Harman Patil (Editor)

Eredivisie

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Country
  
Netherlands

Relegation to
  
Eerste Divisie

Current champion
  
PSV Eindhoven

Confederation
  
UEFA

Level on pyramid
  
1

Number of teams
  
18

Established
  
1956

Levels on pyramid
  
1


Founded
  
1956; 61 years ago (1956)

International cup(s)
  
UEFA Champions League UEFA Europa League

Current champions
  
PSV (23rd title) (2015–16)

Domestic cups
  
KNVB Cup, Johan Cruyff Shield

Teams
  
AFC Ajax, Feyenoord, PSV Eindhoven, AZ Alkmaar, FC Twente

Profiles

Fifa 17 best talents to sign from eredivisie dutch league


The Eredivisie ( [ˈeːrədiˌvizi]; "Honorary Division") is the highest echelon of professional football in the Netherlands. The league was founded in 1956, two years after the start of professional football in the Netherlands. At the end of the 2015–2016 season it was ranked the 13th best league in Europe by UEFA.

Contents

The top division consists of 18 clubs. Each club meets every other club twice during the season, once at home and once away. At the end of each season, the club at the bottom is automatically relegated to the second level of the Dutch league system, the Eerste Divisie (First Division). At the same time, the champion of the Eerste Divisie will be automatically promoted to the Eredivisie. The next two clubs from the bottom of the Eredivisie go to separate promotion/relegation play-offs. The play-offs are played in two groups. Each group has one Eredivisie club and three high-placed clubs from the Eerste Divisie. In both promotion/relegation play-off groups, each club plays a home-and-away series with the other clubs. The winner of each play-off group plays in the following season's Eredivisie, with the other teams going to the Eerste Divisie.

The winner of the Eredivisie claims the Dutch national championship. AFC Ajax has won most titles, 24 (33 national titles). PSV Eindhoven are next with 18 (23), and Feyenoord follow with 9 (14). Since 1965, these three clubs have won all except for three titles (the 1981 and 2009 titles went to AZ and FC Twente won the 2010 title). Ajax, PSV and Feynoord are known as the "Big Three" of Dutch football. They are the only ones in their current forms to have appeared in every edition of the Eredivisie since its formation. A fourth club, FC Utrecht, is the product of a 1970 merger between three of that city's clubs, one of which, VV DOS, had also never been relegated out of the Eredivisie.

From 1990 to 1999, the official name of the league was PTT Telecompetitie (after the sponsor, PTT Telecom), which was changed to KPN Telecompetitie (because PTT Telecom changed its name to KPN Telecom in 1999) and to KPN Eredivisie in 2000. From 2002 to 2005, the league was called the Holland Casino Eredivisie. Since the 2005–06 season, the league has been sponsored by the Sponsorloterij (lottery), but for legal reasons its name could not be attached to the league (the Dutch government was against the name, because the Eredivisie would, after Holland Casino's sponsorship, yet again be sponsored by a company providing games of chance). On 8 August 2012 it was made public that the American tycoon Rupert Murdoch had secured the rights to the Eredivisie for 12 years at the expense of 1 billion euros, beginning in the 2013/2014 season. Within this deal the five largest Eredivisie clubs should receive 5 million euros per year for the duration of the contract.

Top 5 premier league loan players in the eredivisie goals reports


History

From the foundation of the Dutch football championship until 1954, the title was decided through play-offs by a handful of clubs who had previously won their regional league. The competition was purely an amateur one; the Royal Dutch Football Association (KNVB) rejected any form of payment and suspended players who were caught receiving salary or transfer fees. The call for professional football grew in the early fifties after many national team members left to play abroad in search for financial benefits. The KNVB would usually suspend these players, preventing them to appear for the Dutch national team. After the North Sea flood of 1953, the Dutch players abroad (mainly playing in the French league) organised a charity match against the French national team in Paris. The match was boycotted by the KNVB, but after the assembled Dutch players defeated the French (2–1), the Dutch public witnessed the heights that could be achieved through professional football. To serve the growing interest, a dissident professional football association (the NBVB) and league were founded for the 1954–55 season. On 3 July 1954, the KNVB met with a group of concerned amateur club chairmen, who feared the best players would join the professional teams. The meeting, dubbed the slaapkamerconferentie ('bedroom conference'), led to the Association reluctantly accepting semi-professionalism.

Meanwhile, both the KNVB and the NBVB started their separate competition. The first professional football match was contested between Alkmaar and Venlo. The leagues went on for eleven rounds, before a merger was negotiated between the two federations in November. Both leagues were cancelled and a new, combined competition emerged immediately. De Graafschap, Amsterdam, Alkmaar and Fortuna '54 from the NBVB were accepted to the new league. Other clubs merged, which led to new names like Rapid J.C., Holland Sport and Roda Sport. The first (semi-)professional league was won by Willem II. For the 1956–57 season, the KNVB abandoned the regional league system. The Eredivisie was founded, in which the eighteen best clubs nationwide directly played for the league title without play-offs. The inaugural members of the Eredivisie in 1956 were Ajax, BVC, BVV, DOS, EVV, Elinkwijk, SC Enschede, Feijenoord, Fortuna '54, GVAV, MVV, NAC, NOAD, PSV, Rapid J.C., Sparta, VVV '03 and Willem II. Ajax was the first team to claim the title that season.

Current teams (2016–17)

a Founding member of the Eredivisie
b Never been relegated from the Eredivisie

National champions

  • As Rapid JC
  • Attendance

    Since the beginning of the league, there have been three clubs with an attendance much higher than the others: Ajax, PSV and Feyenoord. Clubs like Heerenveen, FC Twente and FC Groningen also have fairly large fanbases. The regular season average league attendance was just over 7,000 in 1990, but this figure has risen sharply over the years thanks to the opening of new stadiums and the expansion of existing ones nationwide. Average attendance for the 2015–16 season was 18,467, with AFC Ajax having the largest (48,653) and Excelsior having the smallest (3,394). Ajax' figures however differ from those provided by the Amsterdam ArenA since the club counts all tickets sold instead of the number of people going through the turnstiles.

    All-time ranking (since 1956)

    Last updated following the 2015–16 season
  • The clubs highlighted in green play in the Eredivisie in the current season
  • The clubs highlighted in red play in the Eerste Divisie in the current season
  • The clubs highlighted in grey no longer exist because they have been disestablished or have been merged into another club
  • Remaining clubs play in lower competitions
  • Eredivisie teams and major UEFA and FIFA competitions

    The following sixteen international tournaments were won by Eredivisie teams:

  • 1970 European Cup Final – Feyenoord
  • 1970 Intercontinental Cup – Feyenoord
  • 1971 European Cup Final – AFC Ajax
  • 1972 European Cup Final – AFC Ajax
  • 1972 Intercontinental Cup – AFC Ajax
  • 1973 European Cup Final – AFC Ajax
  • 1973 European Super Cup – AFC Ajax
  • 1974 UEFA Cup Final – Feyenoord
  • 1978 UEFA Cup Final – PSV Eindhoven
  • 1987 European Cup Winners' Cup Final – AFC Ajax
  • 1988 European Cup Final – PSV Eindhoven
  • 1992 UEFA Cup Final – AFC Ajax
  • 1995 UEFA Champions League Final – AFC Ajax
  • 1995 European Super Cup – AFC Ajax
  • 1995 Intercontinental Cup – AFC Ajax
  • 2002 UEFA Cup Final – Feyenoord
  • The European Super Cup was founded by a Dutch reporter named Anton Witkamp and Ajax's 1973 win was the first time the tournament was contested officially.

    The following 24 European finals took place at Dutch venues, or are scheduled to take place at them:

  • 1962 European Cup Final, Olympic Stadium (Amsterdam) – (Attendance: 65,000)
  • 1963 European Cup Winners' Cup Final, De Kuip – (Attendance: 49,000)
  • 1968 European Cup Winners' Cup Final, De Kuip – (Attendance: 53,000)
  • 1972 European Cup Final, De Kuip – (Attendance: 67,000)
  • 1973 European Super Cup, Olympic Stadium (Amsterdam) – second leg (Attendance: 25,000)
  • 1968 European Cup Winners' Cup Final, De Kuip – (Attendance: 4,000)
  • 1974 UEFA Cup Final, De Kuip – second leg (Attendance: 59,317)
  • 1975 UEFA Cup Final, Diekman Stadion – second leg (Attendance: 21,767)
  • 1977 European Cup Winners' Cup Final, Olympic Stadium (Amsterdam) – (Attendance: 66,000)
  • 1978 UEFA Cup Final, Philips Stadion – second leg (Attendance: 27,000)
  • 1981 UEFA Cup Final, Olympic Stadium (Amsterdam) – second leg (Attendance: 28,500)
  • 1982 European Cup Final, De Kuip – (Attendance: 46,000)
  • 1985 European Cup Winners' Cup Final, De Kuip – (Attendance: 38,500)
  • 1987 European Super Cup, De Meer Stadium – first leg (Attendance: 27,000)
  • 1988 European Super Cup, Philips Stadion – second leg (Attendance: 17,100)
  • 1991 European Cup Winners' Cup Final, De Kuip – (Attendance: 43,500)
  • 1992 UEFA Cup Final, Olympic Stadium (Amsterdam) – second leg (Attendance: 42,000)
  • 1995 European Super Cup, Olympic Stadium (Amsterdam) – second leg (Attendance: 23,000)
  • 1997 European Cup Winners' Cup Final, De Kuip – (Attendance: 52,000)
  • 1998 UEFA Champions League Final, Amsterdam ArenA – (Attendance: 48,500)
  • UEFA Euro 2000 Final, De Kuip – (Attendance: 50,000)
  • 2002 UEFA Cup Final, De Kuip – (Attendance: 45,611)
  • 2006 UEFA Cup Final, Philips Stadion – (Attendance: 33,100)
  • 2013 UEFA Europa League Final, Amsterdam Arena
  • References

    Eredivisie Wikipedia