Be Quick 1887

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Be Quick 1887
Be Quick 1887 logo.png
Full name Be Quick 1887
Nickname(s) Good-Old
Founded April 10, 1887
Ground Stadion Esserberg, Haren
Ground Capacity 12,000
Chairman Netherlands J.D. Osinga
Manager Netherlands Mischa Visser
League Hoofdklasse
2013–14 Topklasse Sunday, 14th (relegated)

Be Quick 1887 is a football club from Groningen, the Netherlands. The club was established in 1887, and is currently playing in the Sunday Hoofdklasse C. Be Quick 1887 won the 1919-20 Dutch national football title.

History

Be Quick 1887 was founded on 1887-04-10, by students of a local gymnasium. The club joined the football competition in 1895, and was placed in the Tweede Klasse Noord, then the highest tier of football in the northern districts of the country. Be Quick joined the newly established Eerste Klasse in 1916, and would remain in the league until the introduction of professional football in the Netherlands in 1954.

The heyday of Be Quick came between 1915 and 1926. The club won the title in the northern football competition in every season except for 1925. On 1920-06-06, Be Quick won the national football title, by defeating VOC of Rotterdam, champion of the western football league, 4-0. Of that team, goalkeeper Deck Ruijter Zylker was the only player who wouldn't make it to the Netherlands national football team.

When professional football was introduced in the Netherlands, in 1954, Be Quick joined the professional leagues. They were placed in the Tweede Divisie, where they won the 1959-60 title. Be Quick played in the Eerste Divisie for a number of seasons, but withdrew from the ranks of professional football after the 1963-64 season.

Upon returning to the amateur football structure, Be Quick were placed in the Tweede Klasse (now Eerste Klasse). The club were promoted to the Hoofdklasse in 1992, suffered relegation to the Eerste Klasse in 1995 and to the Tweede Klasse in 1997. After one season in the Tweede Klasse, the club returned to the Eerste Klasse, finishing the first season there in second place and winning the title in the second season, 1999-2000. The club was relegated back to the Eerste Klasse in 2002, but secured promotion a year later, and has played in the Hoofdklasse since. They were promoted to the Topklasse in 2013, but went relegated after one only season in the top Dutch amateur level.

Stadium

The successes between 1915 and 1926 allowed the club to buy a piece of land to the south of the city of Groningen. Stadion Esserberg was then built, designed by architect Evert van Linge, one of the players of the team that won the national title in 1920. The stadium had a capacity of 18,000 when it was built, and now is located in the territory of the municipality of Haren, just a mere four kilometers south of Groningen. Nowadays, it is host to the Eurovoetbal tournament.

Current squad

As of 1 February 2014

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

No. Position Player
Netherlands GK Kevin van der Enden
Netherlands GK Frank Harms
Netherlands GK Arno de Jong
Netherlands GK Hindrik Snijders
Netherlands DF Björn Adams
Netherlands DF Jelte van der Berg
Netherlands DF Sander van Dijken
Netherlands DF Ali Hussein Jaffar
Netherlands DF Joshua Ottens
Netherlands DF Jesse Renken
Netherlands DF Adams Sarkodie
Netherlands DF Frank Steemers
Netherlands DF Ferry Stollenga
No. Position Player
Netherlands MF Petrit Hoxhaj
Netherlands MF Thomas Mak
Netherlands MF Erik Nederhoed
Netherlands MF Pierre Semudenge-Mujene
Netherlands MF Aron Strengholt (captain)
Netherlands FW Kees Bekker
Netherlands FW Daan Driever
Netherlands FW Jorco van Hezel
Netherlands FW Kevin van der Kooi
Netherlands FW Rob van der Leij
Netherlands FW David Modderman
Netherlands FW Koen Olde Monnikhof
Netherlands FW Rik Spekken

Honours

1919-20
1959-60
  • Northern football competition: 18
1895-96, 1896-97, 1905-06, 1914-15, 1915-16, 1916-17, 1917-18, 1918-19, 1919-20, 1920-21, 1921-22, 1922-23, 1923-24, 1925-26, 1935-36, 1936-37, 1937-38, 1940-41
1991-92, 1999-2000

External links