Roda JC Kerkrade

Roda JC
Club logo
Full nameSportvereniging Roda
Juliana Combinatie Kerkrade
Nickname(s)De Koempels (Miners)
De Trots van het Zuiden (The Pride of the South)

De Limburgers
Founded27 June 1962; 62 years ago (1962-06-27)
GroundParkstad Limburg Stadion
Kerkrade
Capacity19,979
OwnerBert Peels
Stijn Koster
Roger Hodenius
Mercurius
CEOJordens Peters
Head coachBas Sibum
LeagueEerste Divisie
2023–24Eerste Divisie, 3rd of 20
Websitehttp://www.rodajckerkrade.nl/
Current season

Sportvereniging Roda Juliana Combinatie Kerkrade (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈspɔrtfəˌreːnəɣɪŋ ˈroːdaː jyliˈjaːnaː kɔmbiˈnaː(t)si ˈkɛr(ə)kˌraːdə]; Ripuarian: Sjport Verainiejoeng Roda Juliana Combinaatsiejoeën Kirchroa [ˈʃpɔχt fəˈʁaɪnijuŋ ˈʁoːdaː jyliˈjaːnaː kɔmbinaːtsiˈjuəŋ ˈkeʁəçʁoə]),[tone?] shortly as Roda JC Kerkrade (pronounced [ˈroːdaː jeːˈseː ˈkɛr(ə)kˌraːdə]) or commonly Roda JC or simply Roda, is a Dutch professional football club based in Kerkrade, Netherlands. Roda JC Kerkrade plays in the Eerste Divisie. The club was founded by a merger between Rapid JC and Roda Sport in 1962. They were placed in the Eerste Divisie, and after a relegation they were promoted back to the top division in 1973, where they would stay for 41 years until being relegated in 2014. In 2009–10, they added Kerkrade to the name to create brand awareness and get financial support.

Roda JC is known as the "coal-miner's club"; fans of archrival club MVV, from the provincial capital of Maastricht, say those words condescendingly. However, in Kerkrade and the surrounding area, they are said with pride and respect, although the last Dutch coal mines were closed in the 1970s.[1][2]

Roda JC's club honours include seven European campaigns and six KNVB Cup finals, of which they won two. One of its predecessors in club's "family tree" of mergers, Rapid JC, were champions of the Netherlands in 1956. Ten out of eleven players on that Rapid JC team were coal miners.

  1. ^ Hasselt, Laura van. "Mijnsluiting". Andere Tijden (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 14 July 2022. Retrieved 19 February 2023.
  2. ^ Messing, F.A.M. (1988). Geschiedenis van de mijnsluiting in Limburg : noodzaak en lotgevallen van een regionale herstructurering, 1955-1975 : een studie (in Dutch). Leiden: Nijhoff. ISBN 9789068902143.