Wim Jansen

Dutch association football player and manager


Wilhelmus Marinus Antonius Jansen[1] ([ʋɪmˈjɑn.sə(n)]; 28 October 1946 – 25 January 2022) was a Dutch professional football player and manager. As a midfielder or defender, he spent most of his career at Feyenoord, winning honours including the European Cup in 1970. He earned 65 international caps with the Dutch national team and played in the teams that reached the 1974 and 1978 FIFA World Cup finals. He was known for his exceptional vision, his mentality, ball-winning ability, stamina, and his defensive ability. He was considered irreplaceable. Widely regarded to be one of the best Dutch football players of all time.

Wim Jansen
Jansen in 1978
Personal information
Full nameWilhelmus Marinus Anthonius Jansen
Date of birth(1946-10-28)28 October 1946
Place of birthRotterdam, Netherlands
Date of death25 January 2022(2022-01-25) (aged 75)
Place of deathHendrik-Ido-Ambacht, Netherlands
Height1.65 m (5 ft 5 in)
Position(s)Midfielder, Defender
Youth career
1956–1965Feyenoord
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1965–1980Feyenoord415(33)
1980Washington Diplomats27(0)
1980–1982Ajax49(0)
Total491(33)
National team
1967–1980Netherlands65(1)
Teams managed
1982–1986Feyenoord (youth coach)
1986–1987Feyenoord (assistant)
1987–1988SC Lokeren
1988–1990SVV (technical director)
1990–1993Feyenoord
1993–1994Saudi Arabia (assistant)
1995–1996Sanfrecce Hiroshima
1997–1998Celtic
2002–2003Urawa Red Diamonds (assistant)
2005–2008Feyenoord (technical advisor)
2008–2009Feyenoord (assistant)
Honours
Men's football
Representing  Netherlands
FIFA World Cup
Runner-up1974
Runner-up1978
UEFA European Championship
Third place1976
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Club career

He spent most of his playing career with his hometown team, Feyenoord, between 1965 and 1980. At Feyenoord, Jansen won four League Championships, one Dutch Cup, one UEFA Cup in 1974, and the European Cup in 1970 when Feyenoord defeated Celtic 2–1 in Milan.[2] He was the captain of their 1974 team which defeated Tottenham Hotspur 4–2 on aggregate.[3]

After a brief spell in the North American Soccer League with the Washington Diplomats, he moved to Feyenoord's rivals Ajax, where he won a league title in 1981–82.[2] His debut for Ajax was against his former club in De Kuip in December 1980; a fan of Feyenoord threw an icy snowball at Jansen's eye during warming-up which finally resulted in Jansen being substituted within 20 minutes into the game.[3][4]

Dutch teammate Johan Cruyff considered Jansen to be one of only four men worth paying attention to when they spoke about football.

International career

Jansen in 1974

Jansen earned his first of 65 caps for the Netherlands on 4 October 1967, in a 2–1 loss away to Denmark in UEFA Euro 1968 qualifying. He scored his only international goal in his eighth game on 4 September 1968, a 2–0 win over Luxembourg in his hometown for 1970 FIFA World Cup qualification.[5]

Jansen played all seven games as the Dutch finished runners-up to hosts West Germany at the 1974 FIFA World Cup, and repeated the feat in 1978 as they lost to hosts Argentina.[5] He committed the foul on Bernd Hölzenbein in 1974 which allowed Paul Breitner to equalise with a penalty as the Germans came from behind to beat the Dutch.[3] He also played both games of their bronze-medal finish at UEFA Euro 1976 in Yugoslavia.[5]

Managerial career

Jansen began his managerial career at his old club Feyenoord, where he worked as a coach, and then as assistant manager, between 1983 and 1987. He also had a season as manager of Belgian club SC Lokeren.[6] In 1991, he returned to Feyenoord as manager, winning the KNVB Cup in 1991. The result was a surprise as the club had been near bankruptcy in the preceding years.[7]

Jansen in 2013

The team also won the cup in 1992 and reached the semi-finals of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1991–92.[6] He became Technical Director in 1992, and his old teammate, Willem van Hanegem coached the team to the league in 1993 and the Dutch Cup again the following season. Jansen disagreed with van Hanegem's physical tactics, and argued with chairman Jorien van den Herik when the coach was given a contract extension. He left to work as assistant manager of Saudi Arabia alongside compatriot Leo Beenhakker, and also managed Japanese side Sanfrecce Hiroshima, where he struggled with the language.[8]

On 3 July 1997, Wim Jansen was appointed head coach of Celtic, replacing the sacked Tommy Burns.[9] He was their first manager from outside Great Britain and Ireland,[2] and only the second to have never played for the club.[10] He went on to guide them to their first Scottish league championship in ten years, ending the hopes of rival Rangers to win a tenth consecutive championship.[9] Despite winning the league and the Scottish League Cup during his only season in charge, Jansen left the club less than 48 hours after the title was secured as he was unable to work with general manager Jock Brown.[11] His most notable transfer was the signing of Henrik Larsson from Feyenoord.[12]

At the beginning of the 2008–09 season, Jansen took up the position of assistant to the head coach of the Feyenoord first team, Gertjan Verbeek.[13] He resigned in solidarity when the coach was fired in 2009.[8]

Personal life

Jansen and his family were not religious, and he would practice kicking a ball at a pole on Sundays while all his neighbours were at church.[1] As a child, he lived on the same street (Bloklandstraat), just as Feyenoord teammate Coen Moulijn.[1]

Jansen lived in Hendrik-Ido-Ambacht from the 1970s. In late 2021, he released the biography Meesterbrein ("Mastermind"), written alongside Yoeri van den Busken.[7][8]

Death

Jansen died on 25 January 2022 at his home in Hendrik-Ido-Ambacht, Netherlands from problems caused by dementia, aged 75.[14]

Career statistics

Club

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition[15][16][17][18]
ClubSeasonLeagueCupContinentalTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Feyenoord[a]1965–66Eredivisie20
1966–67342
1967–68346
1968–6933320
1969–7034891
1970–713421141
1971–7234260
1972–7327342
1973–74300120
1974–7528340
1975–7626120
1976–7721161
1977–78320
1978–79301
1979–8016150
Total41533525
Washington Diplomats1980NASL270270
Ajax1980–81Eredivisie170
1981–823202020360
Total49020
Career total49133545

International career statistics

Jansen (centre), Dutch teammates and manager Rinus Michels (second from left) before the 1974 World Cup
Appearances and goals by national team and year[5]
National teamYearAppsGoals
Netherlands196730
196851
196930
197050
197150
197210
197310
1974110
197540
197650
197740
1978120
197950
198010
Total651

Honours

Player

From left to right: Jansen, manager Kurt Linder and Jesper Olsen ahead of Ajax's winning 1981–82 season

Feyenoord[2][6]

Ajax[2][6]

  • Eredivisie: 1981–82

Netherlands[2][6]

Individual

  • 1974 FIFA World Cup All-Star Team[19]
  • 1978 FIFA World Cup All-Star Team[20]

Manager

Feyenoord[7][6]

Celtic[2][6]

  • Scottish Premier Division: 1997–98
  • Scottish League Cup: 1997–98'

References