Sunday, 17 May 2026

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All photos: (c) W.B. Tukker / www.extremefootballtourism.blogspot.com. Publication of any of these images only after permission of author

NETHERLANDS: RKVV Obbicht (1980-2019) / SV Argo (2019-2026)

Sportpark De Baendj, Obbicht (formerly RKVV Obbicht & SV Argo)

Netherlands, province: Limburg

17 V 2026 / SV Argo - vv Zwentibold 0-3 / District South II, Sunday League 5C (= NL level 10)

Timeline
  • 1915 / A group of boys from Obbicht, a village hemmed in between the River Meuse and the Belgian border in the south of the Netherlands’ Province of Limburg, gets together to play improvised football matches in a pasture owned by Goswien Stoffers on the fringes of the village, with the small pitch being referred to locally as Sjteine Koel. In the following years, improvised football matches continue to be played on meadows elsewhere around Obbicht, locations with colourful names such as Op den Elleba, Op de Baandj, and Op de Greentj.
  • ± 1918 / The group of youngsters from Obbicht, under the leadership of Willem van Mulken, decides to take the leap and form a football club, which is given the name De Stormvogels. They play recreational matches against teams from surrounding villages, with home games taking place on the so-called Wei van Knops.
  • 1921 / De Stormvogels joins the so-called Roomsch-Katholieke Limburgsche Voetbalbond (RKLVB), the Limburg sub-branch of the Netherlands’ Roman Catholic Football Federation (RKF), probably under the official name RKVV Stormvogels.
  • 1923 / (RKVV?) Stormvogels folds, ceasing all activities.
  • 1924 / Foundation of a new football club in Obbicht, which takes on the name Roomsch-Katholieke Voetbalvereeniging (RKVV) Sparta, with Willem Munsters taking on the role of chairman. Initially, no membership of a football federation is sought, with activities taking place at Sjteine Koel.
  • 1925 / Moving away from Terrein Sjteine Koel, RKVV Sparta settles on a newly laid-out pitch at Burgemeester Venckenstraat (with another entrance being created at Bornerweg later on) – a pitch which is in conformity with the rules of the RKLVB, which Sparta joins this same year, being placed in RKLVB Division 2D for the 1925-26 season.
  • 1926 / Runner-up in RKLVB Division 2B, 2 points behind RVC (Stein) Reserves, RKVV Sparta wins promotion to RKLVB Division 1.
  • 1928 / Finishing in third place in RKLVB Division 1 behind Roosteren and VVS, RKVV Sparta wins promotion to RKLVB Overgangsklasse.
  • 1929 / Following a row, in which a priest attending a match noting that a Sparta player had used unbecoming language notified RKLVB authorities, RKVV Sparta withdraws its membership of the Roman Catholic Federation in December 1929.
  • 1930 / RKVV Sparta joins the neutral, non-confessional Limburgsche Voetbalbond (LVB), the Limburg sub-branch of the official Netherlands’ Football Association (KNVB), being placed in LVB (Sunday) Division 1.
  • 1931 / Clinching the title in LVB Division 1, RKVV Sparta wins promotion to KNVB District South II’s Sunday League 3.
  • 1934 / RKVV Sparta finishes as runner-up in District South II’s Sunday League 3G, 3 points behind champions SV Staatsmijn Maurits.
  • 1935 / Finishing in fifth place in District South II’s Sunday League 3G, RKVV Sparta renounces its membership of the KNVB and LVB following the 1934-35 season, returning into the fold of the RKLVB (RKF) under a new name, RKVV Obbicht, almost certainly due to another member club having older rights to the name ‘Sparta’. For the 1935-36 season, RKVV Obbicht is placed in Division 2 of the so-called IVCB, i.e. Interdiocesane Voetbalcompetitiebond, the nationwide RKF competition.
  • 1939 / RKVV Obbicht finishes as runner-up in IVCB Division 2 South alongside RKVV DES (Swalmen), 4 points behind champions RKSV Minor.
  • 1940 / Having spent the last five pre-war years in the ranks of the RKF / RKLVB, RKVV Obbicht is now constrained to make the step to the official Netherlands’ FA (renamed NVB following the German oppression of the Netherlands, abandoning the royal epithet ‘koninklijk’ for obvious reasons), as all other football associations are abolished by German occupation authorities. The club is placed in District South II’s Sunday League 3.
  • 1949 / Finishing bottom of the table in District South II’s Sunday League 3C, RKVV Obbicht saves its skin in the relegation play-offs, finishing in first place in a group of three, ahead of RKVV Havantia and RKVVH.
  • 1950 / Finishing bottom of the table in District South II’s Sunday League 3C for the second year running, RKVV Obbicht once again saves its skin in the relegation play-offs, finishing in first place in a group of four, ahead of SV Schuttersveld, vv Spaubeek, and VfR Tüddern (Tudderen).
  • 1956 / Midfielder Jean Munsters, who had made the leap from RKVV Obbicht to the reserves’ team of Fortuna ’54 the previous year, now makes his professional league debut with the club from Geleen at the age of 23. Munsters would go on to stay with Fortuna ’54 for twelve seasons, playing a total of 326 matches, before ending his career in Belgium with KSC Hasselt in 1969.
  • 1957 / Finishing bottom of the table in District South II’s Sunday League 3C, RKVV Obbicht goes on to suffer defeat in a relegation play-off against PSV ’35, played at the ground of vv RIOS ’31 (2-1). As such, the club descends into Sunday League 4 for the first time.
  • 1958 / RKVV Obbicht finishes as runner-up in District South II’s Sunday League 4D, 2 points behind champions RKVV IVS.
  • 1962 / Finishing in joint first place in District South II’s Sunday League 4D with RKVV Buchten, RKVV Obbicht meets its rivals in a tie-break match, played at the ground of professional league side RKSV Sittardia (Sittardia-terrein aan de Baandert). Going on to win that encounter (2-1), RKVV Obbicht qualifies for the championship play-offs, in which the club finishes first in a group of four, ahead of SV Maasvogels, RKVV Rimburg, and vv Walram – with Frans Kitzen scoring no fewer than 11 goals for Obbicht in these six play-off encounters. As such, RKVV Obbicht wins promotion to Sunday League 3. The successful coach is J. Muyres. Also in 1962, floodlights are put in place at the main pitch of RKVV Obbicht at Burgemeester Venckenstraat.
  • 1963 / Runner-up in District South II’s Sunday League 3A, 1 point behind champions RKHSV, RKVV Obbicht qualifies for a play-off for one additional promotion place against KVC Oranje, RKSV IVO, and vv SVM. However, with Obbicht finishing in third place – in spite of, again, 11 goals by centre-forward Frans Kitzen – KVC Oranje clinches the extra promotion ticket.
  • 1964 / New dressing rooms are added to the set-up at the ground of RKVV Obbicht at Burgemeester Venckenstraat.
  • 1965 / RKVV Obbicht finishes as runner-up in District South II’s Sunday League 3C, 2 points behind champions RKSV Laar.
  • 1966 / Champions in District South II’s Sunday League 3C, 4 points ahead of closest followers PSV ’35, RKVV Obbicht wins promotion to Sunday League 2. The decisive points are clinched in a 3-2 win over vv Thorn.
  • 1968 / Coached by Piet Hendrix, RKVV Obbicht finishes in second-last place in District South II’s Sunday League 2A, thus dropping back into Sunday League 3 after three years, alongside bottom club RKSV Haslou.
  • 1971 / The floodlights at the main pitch of RKVV Obbicht at Burgemeester Venckenstraat are moved to the training pitch.
  • 1972 / The ground of RKVV Obbicht at Burgemeester Venckenstraat is taken over by municipal authorities.
  • 1973 / Finishing in second-last place in District South II’s Sunday League 3C alongside RKSVN and SV EMS, RKVV Obbicht meets those two clubs in a relegation play-off – and with all three teams finishing on two points (one win, one defeat), RKVV Obbicht draws the shorter straw due to having the worst goal difference of the three following its 5-1 defeat against RKSVN. As such, Obbicht descends into Sunday League 4, along with bottom club SV Altweerderheide. 
  • 1975 / Finishing in joint first place in District South II’s Sunday League 4E with vv Limbricht, RKVV Obbicht meets its rivals in a tie-break match, played at the ground of RKSC Susteren. Thanks to a solitary goal by Math Toonen, Obbicht crowns itself champion, thus gaining promotion to Sunday League 3. The successful coach is Mr Pepels.
  • 1979 / Finishing bottom of the table in District South II’s Sunday League 3C, RKVV Obbicht drops back into Sunday League 4 alongside the club in second-last place, vv RIOS ’31.
  • 1980 / Champions in District South II’s Sunday League 4E, 2 points ahead of runner-up RKVV Buchten, RKVV Obbicht manages an immediate return to Sunday League 3. The decisive points are clinched in a 6-1 away win at OVCS. The successful coaching duo consists of Mr Maas & Mr Hustinx. In the summer of 1980, moving away from their ground since the 1920s at Burgemeester Venckenstraat, RKVV Obbicht settles at a newly laid-out ground, consisting of three pitches, at Kasteelweg – with the new facilities, which are given the name Sportpark De Baandj (later usually spelled as Baendj), being officially inaugurated by Obbicht’s mayor, F.I.J. Loeffen.
  • 1981 / RKVV Obbicht finishes as runner-up in District South II’s Sunday League 3C, 5 points behind champions vv (DES) Swalmen.
  • 1983 / Finishing in joint first place in District South II’s Sunday League 3C with PSV ’35, RKVV Obbicht meets the club from Posterholt in a tie-break match, played at the ground of RKSC Susteren. Suffering a 2-1 defeat on the day, Obbicht has to make do with a place in a promotion competition, organised due to one extra promotion place being available. Going on to have the better of RKVV Heksenberg, vv Sparta ’18, and RKVVL, RKVV Obbicht succeeds in winning promotion to Sunday League 2.
  • 1985 / In the best season in club history, RKVV Obbicht finishes in third place in District South II’s Sunday League 2B, only 3 points behind champions vv Sparta ’18.
  • 1991 / Finishing in tenth place in District South II’s Sunday League 2B, RKVV Obbicht descends into Sunday League 3, along with MVC ’19 and bottom club vv Helden.
  • 1994 / Finishing in second-last place in District South II’s Sunday League 3B, RKVV Obbicht is retrograded into Sunday League 4 alongside bottom club RKVV Heksenberg.
  • 1995 / RKVV Obbicht finishes as runner-up in District South II’s Sunday League 4E, 1 point behind champions RKSC Susteren.
  • 1996 / Champions in District South II’s Sunday League 4E, 5 points ahead of runner-up RKVV Maasbracht, RKVV Obbicht wins promotion to Sunday League 3.
  • 1997 / Finishing in ninth place in District South II’s Sunday League 3C, RKVV Obbicht descends into Sunday League 4 alongside vv (DES) Swalmen and bottom club RKVV Eindse Boys.
  • 1998 / Finishing bottom of the table in District South II’s Sunday League 4E, RKVV Obbicht is retrograded into Sunday League 5 along with the club in second-last place, RKVV Juliana K.
  • 2000 / RKVV Obbicht finishes as runner-up in District South II’s Sunday League 5C, 8 points behind champions vv MHD.
  • 2001 / Champions in District South II’s Sunday League 5A, 6 points ahead of closest followers vv Partij ’33, RKVV Obbicht manages an immediate return to Sunday League 4.
  • 2005 / Finishing bottom of the table in District South II’s Sunday League 4D with coach Harrie Ubachs, RKVV Obbicht drops back into Sunday League 5, alongside the club in second-last place, vv Vlodrop.
  • 2010 / Coached by former first team player Math Thoonen, RKVV Obbicht finishes bottom of the table in District South II’s Sunday League 5C, thus descending into Sunday League 6, along with the club in second-last place, RKVV Doenrade.
  • 2015 / Champions in District South II’s Sunday League 6B, 4 points ahead of closest rivals SV Egchel, RKVV Obbicht wins promotion – not to Sunday League 5, but to Sunday League 4, due to the League 6 level being abolished in the new season. The successful coach is Frans Korsten.
  • 2016 / Finishing in fourth place in District South II’s Sunday League 4C, RKVV Obbicht qualifies for the promotion play-offs, in which the club is knocked out in R1 by RKVV Haelen (6-1 aggr.).
  • 2017 / Runner-up in District South II’s Sunday League 4C, 10 points behind runaway champions RKFC Lindenheuvel-Heidebloem Combinatie, RKVV Obbicht qualifies for the promotion play-offs, in which the club eases past Oranje Blauw ’15 in R1 (9-1 aggr.), only to suffer elimination in the final at the hands of RKVB (2-1 aggr.).
  • 2018 / Runaway champions in District South II’s Sunday League 4C, 10 points ahead of closest followers vv Roosteren, RKVV Obbicht wins promotion to Sunday League 3. The successful coach is Herman Vranken.
  • 2019 / In its last season as an independent club, RKVV Obbicht finishes in eighth place in District South II’s Sunday League 3B. Following the 2018-19 season, the club concludes a merger with vv Armada from the neighbouring village of Grevenbicht, a club playing its football in Sunday League 5. The new merger club is given the name Sportvereniging (SV) Argo, with first team football being played at Sportpark De Baendj (Baandj) in Obbicht, and Sportpark Den Dreesj in Grevenbicht remaining in use for the youth academy. Underlining its ambitions, SV Argo signs Michel Broeders as its new head coach; Broeders is a former professional league defender, who defended the colours of Roda JC for seven years (1987-94).
  • 2021 / Michel Broeders leaves SV Argo after two years, with his role as coach being taken over by his former teammate Eric van der Luer. This midfielder has a successful professional league career (1982-2004) at MVV, FC Assent, Roda JC, and Alemannia Aachen, moreover also winning 2 caps for the Netherlands (1995).
  • 2022 / Eric van der Luer leaves SV Argo after one season as the club’s head coach.
  • 2023 / Coached by André Boessen, SV Argo finishes in second-last place in District South II’s Sunday League 3A, thus descending into Sunday League 3 alongside bottom club SVC 2000. Also in 2023, Sportpark Den Dreesj in Grevenbicht is abandoned, with all of the activities of SV Argo henceforth taking place at Sportpark De Baendj.
  • 2024 / Finishing in second-last place in District South II’s Sunday League 4C with coach Youssef Marouani, SV Argo is retrograded into Sunday League 5 alongside vv Zwentibold and bottom club vv SVM.
  • 2025 / Runner-up in District South II’s Sunday League 5B, 2 points behind champions Sporting HAC, SV Argo qualifies for the promotion play-offs, in which the club draws a bye in R1, only to be eliminated in R2 by RK BVV ’27 (1-4 A.E.T.).
  • 2026 / Moving away from Sportpark De Baendj (Baandj), SV Argo settles at the newly laid-out Centrale Onderwijs- en Sportvoorziening (COS) at Kempenweg in Grevenbicht.
Note – Much of the information above has been derived from a booklet, published on the occasion of the sixtieth anniversary of RKVV Obbicht: “60 jaar vv Obbicht. Uitgegeven bij gelegenheid van het 60-jarig bestaan der RKVV Obbicht”, by Hans Smeets & Math Toonen (ed. RKVV Obbicht: 1984). Thanks to SV Argo for putting a copy of this booklet at my disposal.















All photos: (c) W.B. Tukker / www.extremefootballtourism.blogspot.com. Publication of any of these images only after permission of author

NETHERLANDS: vv SCKR (1981-2013) / vv Hellas (B) (2013-20??)

Terrein aan de Spoorstraat, Ransdaal (formerly vv SCKR & B ground of vv Hellas)

Netherlands, province: Limburg

May 2026 / no match visited

Timeline
  • 1945 / Foundation of a football club in Ransdaal, a village in the south of the Netherlands’ Province of Limburg, which takes on the name vv SCKR, an abbreviation of Sportclub Klimmen-Ransdaal. As there is no football club in the neighbouring hamlet of Klimmen, the club draws its membership from both communities. It is unclear where vv SCKR played its football in the first 36 years of its existence; however, information could be found that there were four successive locations in this period.
  • 1956 / As vv Klimmania is founded in Klimmen, the bulk of the membership from this village leaves vv SCKR.
  • 1967 / vv SCKR wins promotion from the ranks of Afdeling Limburg to KNVB District South II’s Sunday League 4 for the first time.
  • 1975 / Finishing bottom of the table in District South II’s Sunday League 4C, vv SCKR drops back into Afdeling Limburg Division 1 after eight years.
  • 1976 / vv SCKR manages an immediate return from the ranks of Afdeling Limburg to Sunday League 4.
  • 1977 / Champions in District South II’s Sunday League 4B, 2 points ahead of closest rivals vv RVU, vv SCKR wins promotion to Sunday League 3 for the first and only time in its existence.
  • 1978 / Finishing bottom of the table in District South II’s Sunday League 3A, vv SCKR descends into Sunday League 4 after one season only, alongside the club in second-last place, SV Zwart Wit ’19.
  • 1980 / Finishing bottom of the table in District South II’s Sunday League 4B, vv SCKR drops back into Afdeling Limburg Division 1, along with the club in second-last position, SV Nyswiller. In one of the following four seasons, the club even descends into Division 2 of the said league system.
  • 1981 / Having played at four successive locations following its foundation in 1945, vv SCKR now settles at the newly laid-out Terrein aan de Spoorstraat. 
  • 1985 / Clinching the title in Afdeling Limburg Division 2, vv SCKR wins promotion to Division 1 of the said league system.
  • 1992 / After twelve years in the ranks of Afdeling Limburg, vv SCKR now manages a return to Sunday League 4.
  • 2001 / vv SCKR finishes as runner-up in District South II’s Sunday League 4B, 6 points behind champions FC Gulpen.
  • 2004 / Finishing in second-last place in District South II’s Sunday League 4B, vv SCKR descends into Sunday League 5 – the successor of Afdeling Limburg Division 1 – alongside bottom club RKMVC.
  • 2008 / Finishing in third place in District South II’s Sunday League 5B, 5 points behind joint champions RKVV Weltania and vv Passart, vv SCKR goes on to win the promotion play-offs, thus clinching promotion to Sunday League 4. The successful coach is Ramon Meesen.
  • 2011 / Coached by René Flekken, vv SCKR finishes bottom of the table in District South II’s Sunday League 4B, thus dropping back into Sunday League 5 after three years, alongside the club in second-last place, SV Nyswiller.
  • 2013 / In its last season as an independent club, vv SCKR manages a fifth place in District South II’s Sunday League 5B. Following the 2012-13 season, a merger is concluded with Klimmania-TC – in itself a merger of vv Klimmania and vv Troja in 2001 – resulting in the foundation of vv Hellas. First team football moves to Sportpark De Schrub in Klimmen, with Terrein aan de Spoorstraat remaining in use for lower team football and training sessions.
  • ± 2020 / vv Hellas abandons its B ground, Terrein aan de Spoorstraat in Ransdaal.
  • 2022 / The clubhouse of the former vv SCKR at Spoorstraat is rebuilt to house a group of Ukrainian refugees. 






All photos: (c) W.B. Tukker / www.extremefootballtourism.blogspot.com. Publication of any of these images only after permission of author

NETHERLANDS: RKVV Sibbe (1961-1971) / RKSV Sibbe (1971-)

Sportpark De Kleine Linde, Sibbe (RKSV Sibbe)

Netherlands, province: Limburg

17 V 2026 / SV Sibbe - RKVV Geertruidse Boys III 1-2 / District South II, Reserves' League 6-04

Timeline
  • 1920 / Foundation of a first football club in Sibbe, a hamlet near Valkenburg in the far south of the Netherlands’ Province of Limburg; the new club takes on the name (RKVV?) Wilhelmina, but changes its name to (RKVV?) Sibbe that same year – probably upon joining the so-called Roomsch-Katholieke Limburgsche Voetbalbond (RKLVB), the Limburg sub-branch of the Netherlands’ Roman Catholic Football Federation (RKF). It is unclear where the pitch of this first club in Sibbe was situated.
  • 1922 / (RKVV?) Sibbe folds after being expelled from the RKLVB due to debts owed to the federation. That same year, a successor club sees the daylight, (RKVV?) Zwart-Wit, which is allowed to join the RKLVB.
  • 1923 / (RKVV?) Zwart-Wit is expelled from the RKLVB after one year.
  • 1926 / Three years after the demise of Zwart-Wit, a new club is formed with members from Sibbe as well as the neighbouring hamlet of IJzeren; therefore, this club is given the name SIJ, i.e. Sibbe-IJzeren – probably officially RKVV SIJ. SIJ’s pitch is situated at Daelhemerweg, at the back of the Sibberhoes / Villartshof castle.
  • 1927 / One year after its foundation, (RKVV?) SIJ joins the RKLVB.
  • 1938 / After eleven years as a member club, (RKVV?) SIJ is barred from the RKLVB – officially due to being indebted to the federation, but in fact after several players and supporters beat up a referee in an away match against RKSV Kimbria Reserves in Maastricht. That same year, a successor club sees the daylight, Rooms-Katholieke Voetbalvereniging Sibbe, abbreviated as RKVVS. With Albert Rouwet taking on the role of chairman, the new club joins the RKLVB, with a new pitch being laid out at Daelhemerweg – opposite of the pitch previously used by SIJ.
  • 1939 / RKVVS officially changes – or rather adapts – its name to become RKVV Sibbe. 
  • 1940 / Having spent the first two years of its existence in the RKF / RKLVB, RKVV Sibbe is now constrained to make the step to the official Netherlands’ FA (renamed NVB following the German oppression of the Netherlands, abandoning the royal epithet ‘koninklijk’ for obvious reasons), as all other football associations are abolished by German occupation authorities. The club is placed in Division 2 of Afdeling Limburg, i.e. the sub-branch organising football in Limburg below the level of District South (II)’s (Sunday) League 4.
  • 1944 / Suffering relegation from Afdeling Limburg Division 2, RKVV Sibbe descends into Division 3 of the said league system.
  • 1947 / Clinching the title in Afdeling Limburg Division 2, RKVV Sibbe manages a return to Division 1 of the said league system – with the club thus having won a further promotion (or having been put forward one series) in 1945 or 1946.
  • 1959 / Moving away from its ground at Daelhemerweg (Daalhemerweg), RKVV Sibbe settles on a newly laid-out pitch at Kleine Linde – on the site occupied nowadays by the Weusten farmstead (Kleine Linde 8).
  • 1960 / Having suffered relegation into Afdeling Limburg Division 2 sometime in the course of the 1950s, RKVV Sibbe now clinches the Division 2 title, which heralds the club’s return in Division 1.
  • 1961 / RKVV Sibbe moves away from its initial pitch at Kleine Linde, settling on the current location, only a stone’s throw westward from the original pitch.
  • 1966 / Former RKVV Sibbe youth player Josef ‘Sef’ Geurten, who moved to the youth academy of MVV in 1964, wins the first of five caps for the Netherlands’ U19 team. After five years with MVV, Geurten would go on to wear the colours of vv DOS, FC Utrecht, AS Angoulême, AS Béziers, and SC Toulon.
  • 1967 / RKVV Sibbe is retrograded from Afdeling Limburg Division 1 into Division 2.
  • 1968 / Clinching the title in Afdeling Limburg Division 2, RKVV Sibbe manages an immediate return to Division 1 of the said league system.
  • 1970 / RKVV Sibbe wins promotion from Afdeling Limburg Division 1 to District South II’s Sunday League 4 for the first time.
  • 1971 / A handball branch for women is founded under the aegis of RKVV Sibbe, which is the moment when the football club changed its name to become RKSV (Rooms-Katholieke Sportvereniging) Sibbe - although universally referred to as SV Sibbe.
  • 1972 / Having managed a tenth place in District South II’s Sunday League 4B the previous season, SV Sibbe now finishes bottom of the table in that same division, thus descending back into the ranks of Afdeling Limburg after two years.
  • 1973 / Suffering back-to-back relegations, SV Sibbe drops out of Afdeling Limburg Division 1, thus finding itself in Division 2 of the said league system now.
  • 1976 / SV Sibbe wins promotion from Afdeling Limburg Division 2 to Division 1.
  • 1977 / After one season only, SV Sibbe drops back into Afdeling Limburg Division 2.
  • ± 1978 / In 1978 or 1979, SV Sibbe acquires the luxury of a second pitch at Sportpark De Kleine Linde.
  • 1982 / After building works which got underway in 1981, the clubhouse at SV Sibbe’s ground is inaugurated – replacing the very basic facilities, including dressing rooms erected in wood, which had been in place until that time.
  • 1996 / As Afdeling Limburg and all other KNVB sub-branches are abolished, SV Sibbe is placed in District South II’s Sunday League 6.
  • 1999 / Clinching the title in District South II’s Sunday League 6 (A?), SV Sibbe wins promotion to Sunday League 5. The successful coach is Bert Kessen.
  • 2001 / Finishing in ninth place in District South II’s Sunday League 5A, SV Sibbe drops back into Sunday League 6 after two years, alongside RKVV Geertruidse Boys, vv Banholtia, and bottom club SC Biesland.
  • 2015 / Finishing as runner-up in District South II’s Sunday League 6A, 9 points behind champions SVE, SV Sibbe is placed in Sunday League 5 in the following season – not via promotion play-offs, but because of the abolition of Sunday League 6 in District South II.
  • 2018 / Coached by Willy Quaedvlieg, SV Sibbe finishes bottom of the table in District South II’s Sunday League 5A. Following the 2017-18 season, the club withdraws from regular league football, sticking to playing at a recreational level. 














All photos: (c) W.B. Tukker / www.extremefootballtourism.blogspot.com. Publication of any of these images only after permission of author

Saturday, 16 May 2026

NETHERLANDS: HSV Waard '75 (1975-1986) / vv Molenboys '80 (1980-1986) / SV WMC (1986-2023) / SV Vrone (B) (2023-2025) / SV Vrone (2025-)

Sportpark De Vork, Heerhugowaard (SV Vrone, formerly HSV Waard '75 / vv Molenboys '80 / SV WMC / B ground of SV Vrone)

Netherlands, province: North Holland = Noord-Holland

16 V 2026 / SV Vrone - EVC 0-4 / District West I, Saturday League 4A (= NL level 9)

Timeline
  • 1975 / Foundation of Heerhugowaardse Sportvereniging (HSV) Waard '75. The club settles at Sportpark De Vork, already laid out by Heerhugowaard's municipal authorities some time before in view of the growth of the town's population in those years. Prior to HSV Waard 75's foundation, the pitches were used for training sessions by local clubs SVW '27 and vv Reiger Boys. 
  • 1976 / HSV Waard '75, a Sunday club, first enters teams in the regular competitions organised by the Netherlands FA (KNVB).
  • 1978 / At Sportpark De Vork, HSV Waard '75's new clubhouse is inaugurated. Up until that time, the club had made use of the clubhouse and dressing rooms of BC Herons, the local baseball club which has its home on the other side of the same road.
  • 1980 / HSV Waard '75 is joined at Sportpark De Vork by a newly founded Saturday club, vv Molenboys '80.
  • 1986 / A merger is concluded between HSV Waard '75 and vv Molenboys '80, resulting in the foundation of SV WMC (Sportvereniging Waard-Molenboys Combinatie), with teams in Sunday and Saturday league football.
  • 1996 / KNVB Afdeling Noord-Holland (better known under its previous name, Noord-Hollandse Voetbalbond, NHVB), an association which organised non-league football in the Province of North Holland below KNVB League 4 level, is disbanded. In fact, HSV Waard, Molenboys, and WMC never managed to climb up to League 4 level prior to 1996. In the new situation, SV WMC's Sunday team is placed in the newly formed Sunday League 7B, while the club's Saturday team starts in Saturday League 4A.
  • 2001 / While the club's Saturday team was disbanded some years previously, SV WMC's Sunday team manages to win promotion to League 5 on the basis of a 3rd place finish in District West I's Sunday League 6B and a successful set of matches in the promotion play-offs.
  • 2006 / Having spent the previous 5 seasons in League 5, SV WMC finishes 12th and last in Sunday League 5A, thus descending into League 6.
  • 2007 / Finishing 6th in District West I's Sunday League 6A, SV WMC qualifies for the promotion play-offs, in which it manages to win promotion to League 5. Also in 2007, a new Saturday team is formed, which starts its life in Saturday League 5.
  • 2008 / SV WMC wins the so-called Waard Cup, an annual summer tournament between all 5 football clubs from Heerhugowaard.
  • 2009 / Managing a 5th place in Sunday League 5A and a 2nd place in Saturday League 5A, both of SV WMC's teams win promotion to League 4 after winning the promotion play-offs.
  • 2011 / SV WMC's Saturday team finishes 11th and second-last in Saturday League 4A, thus dropping back into League 5. Two years later, WMC disbands its Saturday team for a second time.
  • 2015 / Not having been held for the past 6 years, the Waard Cup is organised in the summer of 2015 by SV WMC. 
  • 2018 / SV WMC manages its best result ever, finishing 7th in Sunday League 4B.
  • 2019 / With a 13th and last place in the Sunday League 4C table, SV WMC descends into League 5 after 10 years. That summer, the club nearly folds, but a restart is managed at the last juncture.
  • 2023 / In February 2023, SV WMC withdraws all its teams from, ceasing its activities altogether and folding. The reasons given by the club's last chairman, Loek van Hinsberg, are (1) a decrease in membership and (2) the rising energy prices. The ground is temporarily taken over by SV Vrone for training sessions.
  • 2025 / As SV Vrone's own ground, Terrein Boeterslaan in Sint Pancras, undergoes a complete renovation, all activities of the club are temporarily moved to Sportpark De Vork in Heerhugowaard.
Note - Below, a compilation of photos of two different visits: pictures 1-7 = non-matchday visit, May 2023 / pictures 8-22 = match visit, May 2026.






















All photos: (c) W.B. Tukker / www.extremefootballtourism.blogspot.com. Publication of any of these images only after permission of author