FC Den Bosch
TO THE FIRST DIVISION AND BACK AGAIN
The western provinces are Holland's most densely
populated, yet no other Dutch province has so
many professional football clubs as Noord-Brabant. No less
than eight clubs in the two professional divisions of
Dutch football hail from the central-southern province, known
for its industries, but also its exuberant cuisine
and beer-drenched carnival celebrations. Noord-Brabant is
close to Flanders. It's where the pleasant influences of
the 'Burgundian' lifestyle are starting to manifest themselves
in Dutch culture.
However, eight professional football clubs,
fishing in the same regional pond of supporters and sponsors,
can impossibly prosper at the same time. Brabant's
largest cities (Eindhoven, Tilburg and Breda) each
have established, big clubs with a large following.
Two clubs from small towns (RBC Roosendaal and RKC Waalwijk)
also managed to become steady Eredivisie outfits. The
smaller Brabant clubs, however (Helmond Sport, TOP Oss,
Eindhoven), seem inevitably condemned to a low-key
existence in the First Division.

FC Den Bosch, First Division
champions 2004.
But: how long will they stay in this time?
And then there's FC Den Bosch, a club that seems to be
unable to do better than hovering between the two
realities described above. Established in 1964 as a merger
of local outfits BVV and Wilhelmina , FC Den Bosch went
down from the Eredivisie five times and roughly spent
two-thirds of its existence in the First Division. Which is
odd, given the fact that Den Bosch is the mundane capital
of the province and a considerably larger town than Waalwijk or
Roosendaal. RKC, from the small town of Waalwijk (only a
few miles down the road from Den Bosch) became a
rock-solid Eredivisie club in its even shorter existence.
Apart from the relatively glorious 1980s - in which the
blue and white almost constantly performed in the upper half of
the Eredivisie table, regularly beat one of the 'Big
Three' and eventually reached the Dutch Cup final in 1991
(lost 1-0 to Feyenoord) - the history of FC Den Bosch is
one of relegations, promotions and, throughout club
history, financial misery. More than just once the
club survived only thanks to donations from the
Den Bosch city council. A couple of formal bankruptcies and
re-foundations were necessary, which explains why the club's
official name was BVV Den Bosch for a few years.
It was almost over for the 'Blue Dragons' in 1999 and
2000, after which the club finally discovered a
dim, distant light at the end of the tunnel.
The club returning to the Eredivisie in 2004 is an
optimistic one, determined to make 2004 the start of a
new, better era. The new ground - which replaced
'good old' De Vliert stadium many years ago, but looked like a
barren construction-site for years - has now actually
developed into a nice little stadium. Survival in
the Eredivisie is the first goal.

Ruud van Nistelrooy: it started
at Den Bosch...
The local fans will always believe in a better
future, optimistic as they are. They actually make
the unlikely happen once every year, during
the traditional Roman-Catholic carnival
celebrations, during which Den Bosch goes by its
bogus name of Oeteldonk, a town where
everything is turned upside down: bosses become employees,
employees become bosses, etcetera. No wonder that Den Bosch was
the place where an Eredivisie goalkeeper scored
a goal for the first time. In 1986 lanky, red-haired
goalkeeper Jan van Grinsven stormed forward in the final
minutes against Roda JC - and became a living legend by
hammering home for the last-gasp equalizer. Last but
not least: FC Den Bosch gave the world Ruud van Nistelrooy,
although admittedly (and perhaps typically) he wasn't
much of a goalscorer in his Den Bosch days. He started
scoring at Heerenveen, became a star at PSV and,
ultimately, a phenomenon at Manchester
United. Developing him is perhaps FC Den
Bosch's most noteworthy achievement. (MP)
FC DEN BOSCH FACTS
Founded: 18 August 1965 as FC Den Bosch/BVV
(continuation of BVV). Name changed into FC Den Bosch on 01
August 1967 after merger with
Wilhelmina. Officially named BVV Den Bosch between
1988 and 1992.
City: Den Bosch (official city name:
's-Hertogenbosch)
Stadium: FC Den Bosch Stadium
Capacity: 8,500
Official website: www.fcdenbosch.nl
Honors:
- Dutch champions: 1948 (BVV)
Recent history: Ajax vs FC Den Bosch
- 2004-2005
- 2003-2004
- 2002-2003
- FC Den Bosch in First Division; no games played
- 2001-2002
- 2000-2001
- FC Den Bosch in First Division; no games played