Pierre van Hooijdonk

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Pierre van Hooijdonk
Personal information
Full name Petrus Ferdinandus Johannes
Stevenson van Hooijdonk
Date of birth November 29, 1969 (1969-11-29) (age 38)
Place of birth    Steenbergen, Netherlands
Height 1.93 m (6ft 4in)
Playing position Striker
Club information
Current club Retired
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1989-1991
1991-1995
1995-1997
1997-1999
1999-2000
2000-2001
2001-2003
2003-2005
2005-2006
2006-2007
RBC Roosendaal
NAC Breda
Celtic
Nottingham Forest
Vitesse Arnhem
SL Benfica
Feyenoord Rotterdam
Fenerbahçe
NAC Breda
Feyenoord Rotterdam
CAREER
069 0(33)
115 0(81)
069 0(44)
071 0(36)
029 0(25)
030 0(19)
061 0(52)
053 0(32)
017 00(5)
037 00(8)
551 (335)   
National team
1994-2004 Netherlands 046 0(14)

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only.
* Appearances (Goals)

Petrus ("Pierre") Ferdinandus Johannes Stevenson van Hooijdonk (born on November 29, 1969 in Steenbergen, Noord-Brabant) is a retired Dutch football player noted for his spectacular free kicks. His last spell was at Feyenoord Rotterdam, he played as a striker. Van Hooijdonk has been capped 46 times for the Dutch national team and has played in the 1998 FIFA World Cup, Euro 2000, and Euro 2004. He has scored 14 goals for his country.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Early years

As a child, Van Hooijdonk who was born in Steenbergen lived in a small village nearby named Welberg. While playing in one of SC Welberg's youth squads he became familiar with the sport. His favourite team was NAC Breda and he was already watching their games at a young age. When he was 11 years old he took part in a talent pool on the open day of the team and he impressed the NAC scouts. He was asked to join NAC, which he did and played mainly as a right midfielder. When he was 14 he was told he was not good enough for NAC and he switched to amateur side VV Steenbergen. Here he switched to the striker position and he would play five years for the team, of which the last two seasons in their first team. His performances at VV Steenbergen were noticed by RBC Roosendaal scout Tiny van Dijk and he was brought into the team at amateur level.

[edit] First steps in professional football

As RBC were facing financial trouble in these days they were forced to use youth players faster than other teams and in the 1988-89 season Van Hooijdonk was brought in as a substitute for a few times and soon scored three goals, which resulted in more appearances throughout the season. Because RBC's main striker suffered from an injury Van Hooijdonk played almost the whole second half of the season, scoring a total of six goals in 32 matches. He signed his first professional contract and his final breakthrough came in the following season in which he became a key player for the team, scoring 27 times in 37 matches. Several teams showed interest and NAC Breda was one of the teams. Van Hooijdonk did not hesitate and signed a contract at the team he supported as a kid.

[edit] Back at NAC

NAC paid 400.000 guilders for Van Hooijdonk, a player which they sent away while he was playing in their youth squads. Returning at NAC gave him a good feeling and he was determined to show them what he was capable of. Van Hooijdonk succeeded in his goal and scored a total of 81 goals in four seasons, in which he played 115 matches. He helped the team to win promotion to the Eredivisie in 1993. In his last season at his club, in December 1995 he was called-up for the Netherlands national football team for the first time in his career. Not much later, in the 1994-95 winter break Celtic offered him a contract and made a deal with NAC to join them immediately, which he accepted.

[edit] Three years in green and white

When Van Hooijdonk arrived at Celtic they had not won any trophies in six years. However with Van Hooijdonk Celtic won the Scottish Cup right away and Van Hooijdonk was the only goalscorer in the final. Van Hooijdonk was popular among the fans, but had an argument with the club's president. As a result he ended up at the substitute bench and did not play that much. The manager of the Dutch national team in these days Guus Hiddink told him he would not be selected for the national team as long as he was no regular first team player at Celtic. In total he scored 57 goals for the club in 68 appearances. He left Celtic over a wage dispute towards the end of the 1996/1997 season, stating that the reputed £7,000 a week he was being offered might be "good enough for the homeless" to live on "but not for an international striker."[1] He went on to join Nottingham Forest.

[edit] Nottingham Forest

Van Hooijdonk arrived as Forest were in deep relegation trouble, struggling to maintain their position in the Premier League. He made his debut for Forest in a 1-1 draw against Blackburn on 11 March 1997. It was hoped the arrival of van Hooijdonk would kick-start their survival, but he scored just one goal in his eight games for them that season. Although only one of those games was lost, the other seven were drawn and Forest were relegated. He immediately pledged his future to helping the club regain their status.

The following season was an unqualified success, both for him and Forest. Forest won the title and promotion in a competitive league (facing stiff opposition from Sunderland, Charlton and Middlesbrough) van Hooijdonk scored 34 goals and built up a good partnership with strike partner Kevin Campbell, who scored 23 times. He was a regular in the Dutch national squad, and was named in the Dutch squad for 1998 FIFA World Cup in France where he scored as a substitute in the match against South Korea.

[edit] Pierre, the 'striker'

After the World Cup had finished he discovered that the promised strengthening to the Forest squad to enable them to cope back in the Premier League had not transpired, indeed that his strike partner Campbell(who had an ongoing back injury) had been sold to Trabzonspor for £2.5m. The club had also announced that Scot Gemmill was dropped from the first team for refusing to sign a new contract, and that club captain and terrace hero Colin Cooper was being allowed to leave to the team promoted alongside them as runners up, Middlesbrough. Van Hooijdonk asked for a transfer. The club's new owners refused. Van Hooijdonk announced that he had been told previously that he could leave the club at the end of the 1997/1998 season if he so wished, that he felt betrayed by the club's owners who had failed to deliver on their promises to him regarding the strengthening of the team, and that he felt he could no longer play for his employers. His employers, desperate for a striker, refused to allow him to be transfer-listed again, so van Hooijdonk announced his intention to strike. He kept fit by training with his former club NAC Breda.

Because of his behaviour Van Hooijdonk received criticism both from fans, who he let down, and from his teammates, who he also let down, not least from new club captain Steve Stone and manager Dave Bassett. The club refused to listen to offers for him, as they needed a top striker and the stand-off lasted until early November when he, realising that he had no choice, agreed to return. By this time the club was again in relegation trouble being bottom of the league without a win in nine games, having a striker would have helped. He played sporadically between then and the end of the season, outlasting Dave Bassett and Steve Stone. He scored 6 goals in his 18 starts in the Premiership, including his first goal in his third game back against Forest's fierce rivals Derby County, helping them to a draw. Infamously after this goal most of his teammates refused to celebrate alongside him, instead going to Scot Gemmill, the man who crossed the ball to him. He also scored a last minute home equaliser against rivals Liverpool with a trademark free-kick that protected Forest's proud unbeaten home run against them that goes back to the 1980s[citation needed]. Forest ended the 1998-99 Premiership season bottom and relegated.

[edit] Football nomad

At the end of the 1998/1999 season he returned to the Netherlands with Vitesse Arnhem to continue his career after and did much to convince his critics of his goal-scoring abilities when he helped the Arnhem team to a UEFA Cup spot with 25 goals in one season. He also returned into the Dutch national team in this period. Van Hooijdonk then signed a three year deal for SL Benfica in 2000. He eventually only played one season for them with 19 goals. At Benfica he faced the same structural problems as he faced at Nottingham Forest and the team used three different managers throughout the season. The new chairman at the team had no faith in Van Hooijdonk and he was set back into their second team. Benfica were planning on selling him to another foreign club, but all Van Hooijdonk wanted was to return to his home country. At the end of the 2000/2001 season, he signed for his fourth Dutch club, Feyenoord Rotterdam.

[edit] UEFA Cup winner

While at Feyenoord, he will always be remembered for his free kick abilities and his integral part in the UEFA Cup 2001-02 win. He scored two goals in the final and his performances helped Feyenoord beat Freiburg, Rangers, PSV Eindhoven, Inter and Borussia Dortmund. Just before the final, a group of Feyenoord fans called the Black and White Brothers recorded a song about van Hooijdonk called "Put your hands up for Pi-air" which charted in the Dutch music charts and referred to van Hooijdonk's free-kicks and goals.

[edit] Fenerbahçe

Never one to settle down, van Hooijdonk joined Fenerbahçe SK at the beginning of the 2003-04 season where he featured in 52 games for the Turkish club and scored 32 goals (24 in his first season). He was nicknamed "Saint Pierre" ("Aziz Pierre") by fans. He wore the number 17 the same number that he worn for the national team.

He won Turkish First Football League 2003-04 (scored 24 goals) and Turkish First Football League 2004-05 with Fenerbahçe SK.

Today, he still follows Fenerbahçe's every European match (whether it is a Champions League or a UEFA Cup game) in the stadium alongside the Fenerbahçe supporters and still is one of the supporters' most popular and beloved former players, and is a remarkable and unforgettable figure in the team's history.

[edit] The final years

In mid-2005, he signed again for his former club, NAC, playing 17 games but scoring only 5 goals. During the winter transfer window of the 2005/2006 season, he signed for another former club, Feyenoord, where he scored 8 goals in 37 appearances.

On October 18, 2006 Van Hooijdonk announced his retirement at the end of the 2006-07 season. On May 13, 2007 he eventually played his final professional match after a draw with Feyenoord against FC Groningen in the play-offs, having played 551 games (334 goals) in the highest leagues in 18 seasons of professional football.

[edit] Victim of Fraud

It was reported on 29th May 2008 that van Hooijdonk had been a victim of fraud and had lost £2,000,000 to a scam, which involved him investing in a Chinese textile company which didn't exist. Dutch police sais the scam was worth 'many millions of euros'. [2]

[edit] External links


[edit] References



Awards
Preceded by
Flag of the Netherlands Mark van Bommel
Dutch Footballer of the Year
20012002
Succeeded by
Flag of Serbia Mateja Kežman
Sporting positions
Preceded by
Flag of Serbia Mateja Kežman
Dutch Eredivisie Topscorer
2001 – 2002
Succeeded by
Flag of Serbia Mateja Kežman


‹The template Lifetime is being considered for deletion.› 

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