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SV Spakenburg

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SV Spakenburg
Full nameSportvereniging Spakenburg
NicknameDe Blauwen ("The Blues")
Founded15 August 1931; 94 years ago (1931-08-15)
GroundSportpark De Westmaat, Bunschoten
Capacity8,500
ChairmanMarc Schoonebeek
ManagerChris de Graaf
LeagueTweede Divisie
2024–25Tweede Divisie, 5th of 18
Websitespakenburg.com

Sportvereniging Spakenburg is a football club based in Bunschoten-Spakenburg, Netherlands, that competes in the Tweede Divisie, the third tier of the Dutch football league system. The club was founded on 15 August 1931, and is regarded as one of the most successful amateur clubs in the Netherlands, having won three championships of the top tier in amateur football.[1][2] In the 2022–23 season, the club reached the semi-finals of the KNVB Cup by eliminating two Eredivisie clubs.

Spakenburg plays its home matches at Sportpark De Westmaat. Their colours are blue and white stripes. The club has a long-standing rivalry with Bunschoten-Spakenburg neighbours IJsselmeervogels.[3]

History

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Foundation and early years (1931–1947)

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On Saturday, 15 August 1931, a group of enthusiasts founded the football club, initially named Stormvogels. At that time, several local football clubs were also established, such as Strandvogels, Noordster, and Spakenburgse Boys. However, there was no formal competition structure as we know it today, and the clubs mainly engaged in friendly matches and tournaments.[4]

After a few years, the club changed its name to Windvogels. In 1935 the club participated in an organised league for the first time, joining the third division of the Utrecht Provincial Football Association (UPVB). Remarkably, in its inaugural year in the league, the team achieved the title of undefeated champions.[4]

As the club continued to grow rapidly, reaching a membership of 200, it underwent another name change. In 1947, the club merged with local gymnastics team Lycurgus, leading to the renaming of the club to Sport Vereniging Spakenburg. This was also the year when SV Spakenburg achieved promotion to the highest possible amateur division for a Saturday club.[4]

Located in the heart of the Dutch Bible Belt of Reformed Protestantism,[5] playing football on Sundays was forbidden due to religious beliefs.[6] As a result, both SV Spakenburg and their town rivals IJsselmeervogels explicitly stated in its statutes that it does not participate in Sunday football. Consequently, the clubs have historically played matches exclusively on Saturdays.[3] To ensure the continuation of this tradition, SV Spakenburg signed a covenant with the Royal Dutch Football Association (KNVB) and the Association for Saturday Football (BZV).[7]

Saturday titles and national recognition (1947–1971)

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Spakenburg emerged as a leading Saturday amateur club after the Second World War, winning section titles in 1947, 1950 and 1952 and the Saturday amateur championship in 1947, 1950, 1952 and 1963.[8] In August 1949, the club twice faced a Soestdijk Palace XI during anniversary festivities; Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard attended both fixtures, and captain Jan van der Goot received a medal from the Prince after a 4–2 win in Spakenburg.[4]

SV Spakenburg celebrates the 1985 championship.

Hoofdklasse contenders (1971–2010)

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With the KNVB's introduction of a national Eerste Klasse in 1971–72, Spakenburg qualified for the top tier under coach Joop van Basten and, after consolidation, won the Eerste Klasse B in 1973–74. The club's most successful season of the period came in 1984–85: Spakenburg regained the section title, won a play-off for the Saturday championship against Kozakken Boys and GVVV, captured the West I district cup, and were declared overall Dutch amateur champions after the deciding home match against Sunday champions DHC was abandoned shortly after Joop van de Groep's late penalty put Spakenburg 1–0 ahead (the first leg in Delft ended 2–2).[9]

Further section titles followed in the 1986–87 and 1999–2000 seasons, the latter under coach Tijs Schipper, with Spakenburg finishing runners-up in the Saturday championship to Katwijk.[8] In the 2007–08 season, Spakenburg won the Hoofdklasse B on the final day before finishing second in the subsequent play-off for the Saturday title behind Lisse.

The club remained a regular contender at Hoofdklasse level through 2010, ahead of the KNVB's reorganisation that created the national Topklasse (from 2010–11), which replaced the Hoofdklasse as the highest amateur division.[4]

Success in the Topklasse (2010–2016)

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Spakenburg joined the newly created Topklasse in the 2010–11 season. The club won the Saturday section of that division in 2011–12 under head coach André Paus, finishing ahead of Rijnsburgse Boys.[4][10]

After avoiding relegation in the 2012–13 season, Spakenburg won the Saturday section again in the following season. Following an early-season managerial change from Johan de Kock to assistant Jochem Twisker, the team finished level on points with GVVV and won a title decider 2–1 at FC Volendam's Kras Stadion following a decisive goal by Kees Tol.[4][11] Spakenburg then defeated Sunday champions AFC 6–4 on aggregate (4–1 home win, 2–3 away loss) to claim the overall Dutch amateur championship.[8][12][13]

Spakenburg remained at Topklasse level through the 2015–16 season, after which the Royal Dutch Football Association (KNVB) introduced the national Tweede Divisie and rebranded the Topklasse as the Derde Divisie.[4][14][15]

Tweede Divisie: cup semi-final, title and aftermath (2019–present)

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Spakenburg's squad and fans celebrate the 4-1 victory against Utrecht

In the 2022–23 season, Spakenburg advanced significantly in the KNVB Cup competition. On 28 February 2023, Spakenburg defeated Eredivisie side Utrecht 4–1 away in the quarter-finals, becoming the third amateur team ever to qualify for the semi-finals of the tournament.[16]

Earlier, on 12 January 2023, Spakenburg had defeated another Eredivisie club, Groningen, 3–2 away at the Euroborg.[17]

In the semi-finals of the KNVB Cup, PSV visited De Westmaat and narrowly won 2–1. Dwayne Green scored for Spakenburg, becoming the first amateur player to score a goal in the semi-finals of the KNVB Cup.[18]

Spakenburg celebrates the 2023–24 Tweede Divisie title.

Spakenburg enjoyed a remarkable 2023–24 season. Already by the winter break, it was clear that SV Spakenburg would be crowned champions. The team's coaching duo, Chris de Graaf and Jorg Hartog, who were both born and raised in Spakenburg and former players of the club, played a key role in their success. On 11 May 2024, SV Spakenburg won the championship with a 3–2 away victory over GVVV.[19]

The team's season saw them accumulate 82 points, a record for the Tweede Divisie.[20] This was achieved through a 19-match unbeaten streak (16 wins and 3 draws).[21] Despite a challenge from De Treffers early on, SV Spakenburg ultimately emerged victorious. The team also set another new record on 6 April 2024 with an 8–0 win over Noordwijk, the biggest league victory in club history and Tweede Divisie history.[22]

SV Spakenburg's Ahmed El Azzouti's became top goalscorer in the Tweede Divisie with 25 goals, while Chris de Graaf was named the best amateur coach of the year for the West 1 division.[23][24]

KNVB Cup

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Spakenburg have periodically eliminated professional opposition in the KNVB Cup, most notably in 2022–23 when they won away at FC Groningen and FC Utrecht to become only the third amateur side to reach the semi-finals; they narrowly lost 2–1 to PSV at De Westmaat.[17][16][18]

Selected matches v professional clubs

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Spakenburg v professional opponents in the KNVB Cup (selected)
Date Round Home/away Opponent Score Notes
5 October 1974 A PEC Zwolle 0–2
8 October 1983 H FC Groningen 1–4
20 October 1984 H Cambuur 1–1 Replay system
31 October 1984 Replay A Cambuur 1–3
27 November 1985 H ADO Den Haag 1–1 Replay system
8 February 1986 Replay A ADO Den Haag 0–2
7 October 1987 H MVV 0–1 After extra time
1 October 1988 H Dordrecht 3–2
18 November 1988 H AZ 1–4
2 September 1989 H Heracles Almelo 2–0
4 October 1989 H De Graafschap 3–2
13 December 1989 N Feyenoord 0–4 Played at De Kuip
12 October 1991 A TOP Oss 1–2
18 August 1999 Group A Utrecht 1–6
23 September 1999 Group A NEC 0–3
11 August 2000 Group H Volendam 1–4
30 August 2000 Group H Cambuur 2–8
11 August 2001 Group H NEC 0–0
19 September 2001 H Veendam 1–2
10 August 2002 Group H PEC Zwolle 0–3
9 August 2003 H Volendam 0–2
7 August 2004 H Vitesse 0–1
25 September 2007 H Roda JC 0–2
24 September 2008 H Telstar 0–1
22 September 2009 H MVV 3–1
28 October 2009 A AZ 2–2 Lost 2–5 on pens
21 September 2010 H RBC Roosendaal 0–0 Won on pens
10 November 2010 A PSV 0–3
23 September 2014 H NAC Breda 3–4
21 September 2016 H Fortuna Sittard 2–1
31 October 2018 A Willem II 0–5
22 January 2020 A Ajax 0–7
26 October 2021 H Dordrecht 3–0
14 December 2021 A Telstar 3–3 Lost 3–5 on pens
12 January 2023 A Groningen 3–2
28 February 2023 Quarter-final A Utrecht 4–1
4 April 2023 Semi-final H PSV 1–2
31 October 2023 H Helmond Sport 3–1
19 December 2023 H Excelsior 2–2 Lost 2–3 on pens

Key: H = home; A = away; N = neutral; "Group" = League Cup group phase; "Replay" = second match under former replay rules; "pens" = penalty shoot-out.

Current squad

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As of 21 October 2025

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  NED Menno Heus
2 DF  NED Nick Verhagen
3 DF  NED Mitch Apau
4 DF  NED Cody Claver
5 DF  BRB Dwayne Green
6 MF  NED Giovanni da Fonseca
7 FW  NED Ahmed el Azzouti
8 MF  NED Sam van Huffel
9 FW  NED Floris van der Linden
10 MF  NED Des Kunst
11 FW  NED Ravelino Junte
13 GK  NED Indy Groothuizen
13 GK  NED Joey Houweling
14 MF  NED Koen Wesdorp
No. Pos. Nation Player
15 DF  NED Hero van Lopik
16 FW  NED Olaf Kok
17 MF  NED Kevin van Dieren
18 FW  NED Ferebory Kourouma
19 DF  NED Delano Vos
20 MF  NED Floris Quaedvlieg
21 FW  NED Maurits Prins
22 FW  NED Killian van Mil
23 GK  NED Kyan van Dorp
25 DF  NED Jay den Haan
29 MF  NED Youri Koelewijn
44 DF  NED Jens Guiting
50 FW  BOE Jeffry Puriel
81 DF  NED Tim Linthorst

IJsselmeervogels–Spakenburg rivalry

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IJsselmeervogels and SV Spakenburg have competed at the same level for much of their histories. The derby is widely regarded as one of the most intense fixtures in Dutch amateur football, often framed locally as a meeting between IJsselmeervogels' "Reds" — traditionally associated with "the people and the fishermen" — and Spakenburg's "Blues", linked to "farmers and clerks".[25]

The rivalry escalated in 1987 when a homemade explosive device, thrown from the crowd, injured an assistant referee during the penultimate league match between the sides; in the years that followed, measures were taken to separate the clubs on matchdays.[25] Tensions resurfaced in 1999 when Spakenburg signed Gérard van der Nooij and Pascal de Bruijn from IJsselmeervogels' title-winning team, prompting a municipal ban on the derby for several seasons before fixtures resumed in 2002.[25] The match continues to attract large crowds and regular national and regional media coverage.[25]

League derbies since the national Eerste Klasse (1971–)

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The tables below list league meetings between Spakenburg and IJsselmeervogels since the KNVB introduced the national Eerste Klasse in 1971–72. Dates are in DMY format. Only league fixtures are included.

IJsselmeervogels v Spakenburg
Season Date Home team Score Away team
1972–73 2 September 1972 IJsselmeervogels 2–1 Spakenburg
1982–83 8 January 1983 IJsselmeervogels 1–1 Spakenburg
1985–86 16 November 1985 IJsselmeervogels 1–1 Spakenburg
1986–87 1 November 1986 IJsselmeervogels 0–0 Spakenburg
1989–90 24 February 1990 IJsselmeervogels 2–4 Spakenburg
1992–93 12 December 1992 IJsselmeervogels 1–0 Spakenburg
1993–94 19 March 1994 IJsselmeervogels 3–1 Spakenburg
1994–95 5 November 1994 IJsselmeervogels 0–0 Spakenburg
2002–03 28 September 2002 IJsselmeervogels 1–2 Spakenburg
2003–04 25 October 2003 IJsselmeervogels 0–2 Spakenburg
2004–05 12 March 2005 IJsselmeervogels 1–0 Spakenburg
2005–06 1 April 2006 IJsselmeervogels 0–0 Spakenburg
2006–07 21 April 2007 IJsselmeervogels 2–1 Spakenburg
2007–08 17 November 2007 IJsselmeervogels 1–5 Spakenburg
2008–09 9 May 2009 IJsselmeervogels 1–1 Spakenburg
2009–10 7 November 2009 IJsselmeervogels 0–2 Spakenburg
2010–11 16 April 2011 IJsselmeervogels 3–2 Spakenburg
2011–12 8 October 2011 IJsselmeervogels 2–2 Spakenburg
2012–13 9 March 2013 IJsselmeervogels 1–0 Spakenburg
IJsselmeervogels wins Draws Spakenburg wins
7 7 5
Spakenburg v IJsselmeervogels
Season Date Home team Score Away team
1972–73 2 December 1972 Spakenburg 2–1 IJsselmeervogels
1982–83 4 April 1983 Spakenburg 1–1 IJsselmeervogels
1985–86 17 May 1986 Spakenburg 2–2 IJsselmeervogels
1986–87 9 May 1987 Spakenburg 1–0 IJsselmeervogels
1989–90 9 September 1989 Spakenburg 0–0 IJsselmeervogels
1992–93 20 March 1993 Spakenburg 2–1 IJsselmeervogels
1993–94 25 September 1993 Spakenburg 1–0 IJsselmeervogels
1994–95 22 April 1995 Spakenburg 1–1 IJsselmeervogels
2002–03 12 April 2003 Spakenburg 3–0 IJsselmeervogels
2003–04 13 March 2004 Spakenburg 4–1 IJsselmeervogels
2004–05 23 October 2004 Spakenburg 2–3 IJsselmeervogels
2005–06 5 November 2005 Spakenburg 0–2 IJsselmeervogels
2006–07 11 November 2006 Spakenburg 1–2 IJsselmeervogels
2007–08 26 April 2008 Spakenburg 7–1 IJsselmeervogels
2008–09 13 December 2008 Spakenburg 1–3 IJsselmeervogels
2009–10 10 April 2010 Spakenburg 2–3 IJsselmeervogels
2010–11 6 November 2010 Spakenburg 2–3 IJsselmeervogels
2011–12 24 March 2012 Spakenburg 2–1 IJsselmeervogels
2012–13 22 September 2012 Spakenburg 2–1 IJsselmeervogels
Spakenburg wins Draws IJsselmeervogels wins
9 4 6

References

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  1. ^ "Spakenburg zet de toon voor amateurclubs: "Dit gaat vaker gebeuren"". VoetbalPrimeur.nl (in Dutch). 4 April 2024. Archived from the original on 3 April 2023. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  2. ^ "SV Spakenburg gekroond tot Koning van de Amateurs". TOTO KNVB Beker (in Dutch). 2 March 2023. Archived from the original on 2 October 2023. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  3. ^ a b Barneveld, Jeroen van (4 April 2023). "Vis, brood en voetbal: welkom in het dorp van bekersensatie Spakenburg". NU.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h "Historie". SV Spakenburg (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 26 May 2024. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  5. ^ Bouma, Kaya (1 January 2021). "Waarom is juist Bunschoten-Spakenburg zo'n coronahaard? 'Wat er gebeurt, gebeurt er. We gaan uiteindelijk allemaal het graf in'". de Volkskrant (in Dutch). Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  6. ^ "Waarom speelt amateurclub en bekersensatie Spakenburg geen voetbal op zondag?". VoetbalNieuws.nl (in Dutch). 3 April 2023. Archived from the original on 5 June 2024. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  7. ^ "Statuten". SV Spakenburg (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 31 May 2023. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  8. ^ a b c "Erelijst". SV Spakenburg (in Dutch). Retrieved 20 October 2025.
  9. ^ "de Stem, 20 juni 1985 (uitslag DHC–Spakenburg 2–2)". Krantenbank Zeeland (in Dutch). 20 June 1985. Retrieved 20 October 2025.
  10. ^ "Spakenburg kampioen zaterdag topklasse" [Spakenburg win Saturday Topklasse title]. RTV Utrecht (in Dutch). 13 May 2012. Archived from the original on 20 October 2025. Retrieved 20 October 2025.
  11. ^ "Spakenburg verslaat GVVV en wint Topklasse Zaterdag" [Spakenburg beat GVVV to claim Saturday Topklasse title]. Voetbal International (in Dutch). 24 May 2014. Archived from the original on 20 October 2025. Retrieved 20 October 2025.
  12. ^ "Spakenburg grijpt titel bij amateurs" [Spakenburg clinch amateur title]. RTL.nl (in Dutch). 7 June 2014. Archived from the original on 20 October 2025. Retrieved 20 October 2025.
  13. ^ "Titel voor Spakenburg ondanks nederlaag bij AFC" [Spakenburg win title despite defeat to AFC]. Voetbal International (in Dutch). 7 June 2014. Archived from the original on 13 August 2023. Retrieved 20 October 2025.
  14. ^ "Historie". SV Spakenburg (in Dutch). Retrieved 20 October 2025.
  15. ^ "Topklasse gaat derde divisie heten" [Topklasse to be renamed Derde Divisie]. NOS (in Dutch). 4 March 2016. Archived from the original on 20 October 2025. Retrieved 20 October 2025.
  16. ^ a b "Megastunt Spakenburg: amateurclub halvefinalist KNVB-beker na winst bij Utrecht". NOS (in Dutch). 28 February 2023. Archived from the original on 3 April 2023. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  17. ^ a b "Spakenburg deelt Groningen nieuwe dreun uit met megastunt". Voetbal International (in Dutch). 12 January 2023. Archived from the original on 9 July 2023. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  18. ^ a b "PSV beëindigt bekersprookje amateurs Spakenburg en gaat naar finale KNVB-beker". NOS (in Dutch). 4 April 2023. Archived from the original on 4 May 2023. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  19. ^ "Spakenburg kampioen na nederlaag De Treffers". RTV Utrecht (in Dutch). 11 May 2024. Archived from the original on 26 May 2024. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
  20. ^ "Op Spakenburg staat dit seizoen geen maat". De Bunschoter (in Dutch). 25 May 2024. Archived from the original on 26 May 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
  21. ^ Leeuwen, Thera van (9 March 2024). "Ongeslagen reeks Spakenburg ten einde". EEMLAND1 (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 4 June 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
  22. ^ "Koploper Spakenburg geeft Noordwijk een enorm pak slaag (8-0)". Bollenstreek Omroep (in Dutch). 6 April 2024. Archived from the original on 6 April 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
  23. ^ "De Namen & Rugnummers topscorer: El Azzouti zegeviert met 25 treffers". RTV Utrecht (in Dutch). 27 May 2024. Archived from the original on 28 May 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
  24. ^ Ineveld, Harold van (10 May 2024). "Eervolle vermelding Sander Middelbeek, Chris de Graaf wint VVON Award". Het Amsterdamsche Voetbal (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 22 May 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
  25. ^ a b c d Klippus, Hans; Lex Stofkooper (2008). De derby: de waarheid achter de Spakenburgse rood-blauwe twisten (in Dutch). Baarn: Tirion Sport. ISBN 978-90-439-1058-3.
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