Women's football in the Netherlands

Last updated • 2 min readFrom Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia

Women's football in the Netherlands
Netherlands womens national football team May 2014.jpg
Netherlands women's national football team in May 2014
CountryNetherlands
Governing body KNVB
National team(s) Women's national team
National competitions
Club competitions
BeNe League
Eredivisie 20 March 2007
2 April 2015 (reestablishment)
Topklasse
Hoofdklasse
International competitions
Champions League
FIFA Women's World Cup (National Team)
European Championship(National Team)
Olympics(National Team)
Audience records
Single match28,182

Women's football in the Netherlands has traditionally had a low profile and female players had to play abroad. [1] [2] [3] However, the national team began having success in the 2010s, notably in winning the UEFA Women's Euro 2017 tournament and the domestic Eredivisie began expanding.

Contents

History

Women first started trying playing football in the 1890s but were banned by the KNVB. [4] [5] In 1896 Sparta Rotterdam tried to form a women's football team but were thwarted. [6] [7] IDecades later, the Dutch Ladies Football Association was formed in 1955 and even created a women's football league but was banned by the KNVB. [8] Women's football was played regionally in the Netherlands until the 1970s, when UEFA declared all its members must invest in women's football. [9]

National team

On 17 April 1971, the French team played the first women's international football match recognized by FIFA against the Netherlands. [10] The match took place in Hazebrouck, France and resulted in a 4–0 defeat for the Netherlands, with Jocelyne Ratignier scoring a hattrick. [11]

The Netherlands did not have a strong track record in women's international football until the 2010s. They did not qualify for the UEFA Women's Championship until 2009 [12] and did not qualify for their first Women's World Cup until 2015, when the tournament expanded from 16 to 24 teams. [13] In 2017, the national team won the UEFA Women's Euro 2017, which the country also hosted. [14] [15] Four out of 5 Dutch television viewers watched the Netherlands win the championship. [16] Two years later, in their second World Cup, the Dutch advanced all the way to the final before losing to the United States, 0–2. [17]

Renate Jansen during friendly match on 15-8-2010 Renate Jansen Ned Ier 2010.jpg
Renate Jansen during friendly match on 15-8-2010

Domestic League

The professional women's Eredivisie formed in 2007. In 2012, the KNVB and its Belgian counterpart, the KBVB/URBSFA, created a new top league for both countries, the BeNe League. From the Dutch perspective, the move was intended to improve the Netherlands women's national football team. [18] [19] However, the two federations scrapped the BeNe League after the 2014–15 season, with the KNVB choosing to restart the women's Eredivisie with the same seven clubs that had formed the Dutch contingent in the final season of the joint league. The Eredivisie has since expanded to twelve teams. [20] The league does not have promotion and relegation.

Level

Level Name

League(s)/Division(s)

1

Eredivisie

Eredivisie
12 clubs

2

Topklasse

Topklasse
12 clubs

3

Hoofdklasse

Hoofdklasse A Saturday
12 clubs

Hoofdklasse B Sunday
12 clubs

4

Eerste Klasse

Eerste Klasse
Group A, Saturday 12 clubs

Eerste Klasse
Group B, Saturday 12 clubs

Eerste Klasse
Group C, Sunday 12 clubs

Eerste Klasse
Group D, Sunday 12 clubs

5

Tweede Klasse

2 A
Saturday, West 1

2 B
Saturday, West 2

2 C
Saturday, East 1

2 D
Saturday, East 2

2 E
Sunday, West

2 F
Sunday, South 1

2 G
Sunday, South 2

2 H
Sunday, South 1

6

Derde Klasse

Sat 3A
West

Sat 3B
West

Sat 3C
South

Sat 3D
West

Sat 3E
East

Sat 3F
East

Sat 3G
East

Sat 3H
East

Sun 3A
West

Sun 3B
West

Sun 3C
West

Sun 3D
South

Sun 3E
South

Sun 3F
South

Sun 3G
East

Sun 3H
East

See also

Football in the Netherlands

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