Marcel Peeper

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Marcel Peeper
Personnel
Surname Marcel Benjamin Peeper
birthday September 9, 1965
place of birth AmsterdamNetherlands
position Left winger
Juniors
Years station
Amsterdamsche FC
Ajax Amsterdam
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1985-1989 HFC Haarlem
1989-1993 FC Twente 37 0(1)
1993 Sparta Rotterdam 11 0(0)
1993-1997 SC Lokeren 132 (19)
1997-1999 FC Groningen 39 0(0)
1999/2000 Wuppertal SV 5 0(0)
2000 Türkiyemspor Amsterdam
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1990 Netherlands 1 0(0)
1 Only league games are given.

Marcel Benjamin Peeper (born September 9, 1965 in Amsterdam ) is a Dutch former football player . He was active in the Eredivisie for HFC Haarlem and FC Twente , among others . In Germany he played one season at Wuppertaler SV in the Oberliga Nordrhein . He also made an international match with the Dutch national team , during which he had to be replaced after 18 minutes with a broken leg.

Club career

Peeper played in his youth in his hometown of Amsterdam, first with Amsterdamsche FC and then with Ajax , for which his father Sjaak Peeper had been active in the mid-1950s. He was supposed to get a professional contract with coach Johan Cruijff's team , but Ajax offered his father too little money. His professional career therefore began at HFC Haarlem , for which he competed in the Eredivisie from 1985. The peeper, who was deployed on the left wing or in the left midfield , stood out less as a goal getter than as a preparer with an overview; in his first season he didn't even hit the opponent's box in 24 games. He himself later said: “My father told me all the years that I had to play more selfishly, look for my own chances more. But if I saw a teammate standing free, he got the ball. ”In all, Peeper only scored nine goals in 115 first division appearances in his four seasons in Haarlem . In the second half of his time in Haarlem, Dick Advocaat Peepers was coach, who had his first coaching station in paid football with the HFC.

For the 1989/90 season Peeper moved to league rivals FC Twente in Enschede , who secured third place in Dutch football for the third time in a row behind PSV and Ajax. With coach Theo Vonk , Peeper earned a regular place in the team around team captain Fred Rutten and the Danish center forward Claus Nielsen, who also moved to Enschede this season . In September 1989 Peeper made his international debut in the UEFA Cup against Club Brugge . The national team's coaching team also became aware of him during this time. After 29 competitive games for the Tukkers , he came to his mission in Oranje , which ended with a broken leg and more than two years injury break. It was only towards the end of the 1991/92 season that he came back to the first team of FC Twente, but in 1992 he only played eleven games. It did not find its old form again. In the winter of 1992/93 he was loaned to Sparta Rotterdam for the second half of the season.

For the 1993/94 season Peeper went to the second division in Belgium . He flourished again at FC Lokeren, scoring eight goals in 34 matches in his first season there. After three seasons he rose to the First Division with Lokeren . He played in Belgium for a year in the top class, after which he tried again from 1997 in the Eredivisie at FC Groningen , with whom he had to be relegated. After playing one season in the second Dutch league, Wuppertaler SV signed him, for which he made his first competitive game at the zoo in the DFB Cup on August 1, 1999 against Kickers Offenbach . The WSV should be its last club in paid football; from the summer of 2000 Peeper ended his career with the amateurs of Türkiyemspor in Amsterdam.

Stations

  • Amsterdamsche FC (youth)
  • AFC Ajax (Youth)
  • HFC Haarlem (1985-89) 115 games (9 goals) in the Eredivisie
  • FC Twente (1989–93) 37 games (1 goal) in the Eredivisie, 2 games in the Dutch Cup, 2 games in the European Cup
  • Sparta Rotterdam (1993) 11 games in the Eredivisie
  • SC Lokeren (1993–97) 31 games in the first division, 101 games (19 goals) in the second division
  • FC Groningen (1997–99), 29 games in the Eredivisie, 10 games in the Eerste Divisie
  • Wuppertaler SV (1999/2000) 5 games in the Oberliga Nordrhein, 1 game in the DFB-Pokal
  • Türkiyemspor Amsterdam (2000)

National team

After Peeper moved to FC Twente and became a regular player there , Nol de Ruiter, who had been promoted to interim bond coach after Thijs Libregts was fired , appointed him to the national team for the first time in the spring of 1990 . Peeper flew with the Elftal to Kiev for a "friendly game" against the selection of the USSR , against which he was on March 28, 1990 in the central stadium in Kiev on the left in the starting lineup of the Dutch. After just ten minutes, the Soviet football team took the lead with a penalty; but what stuck in the minds of everyone who watched this game on the screens in the Netherlands was what happened eight minutes later. Despite the residue, Peeper and Richard Witschge dominated the left attacking side. When Witschge passed Peeper in the 18th minute, he went steeply on the sideline to cross from there. The Belarusian Gorlukowitsch , who played for Borussia Dortmund and right defender of the Soviet team, straddled Peeper's legs with an extended leg - a foul that referee Sándor Puhl did not punish. Years later, a Dutch journalist described the result with the words Kiev: Krak ("Kiew: Knacks"): When he stepped on Peeper's lower leg, Gorlukowitsch had broken his shin and fibula.

The Dutchman was cared for in Kiev, his leg was put in a cast, in Peeper's opinion it took "half a day". It wasn't until two days later, after returning home, that Peeper found out how complicated the injury was. Four operations were necessary; Even today he has a nail in his shin from the calf to the knee, with which the bone was stabilized after multiple fractures. His further career was interrupted for almost two and a half years. The secret hope of being at the World Cup in Italy had died. The KNVB took care of Peeper, paid him a Mediterranean cruise to the World Cup, during which he could attend World Cup games; but a second appearance in the national team was out of the question even after his recovery. So the match on March 28, 1990 was Peeper's only international match.

It was only more than 21 years later, on May 21, 2011, that Peeper wore the orange jersey again when he made his debut in the selection of the old international at the anniversary game of VV Schagen on the occasion of its centenary.

Private

1990 was also a bad year for Peeper in his private life. A few weeks before the broken leg, his girlfriend had had a fatal car accident; his friend and sports mate Tom Krommendijk was also killed in a car accident. After his footballing career, Peeper opened two clothing stores.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Karel NL Grazell, 18 minutes in Oranje , on the Geheugen van Oost website from 2007, viewed on October 29, 2009
  2. "Mijn vader zegt al jaren dat ik egoistic moet zijn, Meer mijn own kansen moet zoeken. Maar as ik een medespeler vrij zie staan, krijgt the de bal." , quoted from Het voetballeven van Marcel Peeper ( Memento from November 26, 2004 in the Internet Archive ), Sportpaleis de Jong from October 29, 1999, viewed on October 29, 2009
  3. a b Rob Pietersen, Altijd iets moois om naar uit te zien , in Trouw on October 24, 2000, viewed on October 29, 2009
  4. a b c d Profile at Voetbalfocus.nl
  5. Page no longer available , search in web archives: player statistics on the FC Twente website@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.fctwente.nl
  6. Page no longer available , search in web archives: Profile at PlayerHistory.com@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / soccerdatabase.eu
  7. Game data ( Memento of the original from September 6, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. at Fussballdaten.de @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.fussballdaten.de
  8. Page no longer available , search in web archives: Martin Laamers en de beenbreuk in Kiev , De Gelderlander of October 24, 2007, viewed on Vitesse.org on October 29, 2009@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.scarlet.nl
  9. a b Marcel Peeper gaat 17 jaar na zijn beenbreuk tegen Rusland gewoon kijken. (No longer available online.) In: debalisnietrond.web-log.nl. February 5, 2007, archived from the original on March 31, 2007 ; Retrieved December 29, 2019 (Dutch).
  10. Debuut Peeper bij Ex-internationals ( Memento of the original from March 13, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , OnsOranje website of the KNVB from May 22, 2011 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / onsoranje.nl
  11. Het voetballeven van Marcel Peeper ( Memento from November 26, 2004 in the Internet Archive ), Sportpaleis de Jong from October 29, 1999, viewed on October 29, 2009