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Lloyd Doesburg

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Full name
  
Lloyd Doesburg

Role
  
Football player

Name
  
Lloyd Doesburg


Years
  
Team

Playing position
  
Goalkeeper

Position
  
Goalkeeper

Lloyd Doesburg Lloyd Doesburg Ajacied


Date of birth
  
(1960-04-29)April 29, 1960

Date of death
  
June 7, 1989(1989-06-07) (aged 29)

Place of death
  
Zanderij Airport, Paramaribo, Suriname

Died
  
June 7, 1989, Johan Adolf Pengel International Airport, Suriname

Lloyd Doesburg (April 29, 1960 – June 7, 1989 in Paramaribo) was a Dutch football goalkeeper. During his career he served Elinkwijk, Vitesse, Excelsior Rotterdam and Ajax. He died at the age of 29, when on June 7, 1989 he was killed in the Surinam Airways Flight PY764 air crash in Paramaribo.

Contents

Club career

Doesburg lived in Lelystad and played his first professional football matches for Elinkwijk where he played until 1981. After this he was transferred to Vitesse where he played a total of five seasons before joining Excelsior. From August 1987 he was purchased by Ajax to become their second goalkeeper behind Stanley Menzo after Fred Grim left the club. In total he would play five matches in the first team of Ajax.

Death

He was invited by Sonny Hasnoe, the founder of the Colourful 11 to be part of the team and travel to Suriname to play in the "Boxel Kleurrijk Tournament" with three Surinamese teams. Team mates Stanley Menzo and Henny Meijer were told to stay with their club, but ignored these demands and went as well, but both took an earlier flight. The Surinam Airways Flight PY764 crashed during approach to Paramaribo-Zanderij International Airport, killing 176 of the 187 on board, including Doesburg, making it the worst ever aviation disaster in Suriname's history. Among the dead were a total of 15 members of the Colourful 11, only three of them survived.

Doesburg's funeral was on June 22, 1989 and the complete Ajax squad of these days were present, including Menzo, Meijer, Jan Wouters, Aron Winter, Danny Blind, Bryan Roy, Dennis Bergkamp, Frank de Boer and Ronald de Boer who carried the coffin.

References

Lloyd Doesburg Wikipedia