Heracles Almelo
ARTIFICIAL PITCH, REAL CLUB
Many Eredivisie players were not overly enthusiastic when
Heracles Almelo clinched the First Division championship in May
2005. The reason: the Almelo club were one of the
first clubs at the top flight of a European
football league to play their home games on an artificial
pitch. 'Fake' grass... It's the future, by all accounts, but
for now players and fans seem to hate the stuff. Ajax's
January 2004 friendly at Heracles' Polman Stadium was the
Amsterdammers' first ever competitive game on artificial
grass and the players were unanimous in their judgement:
absolutely terrible.
Apart from 'that plastic stuff', however, one can only
be delighted by the fact that Heracles Almelo are
back in the Eredivisie (and actually survived their first,
hard seasons). Founded in 1903, the club has a long and
great history that Holland's younger football
fans know too little about: Heracles won two Dutch
championships, the first one long before the Second World
War (1927) and the second one right in the middle of
it (1941). Named after Heracles (a.k.a. Hercules), the
ancient Greek warrior, the club still play in their
classic 'zebra shirts': black and white, vertically
striped, just like Juventus.

Heracles, Dutch champions of
1927. [Photo: Heracles Almelo.nl]
Heracles were once a major force in Dutch football, but
their role in 'modern' Dutch football was (and still
is) a modest one. Heracles' current spell in the
Eredivisie is only their third since the start of the
professional Eredivisie in 1956, and they will hope that they
can stay up a bit longer than the previous two times: they
lasted four seasons from 1962 to 1966, and then there
was a single season in 1985-1986. The only thing that
eased the pain during that brief,
catastrophic Eredivisie campaign of the mid-80s
was a spectacular 0-3 away win in
Enschede, against arch-enemies and 'next door
neighbours' FC Twente.
Nevertheless, there is a lot of remarkable Heracles history
to tell about. The First Division championship of 1962, for
example, was clinched thanks to the club's magnificent duo of
strikers: Joop Schuman (47 goals in one season, an all-time
record in Dutch football) and Steve Mokone, nicknamed
the 'Black Meteor'. Mokone, a South African, was the
very first black player in Dutch football, years before the
arrival of the first 'Surinamese wave'. He was an exotic
attraction in 1950s The Netherlands. Dutch sports journalist
Tom Egbers of Studio Sport, a life-long Heracles
supporter, used to watch Mokone from the famous wooden main
stand of Heracles' old ground on Bornsestraat, which the
club left for new Polman Stadium in 1999. Egbers told the story
of Mokone's life in his superb book De Zwarte Meteoor
('The Black Meteor').

Heracles in 1958, with 'The Black
Meteor', Steve Mokone. [Photo: Heracles Almelo.nl]
Today, both Schuman and Mokone have a stand of Polman
Stadium named after them. A third stand was named after Folkert
Velten, yet another flabbergastingly productive Heracles
striker, who almost singlehandedly brought the crisis of the
1980s to an end. This was in the relative anonymity of the
First Division, but what made Velten a cult figure all over the
country was the fact that he was a devoted Calvinist who
refused to play on Sundays. Luckily, most First Division sides
play on Friday or Saturday evenings. Promotion to the
Eredivisie would have been a serious dilemma for
Velten...

Those were the days: the old,
wooden main stand of Bornsestraat stadium. [Photo: Heracles
Almelo.nl]
Heracles' two most famous clashes with Ajax were the two cup
games for which Ajax came to Almelo in 1974 and 1996.
Remarkably, on both occasions Ajax visited the modest
First Division club as the reigning world champions, but both
times Heracles caused a tremendous upset by knocking the
Amsterdammers out of the cup. In December 1974 two goals in
extra time made Bornsestraat stadium go mad: 4-2. In
1996, when Louis van Gaal's unbeatable
(?) team visited Almelo, Heracles did it again:
1-0.

Heracles captain Nico-Jan Hoogma
lifts the First Division championship
shield, May 2005. [Photo: Heracles Almelo.nl]
Now the proud Almelo side are back in the Eredivisie. Nice
detail: when promotion was secured in May 2005, Heracles
received the championship shield from KNVB
official Henk Kesler, who used to be general manager of
rivals FC Twente back in the 1980s. Kesler outraged the
Heracles fans at the time by saying that the club no longer had
the right to exist independently, and that Heracles would
have to accept a merger with Twente if they wanted to survive.
The merger happened to a certain extent (Twente and Heracles
integrated their youth systems, so that their youth teams in
younger age categories play under the name of Twente/Heracles),
but otherwise the Almelo club wished to continue independently.
On 20 May 2005 Henk Kesler returned to Almelo to present them
the First Division championship shield. He was enough of a
gentleman to crack a joke about his 20 year-old remarks. What a
sweet moment it was. (MP)
HERACLES ALMELO FACTS
Founded: 03 May 1903 as Heracles. Named
changed into SC Heracles '74 on 01 July 1974 and into Heracles
Almelo on 01 July 1998.
City: Almelo
Stadium: Polman Stadium
Capacity: 8,500
Official website: http://www.heraclesalmelo.nl/
Honors:
- Dutch champions: 1927, 1941
Recent History: Ajax vs Heracles Almelo
- 2006-2007
- 2005-2006
- 2004-2005
- Heracles Almelo in First Division; no games played
- 2003-2004
- 2000-2003
- Heracles Almelo in First Division; no games played