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AVV RAP
View on WikipediaAVV RAP, in the long form Amsterdamsche Voetbalvereeniging RUN, Amstels, Progress, was a Dutch football club based in Amsterdam, playing in the Netherlands Football League Championship. The club existed from 1887 to 1914 and was the first cup champion of the Netherlands in the 1898–99 season.[2] The club is most famous for being the winners of the first edition of the Coupe Van der Straeten Ponthoz in 1900, one of the world's first international footballing competitions, in which it played and defeated the reigning champions of Belgium, Switzerland and the Netherlands on three successive days.[3]
Key Information
History
[edit]19th century
[edit]It was founded in Amsterdam on 14 November 1887, by members of three cricket clubs, RUN, Amstels and Progress: RAP. The team managed to win the Netherlands Football League Championship five times (all of which in the 19th century), including three titles in a row between 1897 and 1899, going undefeated in the latter season (1898–99). The dominance of RAP in that season was demonstrated by the fact that HVV Den Haag, who finished second that year, was eight points behind RAP in the end. In that same season, RAP won the very first edition of the KNVB Cup, beating HVV Den Haag 1–0 in the final thanks to a goal from Jan Hisgen, and thus RAP was the first team in the Netherlands to win the league title and the Cup in the same season.[4][5]
1900 Coupe Van der Straeten Ponthoz
[edit]In 1900, the club participated in the first edition of the Coupe Van der Straeten Ponthoz in 1900, regarded by many as the first-ever European club trophy.[6] The tournament was held in Brussels and on 15 April, in the first round, RAP unexpectedly defeated the champions of Belgium, Racing Club, by 2 to 1. On the following day, in the semi-finals, RAP beat the champions of Switzerland, Grasshopper Club, again by the minimum margin of 3–2, with Jan van den Berg netting two of Amsterdam's goals.[7] Finally, in the final on 17 April, RAP faced fellow Dutch club HVV Den Haag, who had succeeded them as the new champions of the Netherlands by winning the championship in 1899–1900. HVV were the favorites to win as they had trashed the hosts Léopold FC with a resounding 8–1 win in the first round and then comfortably got past the semi-finals with a 3–0 win. Furthermore, HVV had great national figures of that time such as Willem Hesselink, Miel Mundt, and Eetje Sol, the latter of which already had 5 goals in the tournament to his name.[7] In the first half, HVV proved their favoritism by going ahead thanks to an own goal from RAP's goalkeeper, Koopman (sometimes credited to Beukema), but the Amsterdammers fought back and found an equalizer with 10 minutes to go, courtesy of van den Berg. It seemed RAP had just forced extra-time, however, just 5 minutes later, they found the winner via Jan Hisgen, thus lifting the first trophy of the competition.[7] Coincidentally, Hisgen had also been the matchwinner of the 1899 KNVB Cup final against the same opponents.
Their victory in the final meant that in a space of three days, RAP played and defeated the reigning champions of Belgium, Switzerland, and the Netherlands. As these were the only existing leagues in continental Europe, the local newspapers at that time dubbed the tournament "the club championship of the continent". Thus, RAP might be considered the first ever continental European Champions,[3] although this title is also contested by Vienna Cricket and Football-Club, who were the winners of the first Challenge Cup in 1897, a competition between clubs in Austria-Hungary.[8][9] However, this tournament up until the 1900–01 season, only featured teams from Vienna, so the 7–0 win by Cricket over Wiener FC 1898 on 21 November 1897 may not be regarded as the first ever truly international club final, and hence, Cricket may not be regarded as the first European Champions.
20th century
[edit]In the 1900–01 season, RAP finished in fourth place, followed by a fifth-place finish in 1901–02. In 1902–03 RAP hit rock bottom and finished last in the league, forcing them to play in a relegation playoff series, which they won, very narrowly escaping relegation. A few years later, the club would eventually be relegated to the second division anyway.
Although no longer relegated by the 1911–14 season, the team would always find themselves at the bottom of the table. Volharding (Dutch for Perseverance), which is the other old Amsterdam football club, found themselves in a similar predicament, always merely one or two points above RAP in the table, but still considered classified in the same section.
On 23 July 1914, it was announced in Sport Magazine, that the two clubs had decided to merge. The creation of the mentioned Volharding-RAP-Combination: VRC would bring an end to RAP's run. After a few more years of football, the club eventually abandoned the sport, and switched back to Cricket, renaming the club once more to the now-known VRA.
Honours
[edit]Results 1889–1914
[edit]| Results from 1889 to 1914 [10] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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References
[edit]- ^ Lijst der Statuten van Vereenigingen. 1910. p. 11.
- ^ "History of Dutch Football". Dutch-football.com. 9 November 2011. Archived from the original on 3 September 2011. Retrieved 5 August 2011.
- ^ a b "Coupe Van der Straeten Ponthoz". RSSSF. 10 February 2022. Archived from the original on 9 July 2022. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
- ^ "Nederlandse voetbalbeker 1898-99" [Dutch Football Cup 1898-99]. www.voetbalkroniek.nl (in Dutch). 23 November 2013. Retrieved 31 October 2024.
- ^ "1899: R.A.P. wint den holdertbeker" [1899: R.A.P. wins the holding cup]. www.totoknvbbeker.nl (in Dutch). 31 January 2018. Retrieved 31 October 2024.
- ^ "European Cup Origins". europeancuphistory.com. Archived from the original on 5 November 2021. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
- ^ a b c "1900 Coupe Van der Straeten Ponthoz". RSSSF. 10 February 2022. Archived from the original on 9 July 2022. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
- ^ García, Javier; Kutschera, Ambrosius; Schöggl, Hans; Stokkermans, Karel (2009). "Austria/Habsburg Monarchy – Challenge Cup 1897–1911". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Archived from the original on 11 April 2020. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
- ^ "IFFHS: Challenge Cup: Austro-Hungarian Monarchy (1897-1911)". Archived from the original on 11 April 2020. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
- ^ Netherlands Eerste Klasse West Final League Tables 1890–1950
External links
[edit]AVV RAP
View on GrokipediaHistory
Founding and early development
The Amsterdamsche Voetbalvereeniging RAP (AVV RAP), in full Amsterdamsche Voetbalvereeniging RUN, Amstels, Progress, was founded on 14 November 1887 in Amsterdam through the merger of the football sections of three existing cricket clubs: C.C. R.U.N. (established 20 March 1882), Amstels C.C., and A.C.C. Progress.[9] This union reflected the growing interest in association football among Dutch cricketers in the late 19th century, as the sport began to supplant cricket as a popular amateur pursuit for urban youth and elites seeking new athletic challenges.[10] The club's name was finalized in January 1888, preserving the initials of its cricket origins while emphasizing its shift to football.[9] In its early years, AVV RAP operated as an amateur club, adhering to the emerging standards of association football in the Netherlands. On 11 February 1888, club captain C.C. Zeverijn published a Dutch translation of the "Laws of the Game" in the newspaper Nederlandsche Sport to guide the team's play, marking a formal adoption of standardized rules ahead of its debut fixtures.[9] The club's initial matches were against nearby teams, including a 4-0 loss to Haarlemsche Football Club (HFC) on 12 February 1888 in Haarlem and a 0-0 draw against the same opponent on 25 March 1888 in Amsterdam, both contested with 12 players per side under these rules.[9] These games highlighted RAP's entry into organized competition amid a nascent Dutch football scene dominated by informal, local encounters.[9] AVV RAP's early infrastructure centered on modest Amsterdam fields, with home matches played at grounds "achter het Rijksmuseum" (behind the Rijksmuseum) and the Sport-Club Amsterdam venue, typical of the era's temporary setups on public or rented urban spaces before dedicated stadiums emerged.[9] Key founding figures included C.C. Zeverijn, who led the club as captain and facilitated its rule adoption, alongside influences from the cricket clubs' leadership; notably, poet and socialist Herman Gorter had co-founded C.C. R.U.N. in 1882, motivating the transition by promoting multi-sport activities among Amsterdam's educated middle class to foster physical and social development.[9][8] This shift was driven by football's appeal as a faster-paced, team-oriented alternative to cricket, aligning with broader European trends in recreational sports during the 1880s.[10]National dominance in the 1890s
In the early 1890s, AVV RAP, founded as an offshoot of Amsterdam's cricket clubs, emerged as a dominant force in Dutch football by securing its first national championship in the 1891–92 season of the Netherlands Football League Championship. Competing in the inaugural structured Eerste Klasse with nine matches, RAP finished with eight wins and one loss, scoring 45 goals while conceding only nine, to claim the title ahead of R.C. en V.V. Rotterdam.[11] This victory marked RAP's breakthrough, showcasing their attacking prowess in key fixtures such as a 6–0 rout of Olympia on December 21, 1890, and a decisive 5–1 win over H.F.C. Haarlem on March 28, 1892, which helped solidify their lead.[11] RAP reinforced its supremacy with back-to-back titles in 1893–94 and later in the decade, amassing four championships by 1899 and contributing to the league's evolution from informal competitions to a more organized national framework. In 1893–94, across ten matches, they recorded eight wins and two losses, netting 27 goals against eight conceded, to edge out H.F.C. Haarlem by two points; pivotal results included a 3–1 home victory over Haarlem on December 17, 1893, and a 4–0 thrashing of H.V.V. Den Haag on March 11, 1894, which clinched the crown.[12] The 1896–97 campaign saw RAP top Afdeeling 1 unbeaten in all but one draw, winning ten of twelve games with a staggering 52–10 goal differential, highlighted by a 10–1 demolition of Victoria Rotterdam on February 14, 1897, and a 7–0 win against Sparta Rotterdam on March 21, 1897; no national playoff occurred due to administrative disputes.[13] RAP defended their title in 1897–98, finishing first in Afdeeling 1 with nine wins, two draws, and one loss (39–8 goals), including an 8–0 rout of H.V.V. on November 21, 1897, before defeating Vitesse Arnhem 4–2 in the national final on April 24, 1898.[14] Their unbeaten 1898–99 Afdeeling 1 run—ten wins, two draws, 37–15 goals—featured intense clashes like a 6–5 thriller against Haarlem on November 20, 1898, and a 4–1 away win over Sparta on December 18, 1898 (abandoned mid-match due to crowd unrest but awarded); RAP then overcame Prinses Wilhelmina Enschede 3–2 and 2–1 in the playoff to secure the championship.[15] These successes, often against regional powerhouses like Haarlem, fostered early rivalries that intensified competition and helped standardize rules across the Netherlands Football Association (NVB).[12][15] RAP's domestic reign peaked with victory in the inaugural KNVB Cup (Holdert-beker) in 1898–99, a knockout tournament involving 32 teams that introduced structured cup play to Dutch football. RAP progressed emphatically: 5–0 over Swift Amsterdam in the first round, 4–1 against Ajax in the second, 7–1 versus B.V.V. Den Haag in the third, and 2–1 over Prinses Wilhelmina in the semifinals.[15] In the final on May 7, 1899, at Heemstede's Spanjaardslaan, RAP defeated H.V.V. Den Haag 1–0 after extra time, with Jan Hisgen scoring the winner in the 117th minute before a crowd of 2,000; this triumph made RAP the first double winners, as they also claimed the league title that season.[15] The cup run underscored RAP's depth, with the team playing 19 competitive matches overall (17 wins, two draws, 61–21 goals), and highlighted their role in elevating the sport's profile amid growing amateur structures.[15] During this era, RAP's style emphasized fluid combination play and high-scoring attacks, typical of the transitional 2-3-5 formation prevalent in late-19th-century Dutch football, which prioritized forward lines over rigid defense.[13] Notable Amsterdam-born contributors included forwards like Jan Hisgen, whose extra-time goal sealed the cup final, and midfielders such as those from the club's cricket-originated roster, though specific lineups varied due to the amateur nature of the game.[15] Rivalries with H.F.C. Haarlem developed through repeated league encounters, such as the tight 1893–94 title race where Haarlem finished second, and high-stakes games like the 6–5 win in 1898–99, fostering regional tension in the west.[12][15] While direct clashes with northern side Be Quick 1887 were limited to potential national contexts, RAP's consistent western dominance indirectly challenged eastern clubs like them in the evolving NVB framework, aiding the shift toward more professionalized administration by the decade's end.[5]International participation and the 1900 Coupe Van der Straeten Ponthoz
The Coupe Van der Straeten Ponthoz was established in 1900 by Belgian count Carl Van der Straeten Ponthoz as an international club tournament held in Brussels, inviting the champions of the Netherlands, Belgium, and Switzerland to compete for a trophy billed as the "club championship of the continent."[16] The event took place over Easter weekend (April 15–17) at the Léopold FC ground on Chaussée de Waterloo, with invitations extended to clubs from Austria and Germany that ultimately did not participate; Antwerp Daring Club and Iris Club of France also withdrew prior to the matches.[16] As the Dutch champions from the 1898/99 season, AVV RAP (also known as R.A.P. Amsterdam) represented the Netherlands alongside H.V.V. from The Hague, the 1899/00 titleholders.[16] The team traveled by train from Amsterdam to Brussels for the three-day event, arriving to face a competitive field that included Belgium's Racing Club de Bruxelles and Switzerland's Grasshopper Club Zürich.[17] In the first round on April 15, RAP defeated Racing Club 2–1, with goals from Freek Kampschreur and an own goal securing the victory against the Belgian hosts.[16] The following day, in the semi-final, they overcame Grasshopper 3–2, thanks to strikes from Kampschreur, Jan Hisgen, and E. van den Berg, showcasing aggressive forward play that neutralized the Swiss side's counterattacks.[16] The final on April 17 pitted RAP against fellow Dutch club H.V.V., resulting in a 2–1 win for RAP (an own goal in the 65th minute, van den Berg in the 80th, and Hisgen in the 85th), clinching the inaugural title; the squad included guest players like Gorter and van den Berg from Haarlem to bolster the lineup.[16] The tournament marked one of the earliest cross-border club competitions in European football, adhering to standard association rules of the era without notable innovations, though it highlighted the growing logistical feasibility of international travel for amateur teams via rail.[16] Upon return, RAP received a hero's welcome in Amsterdam, with contemporary reports praising their disciplined tactics and the event's role in elevating Dutch football's profile abroad.[16] This victory established AVV RAP as the first Dutch club to claim an international honor, enhancing their reputation as continental pioneers and foreshadowing greater regional rivalries in the sport's formative years.[16]Decline and merger in the 1910s
Following its peak in the late 1890s, AVV RAP experienced a marked decline in competitive performance after 1900, failing to win any further national championships despite its earlier dominance. The club's last title came in the 1898–99 season, after which it struggled against the influx of new rivals in Amsterdam's burgeoning football scene, including AFC (founded 1895) and the rapidly rising Ajax (founded 1900). By the 1909–10 season, RAP had been relegated to the Western Second Division, a stark contrast to its previous status in the top tier. This downturn was exacerbated by the amateur nature of Dutch football at the time, which restricted financial resources and player development, leaving established clubs like RAP unable to match the organizational growth of newcomers.[18] Key seasons in the 1910s highlighted RAP's challenges, with few standout results amid consistent underperformance. In 1910, the club suffered a 5–0 defeat to Kampong, underscoring its vulnerabilities in regional play. The following year, RAP hosted a notable international exhibition match in 1911 against a Netherlands vs. England Amateur XI at its Oud-Roosenburgh ground, but the event was overshadowed by a stand collapse that injured spectators, further straining the club's resources. No significant cup runs or regional successes materialized during this period, as RAP languished at the lower end of league tables from 1911 to 1914, often finishing near the bottom of the Netherlands Football League Championship standings. These results reflected broader internal strains, including limited infrastructure and the shifting dynamics of Amsterdam's football landscape, where new stadiums and multi-sport facilities were emerging.[18] The culmination of RAP's decline came with its merger on 23 July 1914 with fellow Amsterdam club Volharding, initially forming the Voetbal- en Cricketclub (VRC), or Volharding RAP Combination; Amstels soon joined, establishing the Amsterdamsche Sport Vereeniging VRA on 5 September 1914. Initiated by stadium secretary J.M. Coucke, the union aimed to consolidate resources amid financial pressures and competitive irrelevance, allowing the new entity to operate from the modern Sportpark while incorporating both football and cricket activities. This merger ended RAP's independent existence as a football club, with VRC/VRA continuing football until 1917, after which it pivoted exclusively to cricket in response to the era's amateur limitations and the professionalizing trends in Dutch sport.[18][8]Achievements
Domestic honours
AVV RAP, founded in 1887, emerged as a dominant force in early Dutch football, securing five Netherlands Football League Championship titles between 1891 and 1899, which underscored their pioneering role in establishing competitive standards in the nascent national league system.[19] These victories occurred during a period when the competition evolved from a single-division Eerste Klasse format to regional sections culminating in national playoffs, reflecting RAP's adaptability and superiority over rivals like H.V.V. and HFC Haarlem.[5] The club's success laid the groundwork for their participation in early international competitions, such as the 1900 Coupe Van der Straeten Ponthoz. The first title came in the 1891–92 season, when RAP topped the single-division Eerste Klasse with 8 wins and 1 loss in 9 matches, scoring 45 goals while conceding just 9, defeating key opponents like R.C. en V.V. Rotterdam decisively.[11] In 1893–94, they repeated as champions in the same format, finishing with 8 wins and 2 losses over 10 games, netting 27 goals against 8 conceded, in a season marked by strong performances against H.F.C. Haarlem.[12] The 1896–97 campaign saw RAP win Afdeeling 1 of the divided Eerste Klasse unbeaten in most matches (10 wins, 1 draw, 1 loss; 52 goals for, 10 against), though no national playoff occurred due to administrative disputes, leading some records to recognize it as a shared or sectional title contributing to their tally of five championships.[13][19] RAP's dominance peaked with back-to-back Landskampioenschap titles in 1897–98 and 1898–99, the latter under the new playoff system where section winners competed for the national crown. In 1897–98, they secured Afdeeling 1 before winning the national playoff against Vitesse 4–2.[14] The 1898–99 season was particularly notable, as RAP remained undefeated in the league with 10 wins and 2 draws (37 goals for, 15 against), before winning the playoffs 5–3 aggregate against Prinses Wilhelmina (3–2 home, 2–1 away), highlighting their offensive prowess led by forwards like Jan Hisgen.[15] Across these championship seasons, RAP averaged over 4 goals per match while maintaining a robust defense, with totals like 172 goals scored in 36 competitive games from 1891–99, establishing them as the era's most prolific team.[19] In addition to league honors, AVV RAP won the inaugural KNVB Cup, known as the Holdertbeker, in the 1898–99 season, defeating H.V.V. 1–0 in the final on May 7, 1899, in Heemstede after extra time (goal by Hisgen in the 117th minute).[15] This victory marked the first Dutch league-and-cup double and symbolized RAP's comprehensive national supremacy in a tournament involving 18 clubs across three districts.[6]| Season | Competition | Result | Key Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1891–92 | Netherlands Football League Championship (Eerste Klasse) | Champions | 8W-1L, 45–9 goals; no playoff |
| 1893–94 | Netherlands Football League Championship (Eerste Klasse) | Champions | 8W-2L, 27–8 goals; no playoff |
| 1896–97 | Netherlands Football League Championship (Afdeeling 1) | Section Champions | 10W-1D-1L, 52–10 goals; no national playoff |
| 1897–98 | Landskampioenschap | Champions | Afdeeling 1 winners; national playoff win vs. Vitesse (4–2) |
| 1898–99 | Landskampioenschap & Holdertbeker | Double Champions | League: 10W-2D, 37–15 goals; Playoffs: 5–3 agg. vs. Prinses Wilhelmina; Cup final: 1–0 vs. H.V.V. (aet) |
