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Tag: Netherlands

  • Israeli soccer fans ambushed in Amsterdam after Europa League game in Netherlands

    Israeli soccer fans ambushed in Amsterdam after Europa League game in Netherlands

    Israeli soccer fans were ambushed and brutally assaulted in Amsterdam overnight Thursday by a mob shouting “Free Palestine,” leading the Jewish state’s government to send planes to evacuate its citizens, officials said. 

    Hundreds of fans of the Maccabi Tel Aviv soccer club were targeted as they walked out of the stadium following a Europa League game against a Dutch team, AFC Ajax, the Israeli Embassy to the United States said.

    The embassy also shared footage of the attacks, including one assailant that screamed “Free Palestine” as a victim cowered in fear.

    Israeli soccer fans clash with Dutch youth neat Amsterdam Central station in the Netherlands on Nov. 8 2024. X/iAnnet via REUTERS

    “The mob who targeted these innocent Israelis has proudly shared their violent acts on social media,” the embassy stated.

    More disturbing video shows a victim surrounded by several people, including one that appears to be holding a Palestinian flag, as a preparator kicked him to the ground. A separate assault shows a victim lying on the ground as he is kicked repeatedly.

    A car also barreled into a victim, causing the man to flip over the hood of the vehicle, footage from the embassy shows.

    “Israeli soccer fans should be allowed to support their team without fear of physical danger,” the embassy stated. “The days of chasing Jews down European city streets should remain in the dark annals of history.”

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu directed two rescue planes to be flown to Amsterdam to assist Israeli citizens, his office said early Friday.

    Hundreds of fans of the Maccabi Tel Aviv soccer club were targeted as they walked out of the stadium following a Europa League game against a Dutch team, AFC Ajax. X/iAnnet via REUTERS
    Two Israel flags are on display in a sea of Maccabi fans during the UEFA Europa League match at the Johan-Cruijff stadium on Nov. 7, 2024. ANP/AFP via Getty Images

    Netanyahu also called on the Dutch government and authorities to take “vigorous and swift action against the rioters, and ensure the safety of our citizens.”

    “The harsh pictures of the assault on our citizens in Amsterdam will not be overlooked,” the prime minister’s office tweeted.

    Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar requested the Dutch government help Israelis reach the airport safely in a phone call with his Dutch counterpart Caspar Veldkamp Friday.

    Sa’ar said at least 10 citizens were injured, CNN reported.

    Ajax’s forward Christian Rasmussen fights for the ball against Maccabi Tel Aviv’s Israeli midfield Dor David Turgeman on Thursday. ANP/AFP via Getty Images

    “The targeted attacks against Jews and Israelis in Amsterdam tonight, are horrific and barbaric. The images of the violence toward Jewish people in Europe are a painful reminder of our history,” Israel Defense Forces international spokesperson Nadav Shoshani tweeted.

    “The IDF has an historic duty of protecting our people, wherever they are. We are preparing to deploy a mission to rescue Israelis from Amsterdam.”

    Antisemitism has skyrocketed since Hamas terrorists carried out a deadly attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, leading to a wider and ongoing conflict in Gaza.

    “Horrified by the attacks tonight in Amsterdam, which are terribly reminiscent of a classic pogrom. I am also deeply disturbed by how long the reported attacks lasted and call on the government to conduct a thorough investigation into security force intervention and on how these despicable attacks transpired,” Ambassador Deborah Lipstadt, of the US Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Antisemitism, said in a statement.

    A car also barreled into a victim, causing the man to flip over the hood of the vehicle, footage from the embassy shows. X/iAnnet via REUTERS

    “In terrible historical irony, this is happening two days before the grim anniversary of Reichspogromnacht in 1938, when Nazi-sanctioned and led pogroms against Jews erupted across the German Reich.”

    With Post wires

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  • Johan Neeskens deserves place next to Cruyff in Total Football pantheon | Netherlands

    Johan Cruyff called the Netherlands’ 2-0 win over Brazil in the second group phase of the 1974 World Cup the truest example of Total Football there had been. Johan Neeskens was knocked out during it, floored by a punch from Brazil’s captain Marinho Peres. That felt typical. Neeskens was always the physical one, a hard, angular midfielder with unnervingly blue eyes. Sublimely skilled as that Dutch side were, they were also more than capable of looking after themselves and when it came to mixing it there was no one better than Neeskens.

    But Neeskens also scored the Dutch opener in that game, receiving the ball halfway inside the Brazil half, pushing the ball to Cruyff on the right then continuing his run to sweep in a first-time finish. Perhaps there was an element of fortune in the loop of the ball over the goalkeeper Émerson Leão, but the key to the goal was his dart in front of Luís Pereira to meet Cruyff’s pass, the awareness of where Cruyff was going to deliver the ball, the instinct to time his movement, and then the technique to guide the ball on target. In a brilliant and brutal game, it was Neeskens, their most brutally brilliant player, who shone.

    It was Neeskens who scored the second-minute penalty in the final, Neeskens who had been key to the development of the aggressive press, first at Ajax and then with his national side. Rinus Michels would depute Neeskens to look after the opposition’s playmaker and he would pursue him, often deep into the opposition half. He was, as the Ajax assistant manager, Bobby Haarms, put it, “like a kamikaze pilot”. At first his teammates would be reluctant to follow, but they soon learned, pushing up behind him, relying initially on Velibor Vasovic and later on Horst Blankenburg to protect the space behind the defensive line by stepping up to catch opponents offside.

    Johan Neeskens (right) opens the scoring in the Netherland’s 2-0 victory over Brazil at the 1974 World Cup. Photograph: Alamy

    After helping Ajax to three successive European Cups and losing in the 1974 World Cup final, Neeskens joined Cruyff at Barcelona. That same summer, Barcelona also signed Marinho. There were no hard feelings: true hard men accepted the odd whack on the jaw as part of the game. Marinho, though, was baffled by this new Dutch style of football.

    “Defenders in Brazil would never be able to push up like that,” he explained. “When I went to Barcelona, Michels wanted the centre-backs to push out to make the offside line. In Brazil this was known as the donkey line: people thought it was stupid … the Dutch players wanted to reduce the space and put everybody in a thin band. The whole logic of the offside trap comes from squeezing the game. In Brazil, people thought you could chip the ball over and somebody could run through and beat the offside trap, but it’s not like that because you don’t have time.”

    Johan Neeskens scores from the penalty spot past Sepp Maier to give the Netherlands the lead against West Germany in the 1974 World Cup final. Photograph: AP

    What Neeskens’s kamikaze charges had shown, though, was that pressing wasn’t just about thwarting the opposition. “In one training session,” Marinho said, “I pushed up and we caught four or five players offside. I was pleased, because it was still new to me and I was finding it difficult, but Michels came and shouted at me. What he wanted was for us then to charge the guy with the ball with the players we had spare because they had men out of the game in offside positions. That’s how offside becomes an offensive game.”

    Michels was always clear that Total Football, although it became theorised, was not in origin a theory, but something that developed semi-organically, because of the players at Ajax, many of whom had played together at youth level and become used to adapting their games to each other. Cruyff was the genius, the organiser, the player with probably a more precise understanding of the geometry of the game than anybody else who has ever played it, but Neeskens was the heart; it was his drive, his ferocious stamina, that encouraged the aggressive press.

    And yet, like so many of that great Netherlands side, Cruyff excepted, once the magnificence of his playing career was over, he became disconcertingly ordinary. Although Neeskens had stints as assistant manager of the Netherlands (he was on the bench at Wembley when England beat the Dutch 4-1 in 1996), and later with Australia, Barcelona and Galatasaray, his only real success as a head coach came with NEC Nijmegen, whom he led into the Uefa Cup on a shoestring.

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    Johan Neeskens joined Barcelona as assistant manager to Frank Rijkaard in 2006. Photograph: Gustavo Nacarino/Reuters

    I visited him there in 2003 and was overwhelmed by how much time he was willing to spend chatting to a young freelancer. A few weeks later, he called me at home (on the communal phone in the flat I shared – “It’s for you – Johan somebody? Sounded Dutch.”) to answer some minor query I’d directed to the press office, and chattered on for half an hour about the 70s, making me late for a shift at Teletext (“Sorry – I was just about to set off when Johan Neeskens called”; even as I said it I knew it sounded like a ridiculous lie). There was a humility and eagerness to talk about the past that characterised most of that side.

    Yet Neeskens the player was tough, icily cool and manifestly exceptional. He would never have said it – the majority of the ego in that side belonged to Cruyff – but without him, Dutch Total Football might have looked a little more like the West German football of the time, clever intermovement and manipulation of space, but without the ferocious press that made it so distinctive and influential. Total Football needed Cruyff, but it also needed Neeskens.

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  • Steven Bergwijn bites back at Ronald Koeman after he was AXED from the Netherlands squad by the manager who questioned his ‘sporting ambition’ following his move to Saudi Arabia

    Steven Bergwijn bites back at Ronald Koeman after he was AXED from the Netherlands squad by the manager who questioned his ‘sporting ambition’ following his move to Saudi Arabia

    • The former Spurs star joined Saudi Pro League side Al-Ittihad from Ajax 
    • He has 35 caps for the Netherlands, but his international career could be over
    • LISTEN NOW: It’s All Kicking Off! , available wherever you get your podcasts. New episodes every Monday and Thursday

    Former Tottenham star Steven Bergwijn has fired back at Ronald Koeman after the Netherlands manager ‘closed the book’ on his international career.

    Bergwijn, 26, completed a €21m (£17.7m) move from Ajax to the Saudi Pro League giants Al-Ittihad on Monday. 

    The winger was not selected for the Netherlands’ upcoming Nations League fixtures against Bosnia and Herzegovina and Germany, amid the speculation surrounding his future.

    In his press conference, Koeman slammed Bergwijn over the move saying it showed a lack of ‘sporting ambition’.

    In comments published by Dutch outlet De Telegraaf, a frustrated Bergwijn has bit back at Koeman insisting ‘that’s not how you treat your players’. 

    Steven Bergwijn has vowed to never play for current Netherlands boss Ronald Koeman again

    Steven Bergwijn has vowed to never play for current Netherlands boss Ronald Koeman again

    It comes after Koeman 'closed the book' on Bergwijn's international career, as he slammed the ex-Tottenham star for showing a lack of 'sporting ambition' by moving to Saudi Arabia

    It comes after Koeman ‘closed the book’ on Bergwijn’s international career, as he slammed the ex-Tottenham star for showing a lack of ‘sporting ambition’ by moving to Saudi Arabia

    Bergwijn was furious with Koeman for not speaking to the winger about his decision to move

    Bergwijn was furious with Koeman for not speaking to the winger about his decision to move

    He said: ‘I don’t even want to play for this manager anymore. I won’t play for someone who portrays me like he has done in the media.

    ‘He could have called me, hear my side of the story. How can he say such things without talking to me?’

    Bergwijn, has won 35 caps for the Netherlands and was part of Koeman’s squad at Euro 2024 where they reached the semi-finals before losing to England. 

    And, speaking to the media on Tuesday after his group came together, Koeman hit out at Bergwijn when asked about the winger and claimed the move to Saudi Arabia has significantly impacted his international ambitions.  

    ‘Steven Bergwijn goes to Saudi Arabia at the age of 26,’ he said. ‘It’s clear that this has nothing to do with sporting ambition.

    ‘His book with the Dutch National Team is closed.’

    Koeman was then questioned on whether Bergwijn had discussed the move with him, before he added: ‘No, he probably knows what I would have said.’ 

    The manager also said that the case was different to Georginio Wijnaldum who was still picked after he left Paris Saint-Germain for Al-Ettifaq last year. 

    Bergwijn was furious with Koeman's (pictured) comments

    Bergwijn left Ajax to join Al-Ittihad

    Bergwijn (right) said ‘that’s not how you treat players’ in response to Koeman’s comments

    He said: ‘Georginio Wijnaldum once went that way because he had a problem at Paris Saint-Germain.

    ‘He could only go to that country to play football until January. In Bergwijn’s case is that he goes at the age of 26, sporting ambition does not prevail.’

    Bergwijn played 60 times for Tottenham between 2020 and 2022 before joining Ajax.  

    At Al-Ittihad he will play alongside the likes of N’Golo Kante, Fabinho and Karim Benzema.  

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