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ADO Den Haag

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dutch association football club

Football club
ADO Den Haag
NicknamesDen Haag (The Hague)
De Residentieclub (The Residence Club)
De Ooievaars (The Storks)
Short nameADO Den Haag
Founded1 February 1905; 120 years ago (1905-02-01)
GroundWerktalent Stadion
Capacity15,000
OwnerDavid Blitzer
ChairmanNatascha van Grinsven-Admiraal
Head coachRobin Peter
LeagueEerste Divisie
2024–25Eerste Divisie, 4th of 20
Websiteadodenhaag.nl
Current season

Alles Door Oefening Den Haag (Dutch pronunciation:[ˈɑləzdoːrˈufənɪŋdɛnˈɦaːx]), commonly known by the abbreviated nameADO Den Haag ([ˈaːdoːdɛnˈɦaːx]), is a Dutchassociation football club from the city ofThe Hague. They play in theEerste Divisie, the second tier ofDutch football, following relegation from theEredivisie in the2020–21 season. The club was for a time known asFC Den Haag ([ɛfˈseːdɛnˈɦaːx]), with ADO representing the amateur branch of the club. Despite being from one of the traditional three large Dutch cities, it has not been able to matchAjax,Feyenoord orPSV in terms of success in theEredivisie or in European competition. There is nonetheless a big rivalry with Ajax and Feyenoord. TheDutch words "Alles Door Oefening" translate intoEverything Through Practice.

History

[edit]

1905–1971: ADO

[edit]

On 1 February 1905, the club Alles Door Oefening (ADO) was founded in café 'Het Hof van Berlijn' (now: De Paap) in The Hague. In the first years of its existence, the club endured some difficult times as many members refused to pay their fees. ADO started out in the local Haagsche Voetbal Bond, but promoted to the national Nederlandsche Voetbal Bond in 1912. That year they promoted to the third level (3e klasse NVB) and two years later they even earned the championship on that level.

After moving to theZuiderpark stadium in 1925, ADO continued to grow to a club of some significance. In 1926, the club earned promotion to the highest national level, the Eerste Klasse. In the following years the red-green-white team struggled not to be relegated at first, but rose to the top of the league at the end of the 1930s. In 1939 the club just missed the class title after losing toDWS in Amsterdam. In 1940, the title seemed very close again, but another second-place finish was the highest achievable position after the club saw many players being drafted in the army withWorld War II closing in. This time another club from Amsterdam,Blauw-Wit, grabbed the title. In 1941, ADO finally won their class and moved on to the national champion's competition, losing that toHeracles.

In the 1941–42 season, all the stars were aligned, and although the war made everyday life harder and harder, the club seemed undefeatable. After winning their league, often by many goals difference, ADO moved on to the national champion's competition and fought for the title with Heerenveen, AGOVV, Eindhoven and Blauw-Wit. A 5–2 victory over AGOVV finally brought ADO their first national title. In 1943 ADO won another title, amongst others by beating legendAbe Lenstra'sHeerenveen 8–2.

The Hague had to wait until the 1960s for more successes from their local club. AfterErnst Happel joined ADO as a coach in 1962, the club worked their way to the top of the league again. They finished third in the final ranking in 1965. In 1963, 1964 and 1966, ADO played in the national cup final, theKNVB Cup, but lost. In 1968, they again reached the final, and this time beat Ajax to win it. In the 1970–71 season, ADO started the league with 17 games undefeated and were at the top of the national league, but ended their season as No. 3.

In 1967, ADO played a summer in North America'sUnited Soccer Association, under the nameSan Francisco Golden Gate Gales. The club finished tied for second in the Western Division.

1971–1996: FC Den Haag

[edit]
[icon]
This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding to it.(July 2014)

In 1971 the club merged with city rivalsHolland Sport to formFC Den Haag.

The club again reached the Dutch Cup final in 1972 (this time losing 3–2 to Ajax) then went on to win the trophy for a second time in 1975, this team defeatingTwente 1–0. Their greatest European success was a quarter-final game againstWest Ham United for the European Cup Winners Cup in 1976. A 4–2 win in The Hague followed by a 3–1 defeat in London meant elimination. In the 1980s, FC Den Haag was often associated with hooliganism and financial backfall. However, they reached their fourth Dutch Cup final in 1987, losing 4–2 (again to Ajax) following two extra-time winners fromMarco van Basten.

On 3 April 1982, hooligans of the club burned down part of their own home ground,Zuiderpark Stadion.[1] The fire was set after a 4–0 loss toHFC Haarlem. It damaged the ground's oldest stand dating back to 1928 and caused $500,000 in damages.[2] The damaged part was rebuilt and opened in 1986.[3]

After another merger the club was renamed ADO Den Haag in 1996.

1996–present: ADO Den Haag

[edit]
Mural in the new ADO stadium

After a long spell in the country'ssecond tier of league football, ADO Den Haag played four seasons in the Eredivisie then were relegated again in the2006–07 season. However, after finishing sixth in the 2007–08 season, they went on to win the play-offs, meaning promotion back to the Eredivisie for 2008–09. The club's new home was finished in 2007: the 15,000-capacityKyocera Stadion, formerly known as the Den Haag Stadion. Their home colors are yellow and green. They began the 2008–09 season with two wins which put them on top of the Eredivisie for the first time in 32 years. In the 2009–10 season, the club's average home attendance was 11,745 spectators.

The team enjoyed success in the 2010–11 season. Defeating rivals Ajax twice was one of the highlights of the season. ADO Den Haag finished seventh in the league and won the play-offs (beatingRoda JC andGroningen) which offered the last DutchUEFA Europa League place. They won the first matches against Lithuanian sideTauras (3–2, 2–0) but lost the first away leg for the third qualifying round against Cypriot clubOmonia 3–0 inNicosia.

ADO supporters have strong links with Welsh clubSwansea City. Flags of the respective clubs are often flown at the matches of the other club, and both clubs regularly hold pre-season friendly matches.Legia Warsaw (Poland),Club Brugge (Belgium) andJuventus (Italy) also share strong supporter links with ADO Den Haag.

The club was in serious financial trouble in 2008 and in June 2014, its majority shareholder agreed to sell the club to Chinese-based United Vansen International Sports Company, Ltd. for a reported $8.9 million.[4] The current ownership group has "promised to invest millions of euros" into the club.[5] UVS was founded in 2008 and was responsible for organising theBeijing Olympic closing ceremony and football curtain-raisers attracting prominent football clubs such as Juventus,Milan,Internazionale,Napoli,Lazio,Tottenham Hotspur,West Ham United andHull City.[6]

The 2019–20 season was declared void, with no promotion/relegation, which meant ADO Den Haag remained in Eredivisie for the 2020–21 season despite their 17th-place finish.[7] In 2021, ADO Den Haag was relegated to theEerste Divisie.[8] The same year, American investment company Global Football Holdings, owned byDavid Blitzer, purchased majority shares in the club fromUnited Vansen.[9][10]

Sponsors

[edit]
PeriodKit manufacturerShirt sponsor
1982–1983AdidasDaihatsu
1983–1986AdidasHotelplan Vakanties
1987–1989CruyffHotelplan Vakanties
1992–1994Lotto
1994–1999VHS
1999–2000WilsonClient Solutions
2000–2001Solidium
2001–2002Fila
2002–2004Hommerson Casino's
2004–2005Hummel
2005–2008DSW
2008–2011Fit For Free
2011–2012ErreàKyocera
2012–2017Basic Fit
2018–2022Cars Jeans
2023–2025Hommerson Casino's
2025–ADOgroen

Honours

[edit]

Eredivisie (up to 1955–56 the Netherlands Football League Championship)

Eerste Divisie

KNVB Cup

European record

[edit]
UEFA Europa League
SeasonRoundOpponentsHome legAway legAggregate
2011–12Q2LithuaniaTauras2–03–25–2
Q3CyprusOmonia1–00–31–3
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup
SeasonRoundOpponentsHome legAway legAggregate
1968–691AustriaGrazer AK4–12–06–1
2Germany1. FC Köln0–10–30–4
1972–731Soviet UnionSpartak Moscow0–00–10–1
1975–761DenmarkVejle BK2–02–04–0
2FranceLens3–23–16–3
QFEnglandWest Ham United4–21–35–5
1987–881HungaryÚjpest Dósza3–10–13–2
2SwitzerlandBSC Young Boys2–10–12–2
UEFA Cup
SeasonRoundOpponentsHome legAway legAggregate
1971–721LuxembourgAris Bonnevoie5–02–27–2
2EnglandWolverhampton Wanderers1–30–41–7

Domestic results

[edit]
Historical chart of league performance
Main article:List of ADO Den Haag seasons

Below is a table with ADO Den Haag's domestic results since the introduction of theEredivisie in 1956.

Domestic Results since 1956
Domestic leagueLeague resultQualification toKNVB Cup seasonCup result
2024–25 Eerste Divisie4thpromotion/relegation play-off: no promotion2024–25first round
2023–24 Eerste Divisie5thpromotion/relegation play-off: no promotion2023–24quarter final
2022–23 Eerste Divisie12th2022–23quarter final
2021–22 Eerste Divisie4thpromotion/relegation play-off: no promotion2021–22round of 16
2020–21 Eredivisie18thEerste Divisie (relegation)2020–21round of 16
2019–20 Eredivisie17th2019–20first round
2018–19 Eredivisie9th2018–19second round
2017–18 Eredivisie7th2017–18first round
2016–17 Eredivisie11th2016–17third round
2015–16 Eredivisie11th2015–16second round
2014–15 Eredivisie13th2014–15second round
2013–14 Eredivisie9th2013–14third round
2012–13 Eredivisie9th2012–13third round
2011–12 Eredivisie15th2011–12third round
2010–11 Eredivisie7thEuropa League (winningEL play-offs) (Q2)2010–11fourth round
2009–10 Eredivisie15th2009–10second round
2008–09 Eredivisie14th2008–09round of 16
2007–08 Eerste Divisie6thEredivisie (winning promotion/releg. play-offs)2007–08third round
2006–07 Eredivisie18thEerste Divisie (relegation)2006–07third round
2005–06 Eredivisie15th2005–06third round
2004–05 Eredivisie14th2004–05quarter final
2003–04 Eredivisie15th2003–04second round
2002–03 Eerste Divisie1stEredivisie (promotion)2002–03round of 16
2001–02 Eerste Divisie4thpromotion/relegation play-off: no promotion2001–02second round
2000–01 Eerste Divisie16th2000–01second round
1999–2000 Eerste Divisie11th1999–2000third round
1998–99 Eerste Divisie10th1998–99second round
1997–98 Eerste Divisie5thpromotion/relegation play-off: no promotion1997–98second round
1996–97 Eerste Divisie8thpromotion/relegation play-off: no promotion1996–97group stage
1995–96 Eerste Divisie15th1995–96round of 16
1994–95 Eerste Divisie4thpromotion/relegation play-off: no promotion1994–95round of 16
1993–94 Eerste Divisie7thpromotion/relegation play-off: no promotion1993–94quarter final
1992–93 Eerste Divisie8th1992–93third round
1991–92 Eredivisie16thEerste Divisie (losing prom./relegation play-off)1991–92third round
1990–91 Eredivisie14th1990–91round of 16
1989–90 Eredivisie10th1989–90second round
1988–89 Eerste Divisie2ndEredivisie (promotion)1988–89semi-final
1987–88 Eredivisie17thEerste Divisie (relegation)1987–88round of 16
1986–87 Eredivisie14thCup Winners' Cup1986–87final
1985–86 Eerste Divisie1stEredivisie (promotion)1985–86semi-final
1984–85 Eerste Divisie4thpromotion/relegation play-off: no promotion1984–85second round
1983–84 Eerste Divisie7th1983–84round of 16
1982–83 Eerste Divisie6th1982–83round of 16
1981–82 Eredivisie17thEerste Divisie (relegation)1981–82second round
1980–81 Eredivisie14th1980–81second round
1979–80 Eredivisie10th1979–80quarter final
1978–79 Eredivisie7th1978–79round of 16
1977–78 Eredivisie12th1977–78second round
1976–77 Eredivisie10th1976–77semi-final
1975–76 Eredivisie6th1975–76round of 16
1974–75 Eredivisie10thCup Winners' Cup1974–75winners
1973–74 Eredivisie13th1973–74second round
1972–73 Eredivisie5th1972–73quarter final
1971–72 Eredivisie5thCup Winners' Cup1971–72final
1970–71 Eredivisie (as ADO...
...and Holland Sport)
3rd
15th
UEFA Cup
1970–71quarter final
round of 16
1969–70 Eredivisie (as ADO...
...and Holland Sport)
6th
9th
1969–70quarter final[citation needed]
first round[citation needed]
1968–69 Eredivisie (as ADO...
...and Holland Sport)
6th
10th
1968–69round of 16[citation needed]
first round[citation needed]
1967–68 Eredivisie (as ADO)
1967–68 Eerste Divisie (as Holland Sport)
4th
1st
Cup Winners' Cup
Eredivisie (promotion)
1967–68winners
group stage[citation needed]
1966–67 Eredivisie (as ADO)
1966–67 Eerste Divisie (as Holland Sport)
4th
3rd
1966–67round of 16[citation needed]
first round[citation needed]
1965–66 Eredivisie (as ADO)
1965–66 Eerste Divisie (as Holland Sport)
3rd
11th
1965–66final
group stage[citation needed]
1964–65 Eredivisie (as ADO)
1964–65 Eerste Divisie (as Holland Sport)
3rd
13th
1964–65second round[citation needed]
quarter final[citation needed]
1963–64 Eredivisie (as ADO)
1963–64 Eerste Divisie (as SHS)
10th
3rd
1963–64final
round of 16[citation needed]
1962–63 Eredivisie (as ADO)
1962–63 Eerste Divisie (as SHS)
10th
11th
1962–63final
1961–62 Eredivisie (as ADO)
1961–62 Eerste Divisie (as SHS)
15th
7th (group B)

– (after surviving promotion/relegation play-off)
1961–62third round
1960–61 Eredivisie (as ADO)
1960–61 Eerste Divisie (as SHS)
11th
14th (group B)
1960–61second round
1959–60 Eredivisie (as ADO)
1959–60 Eerste Divisie (as SHS)
12th
7th (group B)
not heldnot held
1958–59 Eredivisie (as ADO...
...and SHS)
13th
18th

Eerste Divisie (relegation)
1958–59final
1957–58 Eredivisie (as ADO)
1957–58 Eerste Divisie (as SHS)
6th
1st (group B)

Eredivisie (promotion)
1957–58third round
1956–57 Eerste Divisie (as ADO...
...and SHS)
1st
10th
Eredivisie (promotion)
1956–57semi finals

Current squad

[edit]
As of 3 September 2025
No.Pos.NationPlayer
1GK BFAKilian Nikiema
2DF NEDSteven van der Sloot
4DF BELMatteo Waem
5DF NEDMees Kreekels
7FW NEDDaryl van Mieghem
8MF NEDJari Vlak(captain)
11FW NEDEvan Rottier
12DF FRAPhilippe Lanquetin(on loan fromEstoril)
14MF NEDMylian Jimenez
15DF NEDMilan Hokke
16MF NEDFinn de Bruin
18DF GUISekou Sylla
19FW AUTLuka Reischl
No.Pos.NationPlayer
20FW NEDLorenzo Maasland
21FW AUSCameron Peupion
23FW NEDJesse Bal
24GK BELAntoine Lejoly
25MF FINJuho Kilo
26DF NEDIllaijh de Ruijter
27FW NEDNigel Thomas
29GK NEDCaleb Kramer
31DF NEDDevyn Payne
35DF NEDSanyika Bergtop
45DF FINDiogo Tomas
49FW ITARuben Silva-Richards(on loan fromEstoril)

Out on loan

[edit]
No.Pos.NationPlayer
DF FINTaneli Hämäläinen(toKuopion Palloseura)
FW NEDMaikey Houwaart(toExcelsior Maassluis)

Coaching staff

[edit]
PositionName
Head coachGermanyRobin Peter
Assistant coachGermany Philipp Seidler
NetherlandsLevi Schwiebbe
Goalkeeper CoachSyria Kawa Hisso
Physical coachVacant
PhysiotherapistNetherlands Edwin Coret
Equipment managerNetherlands Rob Ravestein
Club PhysicianNetherlands Daan van de Pol, MD PhD

Former players

[edit]
Further information:Category:ADO Den Haag players

National team players

[edit]

The following players were called up to represent theirnational teams ininternational football and receivedcaps during their tenure with ADO Den Haag:

  • Players in bold actively play for ADO Den Haag and for their respective national teams. Years in brackets indicate careerspan with ADO Den Haag.

National team players by Confederation

[edit]

Member associations are listed in order of most to least amount of current and former ADO Den Haag players represented Internationally

Total national team players by confederation
ConfederationTotal(Nation) Association
AFC4Chinese TaipeiChinese Taipei (1),IndonesiaIndonesia (2),JapanJapan (1),PhilippinesPhilippines (1)
CAF5NigeriaNigeria (2),Burkina FasoBurkina Faso (1),GuineaGuinea (1),Ivory CoastIvory Coast (1)
CONCACAF10CuraçaoCuraçao (4),United StatesUnited States (2),ArubaAruba (1),BonaireBonaire (1),JamaicaJamaica (1),SurinameSuriname (1)
CONMEBOL0 
OFC0 
UEFA34NetherlandsNetherlands (19),NorwayNorway (4),SlovakiaSlovakia (2),DenmarkDenmark (1),EstoniaEstonia (1),FinlandFinland (1),IsraelIsrael (1),LithuaniaLithuania (1),LuxembourgLuxembourg (1),Northern IrelandNorthern Ireland (1),PolandPoland (1),SloveniaSlovenia (1)

Players in international tournaments

[edit]

The following is a list of ADO Den Haag players who have competed in international tournaments, including theFIFA World Cup,FIFA Confederations Cup,AFC Asian Cup,Africa Cup of Nations, and theCONCACAF Gold Cup. To this date no ADO Den Haag players have participated in theUEFA European Championship,Copa América, or theOFC Nations Cup while playing for ADO Den Haag.

CupPlayers
Italy1934 FIFA World CupNetherlandsMauk Weber
France1938 FIFA World CupNetherlandsMauk Weber
United States2005 CONCACAF Gold CupUnited StatesJohn O'Brien
South Africa2013 Africa Cup of NationsNigeriaKenneth Omeruo
Brazil2013 FIFA Confederations CupNigeriaKenneth Omeruo
Equatorial Guinea2015 Africa Cup of NationsIvory CoastWilfried Kanon
Gabon2017 Africa Cup of NationsIvory CoastWilfried Kanon
Russia2018 FIFA World CupNigeriaTyronne Ebuehi
Egypt2019 Africa Cup of NationsIvory CoastWilfried Kanon
Costa RicaJamaicaUnited States2019 CONCACAF Gold CupCuraçaoElson Hooi
Cameroon2021 Africa Cup of NationsBurkina FasoKilian Nikiema
Ivory Coast2023 Africa Cup of NationsBurkina FasoKilian Nikiema
Qatar2023 AFC Asian CupIndonesiaRafael Struick

Former managers

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"The tarnishing of Den Haag's golden past". 20 February 2016.Archived from the original on 3 July 2018. Retrieved3 July 2018.
  2. ^Montague, James (24 August 2017).The Billionaires Club: The Unstoppable Rise of Football's Super-rich Owners WINNER FOOTBALL BOOK OF THE YEAR, SPORTS BOOK AWARDS 2018. Bloomsbury Publishing.ISBN 9781472923134.Archived from the original on 12 February 2024. Retrieved15 October 2020 – via Google Books.
  3. ^"History". 29 August 2011.Archived from the original on 3 July 2018. Retrieved3 July 2018.
  4. ^Montague, JamesA Soccer Team, Its Foreign Owner and Local DiscontentArchived 12 June 2018 at theWayback MachineThe New York Times. 6 January 2016
  5. ^"Dutch club Den Haag to be taken over by Chinese company".eurosport.com.Eurosport. Reuters. 24 June 2014.Archived from the original on 12 February 2024. Retrieved23 April 2015.
  6. ^"Glimpses of Exhibitors: United Vansen International Sports Co., Ltd".cifts.org. China Beijing International Fair for Trade in Services. 27 February 2015. Archived fromthe original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved23 April 2015.
  7. ^"Eredivisie". Archived fromthe original on 24 May 2021. Retrieved24 April 2020.
  8. ^"ADO degradeert na dramatische middag tegen Willem II" (in Dutch). Voetbal International. 13 May 2021.Archived from the original on 12 February 2024. Retrieved13 May 2021.
  9. ^"Football club ADO Den Haag taken over by American company".DutchNews.nl. 5 November 2021.Archived from the original on 8 December 2021. Retrieved7 May 2023.
  10. ^"Real Salt Lake Players Set for Short-Term Training Stints in Europe".rsl.com.Archived from the original on 7 May 2023. Retrieved7 May 2023.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^A Dutch-born footballer,Daniël Rijaard representedNetherlands Antilles internationally, prior to the countries dissolution in 2010, with Curaçao considered by both UEFA and FIFA as the only inherit successor to the national team of former Netherlands Antilles.


External links

[edit]

Media related toADO Den Haag at Wikimedia Commons

Personnel
Home stadium
Seasons
Other teams
Links to related articles
ADO Den Haagmanagers
(c) =caretaker manager
KNVB Cup winners (1961–present)
   

1960–61  Ajax (3/20)
1961–62  Sparta (2/3)
1962–63  Willem II (2/2)
1963–64  Fortuna '54 (2/2)
1964–65  Feyenoord (3/14)
1965–66  Sparta (3/3)
1966–67  Ajax (4/20)
1967–68  ADO
1968–69  Feyenoord (4/14)
1969–70  Ajax (5/20)
1970–71  Ajax (6/20)
1971–72  Ajax (7/20)
1972–73  NAC
1973–74  PSV (2/11)
1974–75  FC Den Haag
1975–76  PSV (3/11)

1976–77  FC Twente (1/3)
1977–78  AZ (1/4)
1978–79  Ajax (8/20)
1979–80  Feyenoord (5/14)
1980–81  AZ (2/4)
1981–82  AZ (3/4)
1982–83  Ajax (9/20)
1983–84  Feyenoord (6/14)
1984–85  FC Utrecht (1/3)
1985–86  Ajax (10/20)
1986–87  Ajax (11/20)
1987–88  PSV (4/11)
1988–89  PSV (5/11)
1989–90  PSV (6/11)
1990–91  Feyenoord (7/14)
1991–92  Feyenoord (8/14)

1992–93  Ajax (12/20)
1993–94  Feyenoord (9/14)
1994–95  Feyenoord (10/14)
1995–96  PSV (7/11)
1996–97  Roda JC (1/2)
1997–98  Ajax (13/20)
1998–99  Ajax (14/20)
1999–00  Roda JC (2/2)
2000–01  FC Twente (2/3)
2001–02  Ajax (15/20)
2002–03  FC Utrecht (2/3)
2003–04  FC Utrecht (3/3)
2004–05  PSV (8/11)
2005–06  Ajax (16/20)
2006–07  Ajax (17/20)
2007–08  Feyenoord (11/14)

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