Haarlem
1–3

Spartak Moscow

Piet Huyg 25'


Sergei Shvetsov 43'
Sergei Shavlo 55'
Yuri Gavrilov 85'

Haarlem Stadion, Haarlem

Attendance: 18,000

Referee: Viriato Graça Oliva (POR)






Results



Eerste Divisie


Former managers



  • Netherlands Dick Advocaat


  • Netherlands Hans van Doorneveld


  • Wales Barry Hughes


  • Netherlands Heini Otto


  • Netherlands Karel Bonsink


  • Netherlands Roy Wesseling


  • Netherlands Gert Aandewiel


  • Netherlands Jan Zoutman


References




  1. ^ ab "HFC Haarlem gaat fuseren met HFC Kennemerland" (in Dutch). Sportweek.nl. 2010-04-27. Retrieved 2010-05-02. 


  2. ^ ab "Failliet Haarlem fuseert met amateurclub Kennemerland" (in Dutch). elfVOETBAL. 2010-04-27. Retrieved 2010-05-02. 


  3. ^ "Verregaande samenwerking Ajax en Haarlem" (in Dutch). VI.nl. 2009-08-10. 


  4. ^ [1]


  5. ^ "'Nieuw' HFC Haarlem" (in Dutch). WebRegio.nl. 2010-02-22. Retrieved 2010-04-13. 


  6. ^ "HFC Haarlem fuseert mogelijk met HFC Kennemerland" (in Dutch). SportWeek.nl. 2010-03-04. Retrieved 2010-04-13. 




External links


  • Official website





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