Foppe de Haan
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Family name hatnote Template:Infobox football biography
Foppe Geert de Haan[1] (Script error: No such module "IPA"., born 26 June 1943) is a Dutch football coach.[2] He is known for his long association with Frisian club Heerenveen. De Haan was the manager of the Tuvalu national team during 2011 and then rejoined Heerenveen's youth programme. He is also a politician for the Partij van de Arbeid.
Career
De Haan was born in Lippenhuizen, Friesland. He started his managerial career in 1974 with VV Akkrum. After two years, he combined this role with the youth team manager's position at Heerenveen. By 1978, he had become the manager for Drachtster Boys. He then moved to ACV in 1980, and to Steenwijk in 1983. In 1985, de Haan re-joined Heerenveen, this time as an assistant coach. He continued to spend the next 20 years with the club—the longest time a coach worked for a Dutch professional football club.[3] De Haan was promoted to become the head coach in 1992. In 1993, he led the club back to the Eredivisie. They finished in the Eredivisie with Heerenveen in 2000, as the second place. Thus, they qualifyied for the UEFA Champions League for the first time in the club's history.[3]
In 2003, he received the Sport Award and on 10 May 2004, after his final game as coach of Heerenveen, he was acknowledged as a Knight of the Order of Orange-Nassau.[4] He was successively appointed as coach of the Netherlands U21 national team (Template:Langx), with whom he won the 2006 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship and 2007 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship.[5][6]
De Haan was accused by Steven Taylor of calling him a "cheat" as he had been injured in the match and was originally not going to take a penalty in the semi-final penalty shoot-out. Taylor eventually took and scored his penalty in the shootout which made the Netherlands won despite the act. A semifinal spot in the latter tournament also qualified the Dutch for the 2008 Summer Olympics football tournament, leading his side to the quarter-finals where they were ultimately defeated by Argentina after extra time.[1]
De Haan had announced that he would retire from football at the end of the 2008–09 season, when his contract with the KNVB expired.[3] Instead he returned to work as a senior advisor at SC Heerenveen, before being appointed head coach at South African Premier Soccer League club Ajax Cape Town.
De Haan managed the Tuvalu national team through their 2011 Pacific Games campaign.[7] De Haan left his post after the tournament to rejoin Heerenveen's youth programme.[8]
On 20 October 2015, De Haan became interim coach of SC Heerenveen after the team had a disappointing start of the season and Dwight Lodeweges left as head coach. Under De Haan the team went on to win four of their first six games, drawing and losing one.[9][10]
Honours
Netherlands
References
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External links
Template:Netherlands men's football squad 2008 Summer Olympics Script error: No such module "navboxes". Script error: No such module "Football manager history". Template:Ajax Cape Town managers Template:Tuvalu national football team managersScript error: No such module "navboxes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Template:Rinus Michels Award
- Pages with script errors
- 1943 births
- Living people
- People from Opsterland
- Footballers from Friesland
- Men's association football midfielders
- Dutch men's footballers
- Dutch football managers
- Asser Christelijke Voetbalvereniging managers
- SC Heerenveen managers
- Ajax Cape Town F.C. managers
- Tuvalu national football team managers
- Eredivisie managers
- Dutch expatriate football managers
- Expatriate football managers in Indonesia
- Dutch expatriate sportspeople in Indonesia
- Expatriate football managers in Tuvalu
- Dutch expatriate sportspeople in Tuvalu
- Expatriate soccer managers in South Africa
- Dutch expatriate sportspeople in South Africa
- Knights of the Order of Orange-Nassau
- Rinus Michels Award winners
- SC Heerenveen non-playing staff
- 20th-century Dutch sportsmen