SC Telstar

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Sportclub Telstar (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈspɔrtklʏp ˈtɛlstɑr]) is a Dutch professional association football club based in the town of Velsen-Zuid, North Holland. The team competes in the Eerste Divisie, the second tier of the Dutch football league system. The club was founded on 17 July 1963, as a merger between the professional departments of rivals VSV and Stormvogels. The new club was named Telstar, after the then recently launched communications satellite.

Telstar
Full nameSportclub Telstar
Nickname(s)De Witte Leeuwen (The White Lions)
Founded17 July 1963; 60 years ago (1963-07-17)
Ground711 Stadion, Velsen
Capacity5,200
Head coachAnthony Correia
LeagueEerste Divisie
2023–24Eerste Divisie, 17th of 20
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Telstar plays its home games at the Sportpark Schoonenberg, renamed 711 Stadion, for sponsorship reasons. Since its founding in 1963, the football club has used The Tornados' song "Telstar" as the entrance tune for home games.

History

When professional football was introduced in the Netherlands, both IJVV Stormvogels and neighbouring club VSV played in the professional leagues. VSV won the KNVB Cup in 1938. Because of financial problems at both clubs, their professional teams were merged on 17 July 1963. The new club was named Telstar, after the Telstar communication satellite launched that year. Stormvogels and VSV returned to amateur football. In 2001, Telstar and Stormvogels merged again, this time forming Stormvogels Telstar. This merger was disbanded on 1 July 2008, with the professional branch continuing as Telstar.

Telstar has been a mid-table team in the Eerste Divisie, the second tier of Dutch football, in recent years. They have occasionally challenged for promotion to the Eredivisie, but have not been successful in achieving this goal.

In the 2017–18 season, Telstar finished in sixth place in the league table, their highest finish since the 1993–94 campaign, where they finished fifth.[1][2] The club also made it to the quarter-finals of the KNVB Cup, where they were eliminated by Feyenoord. The following season, Telstar finished in 14th place in the league table, but once again made a strong showing in the KNVB Cup. The club advanced to the round of 16, where they were beaten 4–3 by Ajax in a thrilling match.[3]

In the 2019–20 season, Telstar finished in tenth place in the league table. The season was cut short due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with several matches still to be played.[4] The following season saw Telstar finishing in 13th place in the league table.

Stadium

Its home stadium is the 3,625 seater BUKO Stadion. The stadium was opened in 1948 and has undergone several renovations over the years. It is located in Velsen-Zuid, near the city of Haarlem, and is easily accessible by car and public transport.[5]

Honours

Club names

  • 1963–2001: Telstar
  • 2001–2008: Stormvogels Telstar
  • 2008–present: Telstar

Results

Below is a table with Telstar's domestic results since 1963.

Players

First-team squad

As of 5 July 2024[6]

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

No.Pos. NationPlayer
20GK  NEDJoey Houweling
21MF  NEDAlae-Eddine Bouyaghlafen
23DF  NEDLeonardo Rocha de Almeida
25DF  NEDDanny Bakker
28GK  NEDLukas van Ingen
39FW  SURDanzell Gravenberch
DF  NEDAdil Lechkar
DF  NEDGuus Offerhaus
DF  CPVJorginho Soares
MF  NEDTyrone Owusu
MF  NEDRemi van Ekeris
FW  NEDSoufiane Hetli

Retired numbers

022: Luciano van den Berg, defender (2004–2005)—posthumous honour.

Coaching staff

PositionStaff
Head coach Ulrich Landvreugd[7]
Assistant coach Anthony Correia[8]
Goalkeeping coach Colin van der Meijden[9]
First-team doctor Ron Peters[10]
First-team physio Rens Teeuwen[11]
Paul de Vlugt[12]
Equipmant manager Dirk van der Lugt[13]
Performance manager Kevin Dinkelberg[14]

Historic facts

All-time leading goalscorers

Pos.NameBirthNationalityGoals
1Glynor Plet30 January 1987 90
2Sander Oostrom14 July 1967 87
3Melvin Holwijn2 January 1980 60
4Ronald Hoop4 April 1967 52
5Cees van Kooten20 August 1948 45
6Rini van Roon24 January 1961 43
7Co Stout7 September 1948 41
Ron de Roode20 March 1965 41
9Dick Bond27 December 1943 38
10Jan Bruin30 September 1969 37

Most appearances

Pos.NameBirthNationalityAppearances
1Fred Bischot23 July 1948 372
2Frans van Essen19 February 1948 360
3Anthony Correia2 May 1982 355
4Frank Korpershoek29 October 1984 343
5Paul van der Meeren6 July 1944 339
6Fred André31 May 1941 321
7Sander Oostrom14 July 1967 320
8Koos Kuut2 January 1958 310
9Richard van Heulen13 October 1981 294
10René Panhuis26 August 1964 282

Former managers

PeriodManagerNationality
1963–64Toon van den Ende
1964–65Jack Mansell
1965–66Oliver Gaspar
1966–69Piet de Visser
1969–74Jan Rab
1974–77Joop Castemiller
1977–78Mircea Petescu
1978–80Martin van Vianen
1980–83Joop Brand
1983–87Fred André
1987–88Cor van der Hart
1988–90Cees Glas
1990–93Niels Overweg
1993–95Simon Kistemaker
1995–97Cor Pot
1997–98Harry van den Ham
1998–99Henny Lee
1999–01Simon Kistemaker
2001–02Toon Beijer
2002–05Jan Poortvliet
2005–08Luc Nijholt
2008–10Edward Metgod
2010–2012Jan Poortvliet
2012–2014Marcel Keizer
2014–2017Michel Vonk
2017–2019Mike Snoei
2019–2022Andries Jonker
2022–Mike Snoei

References