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[[Category:Dutch football clubs|Roda JC (Kerkrade)]]
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[[Category:Roda JC]]
[[Category:Roda JC]]
[[category:Sports clubs established in 1962|Roda JC]]
[[Category:Football (soccer) clubs established in 1962]]


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[[de:Roda JC Kerkrade]]

Revision as of 21:49, 29 November 2006

Roda JC Kerkrade
Logo
Full nameSport Vereniging Roda
Juliana Combinatie Kerkrade
Nickname(s)The Pride of the South Koempels
FoundedJune 27, 1962,
merger of Roda Sport (1954)
and Rapid JC (1954).
GroundParkstad Limburg Stadion,
Kerkrade
Capacity19,979
ChairmanServé Kuijer
ManagerHuub Stevens
LeagueEredivisie
2005-06Eredivisie, 8th

Roda JC Kerkrade is a Dutch football club located in Kerkrade, a place in the south of The Netherlands near the German border. Roda JC plays in the Dutch Eredivisie.

History

Roda JC came into being by the merger of several football clubs from Kerkrade. In 1954, SV Kerkrade (of 1926) and SV Bleijerheide (of 1914) merged to form Roda Sport. That same year, Rapid '54 (of 1954) and amateur club Juliana (of 1910) merged to form Rapid JC, which would go on to win the Dutch league in 1956. On June 27, 1962, Rapid JC and Roda Sport merged to form Roda JC. As a result, the current club is the result of the complex merger history involving no less then five clubs. Since being promoted to the Eredivisie in 1973, Roda JC hasn't been relegated. The club has reached the Dutch Cup final 5 times, winning it twice, in 1997 and 2000. The average attendance in 2004/05 was 12,700 people.

The history of the forming of Roda JC

The last Dutch coal-mines were closed in the 1960s, but the south of the Netherlands' most southern province, Limburg, is still referred to as the Mijnstreek ('mine district') today. It is a hilly area, unlike the majority of the rest of the country. The coal-mines are still industrious in folk songs in the regional dialect and in the stories of old miners, reminiscing of an era that will never return. Southern Limburg will always be their home. Their team, in most cases, is Roda JC.

Roda are known as a 'coal-miner's club'. Fans of MVV, from the mundane provincial capital of Maastricht, pronounce those words condescendingly. In Kerkrade and surroundings they are pronounced with pride. Roda JC are without any doubt Limburg's number one club, now that Limburg rivals VVV Venlo, MVV and Fortuna Sittard have all dropped out of the Eredivisie. Roda's club honors include seven European campaigns and five Dutch cup finals, of which the latter two (1997 and 2000) were won. One of the predecessors in Roda's 'family tree' of mergers, Rapid JC, were champions of The Netherlands in 1956. Ten out of eleven players on that Rapid JC team were coal-miners.

Few Dutch football clubs have such a complex history of mergers as Roda JC (full name: Roda Juliana Combinatie). The story in short: Kerkrade football club (of 1926) and Bleyerheide (of 1914) became Roda Sport in 1954. In the same year Juliana (of 1910) and Rapid (of 1954) became Rapid JC. The two mergers, Roda Sport and Rapid JC, existed for only eight years, forming Roda JC in 1962. The newly born club got promoted to the Eredivisie in 1973 and did not get relegated since. Today, the club play in Parkstad Limburg Stadium, one of the larger and most beautiful new Eredivisie facilities.

Since their promotion to the highest level in 1973 Roda finished in the top ten of the Eredivisie more than twenty times, thereby developing into one of the clubs that have a claim on the tiltle 'best of the rest'. It is one of the select handful of clubs that regularly qualify for 'Europe' and manifest themselves as tough opposition for the 'Big Three'. Roda, for one, reached their all-time high in the 1994-1995 season: the yellow and black side were the only team in the country not to lose to unbeaten national and European champions Ajax. Both league confrontations ended in 1-1 (the final score of surprisingly many recent editions of Ajax vs Roda, by the way, especially in Kerkrade) and Roda JC finished second in the Eredivisie, their best league achievement ever.

The club's most memorable European campaign was in 1988-1989, when Roda made it through the winter in the European Cup Winners Cup before succumbing to the superb strikers of Bulgarian powerhouse Sredets Sofia: Hristo Stoichkov and Emil Kostadinov, who were soon to become superstars in Europe's major football leagues. Roda's most memorable European game, however, was played thirteen years later on 28 February 2002: after an unfortunate 0-1 defeat to the great AC Milan in Kerkrade, Roda caused panic at the San Siro by winning the return leg by the same score. Roda even took the lead in the penalty shoot-out, but ended up losing the series. One penalty away from eliminating AC Milan...

Roda's position in Dutch football is best illustrated by their history in the Dutch Cup. Roda were good enough to make it to five finals, but the first three times the opponent in the final was one of the 'Big Three' - and Roda went home with the silver medal: PSV won in 1976 and 1988, Feyenoord in 1992. In the club's latter two cup finals, however, a 'non-Big Three' side was the opponent. Both times the cup went to Kerkrade: Heerenveen were beaten in 1997, NEC in 2000. It sums it all up: normally not good enough to compete with the 'Big Three', but better than most of the others.

Roda can keep up with the big ones, even in times of financial trouble (2002-2003), but without being unfaithful to the real Roda soul. Typically, the club's eternal fan hero was a scion of a local coal-miner's family. A history of Roda would be incomplete without his name: Eugène Hanssen, long-time Roda captain during the 1980s and early 1990s, and still a working-class hero of Limburg's 'mine district'.

Stadium

File:Parkstadlimburg-stadion.jpg
Parkstad Limburg Stadion

This file may be deleted after 2006-12-04.
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Since the establishment of the club, Roda JC played in "Sportpark Kaalheide" with a capacity of 21,500 people. The current stadium is called Parkstad Limburg Stadion and has a capacity of nearly 20,000 seats. It was opened on August 15,2000 with a match against Real Zaragoza.

Achievements

  • Eredivisie
    • Winners: 1955/1956 Rapid JC
    • Runners-Up: 1958/1959 Rapid JC
    • Runners-Up: 1994/1995 Roda JC
  • Dutch Cup
    • Winners: 1997, 2000 Roda JC
    • Runners-Up: 1976, 1988, 1992 Roda JC


Current squad 2006/2007

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Serbia SRB Vladan Kujovic
2 DF Netherlands NED Ger Senden
3 MF Germany GER Alexander Voigt
4 DF Netherlands NED Jean Paul Saeijs
5 FW Canada CAN Marcel De Jong
6 DF Norway NOR Pa Modou Kah
7 FW The Gambia GAM Edrissa Sonko
8 MF Netherlands NED Marcel Meeuwis
9 FW Brazil BRA Cristiano Dos Santos Rodriques
10 FW Morocco MAR Adil Ramzi
11 MF Estonia EST Andres Oper
No. Pos. Nation Player
14 MF Belgium BEL Kevin Van Dessel
16 FW Belgium BEL Jamaïque Vandamme
17 DF Belgium BEL Vincent Lachambre
18 MF Netherlands NED Elbekay Bouchiba
19 FW Ivory Coast CIV Sekou Cissé
21 DF Netherlands NED Humphrey Rudge
22 GK Belgium BEL Bram Castro
25 DF Belgium BEL Ken Leemans
26 DF Belgium BEL Davy De Fauw
27 DF Hungary HUN Boldizsár Bodor
-- FW Belgium BEL Dieter Van Tornhout

Hall of Fame