SBV Vitesse#Player of the Season

{{Short description|Dutch professional football club}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2020}}

{{not to be confused|Vitesse FC (Burkina Faso)}}

{{Infobox football club

| clubname = Vitesse

| image = SBV Vitesse_logo.svg

| upright = 0.55

| alt = Vitesse logo

| fullname = Stichting Betaald Voetbal Vitesse Arnhem{{cite web|url=https://www.kvk.nl/orderstraat/product-kiezen/?kvknummer=090370910000|title=Stichting Betaald Voetbal "Vitesse-Arnhem"|publisher=Kamer van Koophandel|access-date=21 June 2022|archive-date=1 September 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230901121837/https://www.kvk.nl/orderstraat/product-kiezen/?kvknummer=090370910000|url-status=live}}

| nickname = Vites
FC Hollywood at the Rhine
Airborne Football Club

| founded = {{Start date and age|df=yes|1892|5|14}}

| ground = GelreDome

| capacity = 21,248{{Cite web| title = Vitesse verlaagt capaciteit stadion GelreDome naar 25.000 zitplaatsen| work = de Gelderlander| access-date = 2023-11-15| date = 2009-12-28| url = https://www.gelderlander.nl/arnhem/vitesse-verlaagt-capaciteit-stadion-gelredome-naar-25-000-zitplaatsen~a670ea5b/| language = nl| archive-date=14 March 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230314110743/https://www.gelderlander.nl/arnhem/vitesse-verlaagt-capaciteit-stadion-gelredome-naar-25-000-zitplaatsen~a670ea5b/ | url-status=live }}

| owner = Timo Braasch, Dane Murphy, Leon Müller, Flint Reilly, Bryan Mornaghi

| chairman = Henk Parren

| manager = John van den Brom

| mgrtitle = Head coach

| league = {{Dutch football updater|VitesseAr}}

| season = {{Dutch football updater|VitesseAr2}}

| position = {{Dutch football updater|VitesseAr3}}

| pattern_la1 = _vitesse2324h

| pattern_b1 = _vitesse2324h

| pattern_ra1 = _vitesse2324h

| pattern_sh1 = _vitesse2324h

| pattern_so1 = _vitesse2324hl

| leftarm1 = 000000

| body1 = FFDD00

| rightarm1 = 000000

| shorts1 = 000000

| socks1 = 000000

| pattern_la2 = _vitesse2324a

| pattern_b2 = _vitesse2324a

| pattern_ra2 = _vitesse2324a

| pattern_sh2 =

| pattern_so2 = _vitesse2324al

| leftarm2 = FFFFFF

| body2 = FFFFFF

| rightarm2 = FFFFFF

| shorts2 = FFFFFF

| socks2 = FFFFFF

| pattern_la3 =

| pattern_b3 =

| pattern_ra3 =

| pattern_sh3 =

| pattern_so3 =

| leftarm3 =

| body3 =

| rightarm3 =

| shorts3 =

| socks3 =

| website = {{official URL}}

| current = 2023–24 SBV Vitesse season

}}

Image:GelreDome 20151129.png

SBV Vitesse Arnhem (Stichting Betaald Voetbal Vitesse Arnhem, Eng: Professional Football Foundation Vitesse Arnhem), widely known as Vitesse ({{IPA|nl|viˈtɛsə}}) or internationally known as Vitesse Arnhem, is a Dutch professional football club located in the municipality of Arnhem. Established on 14 May 1892, they currently play in the Eerste Divisie following relegation from the 2023–24 Eredivisie. Since 1998, the club has played its home games at the GelreDome.

Vitesse had its most successful period in the 1990s. Their best result in the Eredivisie was third place in 1997–98. They won the KNVB Cup in 2017 and also reached the final in 1912, 1927, 1990 and 2021. Throughout the years, Vitesse established itself as a stepping stone for future top class players like Raimond van der Gouw, Phillip Cocu, Roy Makaay, Sander Westerveld, Nikos Machlas, Mahamadou Diarra, Nemanja Matić, Wilfried Bony, Bertrand Traoré, Robin Gosens, Lewis Baker, Dominic Solanke, Martin Ødegaard, Milot Rashica and Mason Mount.

History

{{more citations needed|section|date=June 2022}}

Image:Vitesse kampioen van Oosten 1896.JPG

Image:Vitesse 1913.jpg

Image:Vitesse tegen Ajax 1-3 in KNVB-beker. Johan Cruijff in aktie, Bestanddeelnr 923-3094.jpg in the 1970 Dutch Cup match.]]

File:Nicky Hofs vs. NEC.jpg played for Vitesse 194 matches. He was the cousin of Bennie Hofs and Henk Hofs.]]

File:Wilfried Bony 2.png was awarded the Golden Shoe for the best player in the Netherlands.]]

Vitesse, founded in 1892, is the 2nd oldest professional football club still in existence in the Netherlands, after Sparta Rotterdam who were formed in 1888. The roots of Vitesse actually pre-dated Sparta by a year as in 1887, a club with the name "Arnhemsche cricket- en voetbalvereeniging Vitesse" was formed by a group of high school students who played their sport on the Rijnkade, overlooking the River Rhine in the city centre. Reluctant to choose a Latin or English name for the club as they felt those languages were too elitist, they picked the French word Vitesse, meaning "speed".

In 1891 the club disbanded as they were no longer able to find anywhere suitable to play cricket after a Velodrome was built on their usual playing field in the Klarenbeek Park. The following year a group of wealthy students resurrected the sports club, this time with the name AVC (Arnhemse Voetbal en Cricketclub) Vitesse. In the summer they played cricket and in the winter football. In the end of 1892, Vitesse played its first real football match, and in 1894 Vitesse disbanded the cricket branch. In 1895 and 1896 Vitesse became champions of the Gelderland competition. From the foundation of the Netherlands national football championship in 1898 until 1954, the title was decided by play-offs by a handful of clubs who had previously won their regional league. Vitesse lost the final of the national championship six times (1898, 1899, 1903, 1913, 1914 and 1915).

In 1912, Vitesse reached the final of the Dutch Cup Tournament for the first time. Vitesse lost the final with 0–2 from HFC Haarlem. In this period Vitesse had top players, likes Willem Hesselink and Just Göbel. These players were also active in the Netherlands national team. In 1914 John William Sutcliffe became the first foreign trainer.

During World War II, Vitesse did not play-official matches because playing football in the open air was forbidden. During the Battle of Arnhem, the residents of the city were forcibly evicted from their homes, allowing the Germans to turn the north bank of the Rhine into a heavily defended line. Residents were not allowed to return home without a permit and most did not return until after the war. The football field and clubhouse was completely destroyed. The damage was repaired in the years after the liberation.

In 1984 it was decided to divide the professional and amateur sections of the club. The professional section was renamed SBV (Stichting Betaald Voetbal – "Professional Football Foundation") Vitesse whilst the amateur section became "Vitesse 1892", which lasted until they disbanded in 2009.

From 1984, Karel Aalbers was the president of SBV Vitesse. Aalbers' goal was to bring Vitesse from the bottom of the Second League (Eerste divisie, now Jupiler League), the league in which the club originated, to the top 40 soccer clubs of Europe. He developed the basic idea for the 'Gelredome', a stadium with a sliding pitch that can be moved out of the building. Later, the same system was applied in Gelsenkirchen (Schalke 04) and in Japan. Events such as pop concerts can be held without damaging the grass. Gelredome opened in 1998. It has a roof that can be opened and closed. It is fully climate controlled as well. In the first season after the opening, Gelredome's attendance rose to 20,000, (from less than 8,000 in the old stadium).

Vitesse made their debut in European competition in 1990. The club won their first match in the first round 1–0 over Derry City.

The club remained financially sound through making notable profits on the transfer market. Players such as Roy Makaay, Sander Westerveld, Nikos Machlas, Glenn Helder and Philip Cocu were sold for large sums of money. Others came to occupy empty player positions, such as Mahamadou Diarra and Pierre van Hooijdonk. Vitesse finished in the top four positions, made profits and showed a solid balance sheet in the final years of Aalbers' presidency. Also, the club became regular competitors in the UEFA Cup and in 1997–1998 finished third in the Eredivise, its record highest finish to date.

Herbert Neumann was Vitesse's manager over most of these years (1992–95 and 1998–99), while star players included: Nikos Machlas, the first ever Vitesse player to win the European Golden Boot in 1998 when he scored 34 goals in a season; John van den Brom, who played 378 matches for Vitesse during this period scoring 110 goals from midfield; and Edward Sturing, who played 383 matches in defence for Vitesse from 1987 to 1998, as well as receiving 3 caps for the Netherlands national team. Additional stars included Dejan Čurović, who spent six years at Vitesse playing 109 matches as a striker, scoring 41 goals including the first goal in GelreDome. Meanwhile, Dutch forward Roy Makaay spent four years at Vitesse, scoring 42 goals in 109 matches between 1993 and 1997.

Aalbers resigned on 15 February 2000,{{cite news | last = Ritsema | first = André | title = Aalbers moet bij Vitesse weg als voorzitter | work = NRC Handelsblad | language = nl | date = 16 February 2000 | url = http://www.nrc.nl/W2/Nieuws/2000/02/16/Spo/01.html | access-date = 21 September 2008 | archive-date = 13 October 2009 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20091013225036/http://www.nrc.nl/W2/Nieuws/2000/02/16/Spo/01.html | url-status = live }} after the main sponsor, Nuon, threatened to pull the plug if he did not. Nuon, as a public utility company owned by local authorities, had trouble explaining why it invested heavily in Aalbers' ambitious plans. His successor was Jan Koning (former chief of Sara Lee/DE who resigned after four months). In a short period of time, Vitesse began to show negative financial results due to poor deals on the transfer market. The club survived numerous financial crises, such as the last one in 2008, when debts were bought off, under the threat of bankruptcy.

File:VitesseTottenhamHotspur.jpg during a 1–0 victory against Tottenham Hotspur in the UEFA Europa Conference League at 21–10–2021.]]The club was in serious financial trouble, and in August 2010 its majority shareholder agreed to sell the club to the Georgian businessman Merab Jordania. There were rumors in The Guardian and various news outlets that this purchase was engineered by former Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich.{{cite news |title=Roman Abramovich secretly bankrolled Dutch football club, leaked documents suggest |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/mar/29/roman-abramovich-secretly-bankrolled-dutch-football-club-leaked-documents-suggest |access-date=17 April 2023 |work=The Guardian |date=29 March 2023 |archive-date=17 April 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230417042957/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/mar/29/roman-abramovich-secretly-bankrolled-dutch-football-club-leaked-documents-suggest |url-status=live }} The club underwent a successful transformation into a modern, commercial sports organization and established itself as one of the dominant teams of the Eredivisie.

On 1 July 2012, Fred Rutten signed a contract as the new manager of Vitesse, for the season 2012-13. Rutten left Vitesse after the season, finishing in fourth place. Wilfried Bony ended the season as the Eredivisie's top scorer with 31 goals in 30 matches and was awarded the Golden Shoe for the best player in the Netherlands.

For the 2013–14 season, Vitesse appointed Peter Bosz as its new manager. In November 2013, Vitesse was top of the league in the Eredivisie for the first time since 2006. It was the first time since 2000 they'd been top of the league later than the first week. Halfway through the season, after 17 matches, Vitesse was the leader in the competition. Key players in the squad from this period included Davy Pröpper, Christian Atsu and Bertrand Traoré.

Vitesse announced on 13 June 2016 that Henk Fraser would replace Bosz at the start of the 2016–17 season. In his first full season, won the club first major trophy in its 125-year existence. Fraser defeating AZ by a score of 2−0 in the final of the KNVB Cup, with two goals from Ricky van Wolfswinkel.{{cite web |url= http://www.goal.com/en-ng/news/4055/main/2017/04/30/35097562/van-wolfswinkel-fires-vitesse-to-first-major-trophy |title= Van Wolfswinkel fires Vitesse to first major trophy |website= Goal.com |date= 1 May 2017 |access-date= 4 May 2017 |archive-date= 8 July 2017 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20170708073704/http://www.goal.com/en-ng/news/4055/main/2017/04/30/35097562/van-wolfswinkel-fires-vitesse-to-first-major-trophy |url-status= live }} On 5 August 2017 Vitesse were beaten 1–1 (4–2 pen.) at De Kuip, Rotterdam in the Johan Cruyff Shield final by Feyenoord. In the 2017–18 UEFA Europa League group stage, Vitesse's opponents were Lazio, Nice and Zulte Waregem. Vitesse ultimately finished the group stage in fourth place. In October 2017, Guram Kashia wore a rainbow-striped captain's armband for Vitesse against Heracles Almelo in support of LGBT rights, leading to a backlash in his own country. In August 2018, he became the inaugural recipient of UEFA's #EqualGame award for his act.{{cite news |title=Guram Kashia: Georgia captain becomes first recipient of Uefa #EqualGame award |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/45274881 |access-date=23 August 2018 |publisher=BBC Sport |date=22 August 2018 |archive-date=23 August 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180823031853/https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/45274881 |url-status=live }}

In 2021, after beating VVV-Venlo in the semi-final, Vitesse reached the KNVB Cup Final for the fifth time in their history. Vitesse lost the final 2–1 to Ajax. Vitesse finished the 2020–21 Eredivise season in fourth place. In July and August 2021, Vitesse qualified for the UEFA Europa Conference League. Vitesse knocked-out Dundalk (2-2 and 2–1) and Anderlecht (3-3 and 2–1) in the qualifiers. On 27 August, Vitesse was drawn on Group G of the 2021–22 UEFA Europa Conference League alongside Tottenham Hotspur, Rennes and Mura. Vitesse eventually placed second in the group, making it to the round of 32.

Towards the end of the 2023–24 Eredivisie season, Vitesse was relegated after being deducted eighteen points for failing to comply with the KNVB's license requirements amid continuous financial troubles.{{cite web |url=https://www.vi.nl/nieuws/vitesse-degradeert-door-enorme-puntenstraf-na-35-jaar-uit-de-eredivisie |title=Vitesse degradeert door enorme puntenstraf na 35 jaar uit de Eredivisie |trans-title=Vitesse relegated due to enormous points deduction after 35 years of Eredivisie |language=Dutch |date=19 April 2024 |access-date=19 April 2024}} During the 2024-25 Eerste Divisie season, Vitesse was deducted 39 points in total, which had a big contribution to Vitesse finishing in last place.

Stadium and training facilities

{{Main|GelreDome|National Sports Centre Papendal}}

Image:GelreDome 4.png

Image:Gelredome Binnenkant.jpg

Image:Accommodatie Vitesse Papendal.png

The club plays its home games at the GelreDome stadium, with a capacity of 21,000 seats. The GelreDome was built to serve as a multifunctional stadium suited for sports, concerts and other events. It was the first football stadium in the world to have a retractable pitch, and, after the Amsterdam ArenA, the second stadium in Europe to have a sliding roof. The pitch is surrounded on each side by four covered all-seater stands, officially known as the Edward Sturing Stand (North), Charly Bosveld Stand (East), Theo Bos Stand (South) and Just Göbel Stand (West).

The idea of building a multifunctional stadium, which had more than double the capacity of Vitesse's old Nieuw Monnikenhuize stadium, came from former Vitesse chairman Karel Aalbers. The ambitious chairman had been playing with the idea from as early as the late 1980s, but it took until 1996 and the prospect of the upcoming Euro 2000 championships for construction to finally begin. The GelreDome opened two years later, on 25 March 1998, with a league match between Vitesse and NAC Breda (4–1). Three international matches of the Netherlands national football team were played in the stadium, the first one being on 27 May 1998: a friendly against Cameroon (0–1). The last one, played on 26 April 2000, was also a friendly: a 0–0 against Scotland. In 2019, the Netherlands women's national team, also played their an international (friendly) match at the stadium. Furthermore, the GelreDome was the location for three UEFA Euro 2000 group stage matches, as well as the 2007 UEFA European Under-21 Championship tournament.

Vitesse's training facilities are conducted at National Sports Centre Papendal, located in the outskirts of Arnhem in woodland surroundings. The training ground consists of several pitches, a number of which have an artificial turf pitch, and extensive training facilities, including a fitness centre. Papendal, a mere twelve kilometers north of the GelreDome, is not only the training facility for Vitesse's first team; the youth teams play their home matches here as well. Its main field has seating capacity for 500 people. The complex is situated in large wooded area, where the players can prepare in a peaceful and private environment, whilst not being too far from the hustle and bustle of Arnhem's city centre. Papendal is also the base for administration staff, scouting department and all club coaches.

= Stadium history =

class="wikitable sortable"
style="background:#0D4C92; color:#fff;" scope="col"| Namestyle="background:#0D4C92; color:#fff;" scope="col"| Years
align="left"|Rijnkade / Klarenbeek Park

|1887–1891

align="left"|Molenbeekstraat

|1892

align="left"|IJsclub Boulevard Heuvelink

|1892–1894

align="left"|Bronbeek Royal Palace

|1893

align="left"|Paasweide

|1894–1896

align="left"|Klarenbeek Stadium

|1896–1915

align="left"|Monnikenhuize

|1915–1950

align="left"|Nieuw Monnikenhuize

|1950–1997

align="left"|GelreDome

|1998–present

Symbols

=Hertog=

Vitesse are well known for the American bald Eagle 'Hertog', which is released before the match and flies over the crowds.

=Anthems=

Vitesse fans are known to be creative and have various songs and chants during matches. Among the most important Vitesse songs are "Geel en Zwart zijn onze kleuren" by Emile Hartkamp, "Ernems Trots" by Joey Hartkamp, and "Bouw mee aan een steengoed Vites!" by Henk Bleker & Enka Harmonie. Vitesse opens its home matches with "Whatever You Want" by Status Quo, and after every home goal "Bro Hymn" by Pennywise is played.

=Mr Vitesse=

Theo Bos was raised in Arnhem and started playing football from an early age. He began his career at amateur club Sv Sempre Avanti and played from 1979 to 1983 in the academy of Vitesse. Manager Leen Looijen gave him his professional debut on 13 August 1983 against FC Wageningen; the match ended in a 3–0 victory for Vitesse. Bos spent his entire playing career for Vitesse, making a total 369 appearances in 14 seasons with his club. After his playing career, Bos worked at Vitesse as youth coach, assistant coach and manager. He is therefore considered to be Mister Vitesse. In 2012, the south stand of the GelreDome stadium was named the Theo Bos Stand. Bos died on 28 February 2013 of pancreatic cancer, aged forty-seven. Following his death, a special remembrance to honour Theo Bos took place at Gelredome with around 7,000 Vitesse supporters. As of the 2012–13 season, no player will wear the number 4 shirt at Vitesse after the club decided to retire the shirt out of respect for Theo Bos, "the legendary number four". Dutch defender Jan-Arie van der Heijden was the last player to wear the number. In November 2013, his biography Het is zoals het is ('It is what it is') was published, written by journalist Marcel van Roosmalen. In 2015, a statue of Bos was erected outside of the training complex at Papendal.

=Airborne-match=

Image:Airborne_match_Vitesse_Arnhem.jpg

Around September there is an annual 'Airborne memorial' football match. During this annual Airborne-match the veterans of World War II will be honored. The Gelredome is decorated with Airborne flags, both outside and inside the stadium, and at halftime, 120 members of the Royal British Legion played the bagpipes with some other musical guests. Clubsymbol Hertog fly with the typical Airborne colours. The match is traditionally visited by veterans who were fighting in this battle, while a special shirt is worn by Vitesse. The club drop their normal striped black and yellow kit for this special match. Instead they wear claret and blue outfits, the same colours of the 1st Airborne Division, with a 1st Airborne 'winged horse' emblem also etched on the kit. Pictured on the collar sticker is the John Frost Bridge. These shirts are after the match auctioned for charity. In addition, Vitesse wearing a special captain's armband as a sign of recognition and respect for those who have fought for our freedom. In the 2014–15 and 2019–20 seasons, Vitesse played their away games in the same colours of the 1st Airborne Division.

=Colours and badge=

Originally, Vitesse played in white shirts with a blue sash from inception until 1900, paying hommage to the city's colours. At the turn of the century, player Reinhard Jan Christiaan baron van Pallandt offered to sponsor the club's shirts in exchange for Vitesse switching to his family colours of black and yellow. The board were quick to accept, noting that Vitesse, being one of the strongest team in the province of Gelderland, would be vindicated in playing in what could also be considered the province's colours (the flag of Gelderland is a tricolour in blue, yellow, and black).

The first logo of Vitesse was a shield-shaped crest. In the middle there was a diagonal dividing line between the left yellow face and the right black box. In the left box, "AVC Vitesse" was diagonally written and in the right-hand side, "1892 ", the club's founding year. The old logo was replaced in 1984, the year in which the roads of the BVO branch and the amateur branch separated. The amateur branch retained the logo with limited modification, SBV Vitesse got a new logo.

The new logo of the BVO from 1984 is once again a shield-shaped figure, but it has straight lines at both the top and sides of the logo. At the top is with thick white uppercase Vitesse. Under the name is a double-headed eagle counterchanged on a black and yellow field. This double-headed eagle can also be found in the coat of arms of Arnhem. In the middle of the logo is a football.

In the autumn of 2011, a new version of the logo was put into use; a total of 13 changes were made. For example, the symmetry of the eagle was improved, the black outer edge replaced by a white and in the writing has been made thinner. The football has been altered in terms of appearance as a shadow effect is added and (if the context allows it) the year of creation as text EST. 1892 under the logo can be found.

File:Vitesse Logo jaren 70 1.png|The first Vitesse crest

File:Vitesse Logo jaren 70 2.png|The second crest

File:Vitesse logo.svg|The third crest

File:SBV Vitesse logo.svg|2011–present

=Kit manufacturers and sponsors=

Since 2023 Vitesse's kit has been manufactured by Robey. Previous manufacturers include Adidas (1982–89), Hummel (1989–90), Bukta

(1990–91), Diadora (1991–93), Umbro (1993–97), Lotto (1997–99), Uhlsport (1999–05), Quick (2005–06), Legea (2006–09), Klupp (2009–12), Nike (2012–14), Macron (2014–19), Nike (2019–23) and Robey (2023-present).

The club's shirts are currently sponsored by BetCity. Previous commercial sponsors have been Akai (1982–83), Oad Reizen (1983–85), Spitman (1985–86), Schoenenreus (1987–89), RTL 4 (1990–1991), PTT Telecom (1991–92), BFI (1991–92), Spaarenergie (1992–93), Nuon Energy (1993–01), ATAG Benelux (2000–01), SITA (2002–03), Hubo (2002–03), Bavaria (2002–03), SBS 6 (2002–03), Sunweb Group (2003–04), AFAB (2004–2010), Zuka.nl (2010–2011), Simpel (2011–12), Youfone (2013–14), Truphone (2014–17), SWOOP (2017–18), Droomparken (2018–19), Royal Burgers' Zoo (2019–20), The Netherlands Open Air Museum (2019–20), Waterontharder.com (2020–21) eToro (2021–23) and BetCity (2023–present).

Support

Image:Bekerfinale2017.jpg in Rotterdam.|thumb|400px]]

The supporters of the club are known as Vitessenaren. Vitesse has two independent fan bodies. The Supportersvereniging Vitesse was founded in 1992 and currently consists of 3,000 members. They own a fan base within the GelreDome. The second one, Arnhem Ultras, serve a more specific purpose: to improve the atmosphere in the stadium. Besides the fan unions, there are several sets of fans who work together on tifo choreography, likes VIVO (Vitesse Is van Ons), De Aftrap, VAK 113, VAK 212, RFFC, Crew 81 and BGN among others. Nowadays, Vitesse is supported by one fanatic side: The Theo Bos – South Stand. This stand is responsible for a big part of the atmosphere in the stadium.

Vitesse have attracted around 18,000 people to Eredivisie matches on average in the last years. The record attendance stands at 26,600, achieved in a match against NAC Breda at 25 March 1998. Research showed that about 10,000 season ticket holders from Gelderland, with other significant groups coming from Utrecht, South Holland and North Rhine-Westphalia.

The Vitesse Kids Club was founded by Vitesse in 1998 for children up to 16 years. Every year, the Vitesse Kids Club Day is organized, offering activities for members who are joined by the first team squad. During pre-season, Vitesse also holds an Open Day for people of all ages; the event gives the opportunity for sponsors and new player signings to be presented.

Vitesse fans have established a close friendship with the supporters of Petrolul Ploiești and RFC Liège. Previously, they had a friendship with Lierse until there was a big riot between them at a friendly match in 2011.

Rivalries

= Rivalry with NEC =

N.E.C. from Nijmegen are Vitesse's archrivals. The two clubs share a long history together and matches between the two clubs are called the Gelderse Derby (Derby of Gelderland). The rivalry between these two clubs goes beyond the football rivalry, it transcends into the city rivalry between the two largest cities of Gelderland: Nijmegen and Arnhem. This city rivalry began when these two cities first received their city rights. The two cities are just 20 kilometres apart, leading to an intense feeling of a cross-town rivalry, heightened by a feeling that local pride is at stake. The meeting between the two teams is still considered to be one of the biggest matches of the season.

The inhabitants of these cities differ extremely in both attitudes and cultures which is clearly reflected on the football pitch. Vitesse's style of play has long been a source of pride for the supporters, and one of irritation for the NEC fans.

Since 1813, Arnhem has been the capital of Gelderland, historically based on finance and trade. Arnhem is perceived as an office city with modern buildings. Nijmegen, on the other hand, is predominantly a workers' city, with middle and high-income groups in the minority. People from Nijmegen see Arnhem as arrogant and lazy.

{{Col-begin}}

{{Col-2}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"

|+Statistics

rowspan="2"|Competition

!rowspan="2"|Matches

!colspan="2"|Wins

!rowspan="2"|Draws

!colspan="2"|Goals

Vitesse

!NEC

!Vitesse

!NEC

Eredivisie

|58

2319167362
Eerste divisie

|14

2661827
Tweede divisie

|4

03139
Eerste klasse

|8

161923
Tweede klasse

|4

21175
KNVB Cup

|5

03239
Play-offs

|6

41194
Total

!99

323928122139

{{col-2}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"

|+Last two results

Venue

!Date

!Competition

!Vitesse

!NEC

De Goffert

|1 October 2023

|Eredivisie

|3

1
Gelredome

|7 April 2024

|Eredivisie

|0

3

{{col-end}}

=Rivalries with other clubs=

De Graafschap are also a rival of Vitesse, but in terms of tension and rivalry, these matches are not as loaded as the duels with NEC Nijmegen. The rivalry has existed for some time with De Graafschap and stems from various causes, such as the opposition between the large city (Arnhem) and the countryside (Doetinchem).

Further teams who share a rivalry with Vitesse include Twente, Utrecht and Ajax. Past rivalries include local derbies between Vitesse and clubs such as FC Wageningen, Go Ahead Eagles, Quick 1888, Arnhemse Boys and VV Rheden. However, the tension between the local sides lessened as the division of the clubs through playing in different leagues over time became greater. Years of not competing in the same league resulted in less frequent match-ups, until tensions finally settled between the local clubs.

Players

=Current squad=

{{updated|23 March 2025}}{{cite web |url=https://www.vitesse.nl/teams/eerste-selectie |title=Vitesse - Selectie |date=10 January 2023 |access-date=13 July 2022 |archive-date=7 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180707065247/https://www.vitesse.nl/nl/eersteelftal/selectie |url-status=live }}

{{Fs start}}

{{Fs player|no= 2|nat=NED|name=Mees Kreekels|pos=DF}}

{{Fs player|no= 3|nat=NED|name=Giovanni van Zwam|pos=DF}}

{{Fs player|no= 5|nat=NED|name=Justin Bakker|pos=DF}}

{{Fs player|no= 6|nat=NED|name=Loek Postma|pos=DF}}

{{Fs player|no= 7|nat=NED|name=Gyan de Regt|pos=FW}}

{{Fs player|no= 8|nat=NED|name=Enzo Cornelisse|pos=DF}}

{{Fs player|no= 9|nat=RSA|name=Simon van Duivenbooden|pos=FW}}

{{Fs player|no=11|nat=NED|name=Dillon Hoogewerf|pos=FW}}

{{Fs player|no=12|nat=NED|name=Sil Milder|pos=GK}}

{{Fs player|no=15|nat=NED|name=Nordin Musampa|pos=DF}}

{{Fs player|no=16|nat=NED|name=Tom Bramel|pos=GK}}

{{Fs player|no=17|nat=GRE|name=Theodosis Macheras|pos=FW|other={{small|on loan from AEK Athens}}}}

{{Fs player|no=18|nat=NED|name=Jim Koller|pos=MF}}

{{Fs player|no=19|nat=NED|name=Andy Visser|pos=FW}}

{{Fs player|no=20|nat=GEO|name=Irakli Yegoian|pos=MF}}

{{Fs player|no=22|nat=NED|name=Mats Egbring|pos=DF}}

{{Fs player|no=23|nat=NED|name=Mikki van Sas|pos=GK|other={{small|on loan from Feyenoord}}}}

{{Fs player|no=24|nat=NED|name=Roan van der Plaat|pos=DF}}

{{fs mid}}

{{Fs player|no=25|nat=NED|name=Adam Tahaui|pos=MF}}

{{Fs player|no=28|nat=NED|name=Alexander Büttner|pos=DF}}

{{Fs player|no=29|nat=RSA|name=Michael Dokunmu|pos=MF}}

{{Fs player|no=30|nat=NED|name=Sep van der Heijden|pos=GK}}

{{Fs player|no=31|nat=NED|name=Xiamaro Thenu|pos=DF}}

{{Fs player|no=34|nat=NED|name=Anass Zarrouk|pos=MF}}

{{Fs player|no=35|nat=NED|name=Bas Huisman|pos=MF}}

{{Fs player|no=36|nat=NED|name=Nino Zonneveld|pos=FW}}

{{Fs player|no=37|nat=GRE|name=Angelos Tsingaras|pos=MF}}

{{Fs player|no=38|nat=NED|name=Jordy de Beer|pos=DF}}

{{Fs player|no=40|nat=NED|name=Mathijs Marschalk|pos=MF}}

{{Fs player|no=41|nat=NED|name=Youssef Ouallil|pos=MF}}

{{Fs player|no=43|nat=NED|name=Jayden Siecker|pos=GK}}

{{Fs player|no=55|nat=NED|name=Marcus Steffen|pos=DF}}

{{Fs player|no=59|nat=NED|name=Naygiro Sambo|pos=MF}}

{{Fs player|no=98|nat=CRO|name=Tomislav Gudelj|pos=FW}}

{{Fs player|no=|nat=NED|name=Ezra van der Heiden|pos=FW}}

{{Fs end}}

=Out on loan=

{{Fs start}}

{{Fs player|no=|nat=NED|name=Mathijs Tielemans|pos=MF|other={{small|at Excelsior until 30 June 2025}}}}

{{Fs end}}

=Retired numbers=

style="text-align:right; padding-right:0.6em"| 4

| {{flagicon|Netherlands}} Theo Bos, defender (1983–98), posthumous honour

style="text-align:right; padding-right:0.6em"| 12

| Club Supporters (the 12th Man)

style="text-align:right; padding-right:0.6em"| 13

| Vito, the official team mascot

=Youth teams=

The club is famous, however, for its Youth Academy, which is rated with the maximum of 4 Stars by the KNVB. Many players in professional football in Europe have played at Vitesse in the past including Roy Makaay, Robin Gosens, Ricky van Wolfswinkel, Davy Pröpper, Alexander Büttner, Stijn Schaars, Peter Bosz, Marco van Ginkel, Theo Janssen, Erwin Mulder, Eloy Room, Piet Velthuizen, Martin Laamers, Nicky Hofs and Mitchell van Bergen. All youth teams will train and play their matches at Papendal.

The Vitesse Academy comprises age-group teams ranging from U8's up to the flagship U19's. The youngest players are scouted at amateur clubs in the direct surroundings of Arnhem. For the age of twelve and older, the academy extends its scouting area, mainly to the remaining part of the Netherlands and Germany. In Vitesse's youth system, efficient and qualified training is done by full-time coaches and organized by further employees looking after the administration. The goal of the sporting education is to train the youths from basic to development to performance levels, for them to fulfil the sportive and non sportive demands of professional football.

Former players

{{further|:Category:SBV Vitesse players}}

=National team players=

''The following players were called up to represent their national teams in international football and received caps during their tenure with Vitesse:

{{col-begin}}

{{col-3}}

{{col-3}}

{{col-3}}

{{col-3}}

{{col-end}}

  • Players in bold actively play for Vitesse and for their respective national teams. Years in brackets indicate careerspan with Vitesse.

= National team players by Confederation =

Member associations are listed in order of most to least amount of current and former Vitesse players represented Internationally

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:left"

|+ Total national team players by confederation

scope="row" | Confederation

! scope="col" | Total

! scope="col" class="unsortable" | (Nation) Association

AFC

| 4

| {{flagicon|Japan}} Japan (2), {{flagicon|China}} China (1), {{flagicon|Saudi Arabia}} Saudi Arabia (1)

CAF

| 14

| {{flagicon|Ghana}} Ghana (4), {{flagicon|Burkina Faso}} Burkina Faso (2), {{flagicon|Nigeria}} Nigeria (2), {{flagicon|Algeria}} Algeria (1), {{flagicon|Ivory Coast}} Ivory Coast (1), {{flagicon|Mali}} Mali (1), {{flagicon|Morocco}} Morocco (1), {{flagicon|South Africa}} South Africa (1), {{flagicon|Zimbabwe}} Zimbabwe (1)

CONCACAF

| 5

| {{flagicon|Curaçao}} Curaçao (1), {{flagicon|El Salvador}} El Salvador (1), {{flagicon|Haiti}} Haiti (1), {{flagicon|Mexico}} Mexico (1), {{flagicon|United States}} United States (1)

CONMEBOL

| 2

| {{flagicon|Ecuador}} Ecuador (2)

OFC

| 0

|  

UEFA

| 57

| {{flagicon|Netherlands}} Netherlands (24), {{flagicon|Serbia}} Serbia (6), {{flagicon|Georgia}} Georgia (3), {{flagicon|Norway}} Norway (3), {{flagicon|Belgium}} Belgium (2), {{flagicon|Estonia}} Estonia (2), {{flagicon|Israel}} Israel (2), {{flagicon|Kosovo}} Kosovo (2), {{flagicon|Slovakia}} Slovakia (2), {{flagicon|Slovenia}} Slovenia (2), {{flagicon|Albania}} Albania (1), {{flagicon|Bosnia & Herzegovina}} Bosnia & Herzegovina (1), {{flagicon|Czech Republic}} Czech Republic (1), {{flagicon|Denmark}} Denmark (1), {{flagicon|Finland}} Finland (1), {{flagicon|Luxembourg}} Luxembourg (1), {{flagicon|Romania}} Romania (1), {{flagicon|Russia}} Russia (1), {{flagicon|Ukraine}} Ukraine (1)

Players in international tournaments

The following is a list of Vitesse players who have competed in international tournaments, including the FIFA World Cup, FIFA Confederations Cup, UEFA European Championship, CONCACAF Gold Cup, Africa Cup of Nations, Copa América, and the Caribbean Cup. To this date no Vitesse players have participated in the AFC Asian Cup, or the OFC Nations Cup while playing for Vitesse.

class="wikitable" style="text-align: left"
style="text-align: center"

!Cup

!Players

align="left"|{{Flag icon|Tunisia}} 1994 Africa Cup of Nations{{Flag icon|Nigeria}} Benedict Iroha
align="left"|{{Flag icon|United States}} 1994 FIFA World Cup{{Flag icon|Nigeria}} Benedict Iroha
align="left"|{{Flag icon|Bolivia}} 1997 Copa América{{Flag icon|Ecuador}} Giovanny Espinoza
align="left"|{{Flag icon|Ghana}}{{Flag icon|Nigeria}} 2000 Africa Cup of Nations{{Flag icon|Burkina Faso}} Mamadou Zongo
align="left"|{{Flag icon|Belgium}}{{Flag icon|Netherlands}} UEFA Euro 2000{{Flag icon|Netherlands}} Pierre van Hooijdonk
align="left"|{{Flag icon|Mali}} 2002 Africa Cup of Nations{{Flag icon|Ghana}} Matthew Amoah
{{Flag icon|Nigeria}} Tijani Babangida
{{Flag icon|Mali}} Mahamadou Diarra
align="left"|{{Flag icon|South Africa}} 2010 FIFA World Cup{{Flag icon|Slovenia}} Dalibor Stevanović
align="left"|{{Flag icon|Equatorial Guinea}}{{Flag icon|Gabon}} 2012 Africa Cup of Nations{{Flag icon|Ghana}} Anthony Annan
{{Flag icon|Ivory Coast}} Wilfried Bony
align="left"|{{Flag icon|South Africa}} 2013 Africa Cup of Nations{{Flag icon|Ivory Coast}} Wilfried Bony
align="left"|{{Flag icon|Brazil}} 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup{{Flag icon|Japan}} Mike Havenaar
align="left"|{{Flag icon|Brazil}} 2014 FIFA World Cup{{Flag icon|Ghana}} Christian Atsu
{{Flag icon|Ecuador}} Renato Ibarra
align="left"|{{Flag icon|Equatorial Guinea}} 2015 Africa Cup of Nations{{Flag icon|Burkina Faso}} Bertrand Traoré
align="left"|{{Flag icon|Chile}} 2015 Copa América{{Flag icon|Ecuador}} Renato Ibarra
align="left"|{{Flag icon|Gabon}} 2017 Africa Cup of Nations{{Flag icon|Zimbabwe}} Marvelous Nakamba
align="left"|{{Flag icon|Martinique}} 2017 Caribbean Cup{{Flag icon|Curaçao}} Eloy Room
align="left"|{{Flag icon|United States}} 2017 CONCACAF Gold Cup{{Flag icon|Curaçao}} Eloy Room
align="left"|{{Flag icon|Egypt}} 2019 Africa Cup of Nations{{Flag icon|South Africa}} Thulani Serero
align="left"|{{Flag icon|United States}}{{Flag icon|Canada}} 2023 CONCACAF Gold Cup{{Flag icon|Haiti}} Carlens Arcus

List of Vitesse coaches

{{div col|colwidth=35em|small=yes}}

{{div col end}}

Board and staff

=Corporate hierarchy=

class="wikitable"
style="background:#00f; color:#fff;" scope="col"|Position

! style="background:#00f; color:#fff;" scope="col"|Name

Owner{{flagicon|USA}} Dane Murphy
{{flagicon|USA}} Flint Riley
{{flagicon|GER}} Timo Raasch
{{flagicon|GER}} Leon Müller
{{flagicon|ITA}} Bryan Mornaghi
Supervisory Board{{flagicon|NED}} Henk Parren (chairman)
{{flagicon|USA}} Coley Parry
Board of the Vitesse-Arnhem Foundation{{flagicon|NED}} Henk Parren (chairman)
{{flagicon|NED}} Peter van Bussel
{{flagicon|NED}} Gerrit Jan Steenbergen
Advisory Council{{flagicon|NED}} Bert Roetert
{{flagicon|NED}} Cor Guijt
{{flagicon|NED}} Jan Snellenburg
Directors{{flagicon|NED}} Pascal van Wijk (General/Financial director)
{{flagicon|GER}} Benjamin Schmedes (Technical director)
{{flagicon|NED}} Peter Rovers (marketing director)
Ambassadors{{flagicon|NED}} Edward Sturing
{{flagicon|NED}} Theo Janssen
{{flagicon|NED}} Nicky Hofs

=Management hierarchy=

class="wikitable"
style="background:#00f; color:#fff;" scope="col"|Position

! style="background:#00f; color:#fff;" scope="col"|Staff

Sports director{{flagicon|Germany}} Benjamin Schmedes
Chief scout{{flagicon|Germany}} Daniel Ebbert
Manager{{flagicon|Netherlands}} John van den Brom
rowspan="2"|Assistant manager{{flagicon|Netherlands}} Nicky Hofs
{{flagicon|Netherlands}} Gery Vink
Goalkeepers coach{{flagicon|Netherlands}} Max de Jong
Fitness coach / Recovery trainer{{flagicon|Netherlands}} Chima Onyeike
Video analyst{{flagicon|Netherlands}} Koen Berkheij
Head of academy{{flagicon|Netherlands}} Michael Jansen
Under-21 coach{{flagicon|NED}} Tim Cornelisse

Owners

After Karel Aalbers left, the financial situation for the club became dire. This downfall almost led Vitesse into bankruptcy in 2008, as they were not able to pay back loans given by their sponsor AFAB Geldservice B.V. Eventually the club arranged a deal that saw AFAB's owner, Maasbert Schouten, gain 100% of Vitesse's shares. Schouten immediately expressed his intent to sell the club, which opened the window for Merab Jordania to buy Vitesse. When Jordania, a former Dinamo Tbilisi player and owner, bought the team in 2010, Vitesse became the first Dutch club in history with a foreign owner. In 2013, Russian businessman Alexander Tsjigirinski bought the club from Jordania. In May 2018 a new acquisition took place at Vitesse. Valeriy Oyf became the new majority shareholder of Vitesse. The Russian oligarch, who was part of the Board of Directors of Vitesse from 2016, took over the shares of Tsjigirinski.

A consortium of five new owners (Dane Murphy, Flint Reilly, Timo Braasch, Leon Müller, and Bryan Mornaghi) acquired Vitesse, assuming its €17 million debt from creditor Coley Parry, who had stepped in after the club's previous Russian owner, Valery Oyf, sought a sale following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.{{cite web |last=Pascoe |first=Robin |title=Five new shareholders for troubled football club Vitesse Arnhem |website=DutchNews.nl |date=30 January 2025 |url=https://www.dutchnews.nl/2025/01/five-new-shareholders-for-troubled-football-club-vitesse-arnhem/ |access-date=3 February 2025}}

Chairmen

The first chairman was Frans Dezentjé. Willem Hesselink was chairman of the club from 1917 to 1922 and was appointed honorary chairman in 1962. Although Vitesse's coaches have come from all over Europe, the club's chairmen have been mostly Dutch, with Merab Jordania and Yevgeny Merkel as the only exceptions. The name of Karel Aalbers is inseparably linked to Vitesse. Although a club's success is never the work of a single man, nonetheless, the former chairman's part in the sportive and professional growth of Vitesse may be labelled as truly exceptional. Karel Aalbers handled the chairman's gavel from 1984 to 2000.

{{div col|colwidth=28em|small=yes}}

  • Frans Dezentjé, 1982
  • Dick Couvéé, 1892–1993
  • Siegfried Leopold, 1893
  • Fons Donkers, 1893–1895
  • Chris Engelberts, 1895–1909
  • Johan Caderius van Veen, 1902–1906
  • Lodewijk Suringa, 1906–1908
  • Jan F. Keppel Hesselink, 1908–1909
  • Wim Hupkes, 1909–1916
  • Daniel Brondgeest, 1916
  • Willem Hesselink, 1916–22
  • Lex Staal, 1922–1924
  • Jan Holtus, 1924–1929
  • Wim Hupkes, 1929–1936
  • Henk Herberts, 1936–1947
  • Jan Bosloper, 1947–1949
  • Herbert Mogendorff, 1949–1951
  • Henk Hoolboom, 1951–1955
  • Henk Lammers, 1955–1963
  • Henk Herberts, 1963
  • Coen Winters, 1963–1965
  • Herbert Mogendorff, 1965
  • Herman Ribbink, 1965–1967
  • Gerard Veerkamp, 1967–1969
  • Arnold van der Louw, 1969–1974
  • Eef van Amerongen, 1974–1979
  • Piet Bodewes, 1979–1982
  • Bob Treffers, 1982–1984
  • Karel Aalbers, 1984–2000
  • Jan Konings, 2000
  • Jos Vaessen, 2000–2003
  • Kees Bakker, 2003–2004
  • Henk Ramautar, 2004–2008
  • Kees Bakker, 2008–2009
  • Maasbert Schouten, 2009–2010
  • Merab Jordania, 2010–2013
  • Bert Roetert, 2013–2016
  • Kees Bakker, 2016–2017
  • Yevgeny Merkel, 2017–2021
  • Henk Parren, 2021–

{{div col end}}

Honours

=Domestic=

: Runners-up: 1897–98, 1902–03, 1912–13, 1913–14, 1914–15

: Winners: 1976–77, 1988–89

: Runners-up: 1959–60, 1973–74

: Promoted: 1970–71

: Winners: 1965–66

: Winners: 2016–17

: Runners-up: 1911–12, 1926–27, 1989–90, 2020–21

: Runners-up: 2017

=Regional=

  • Eerste klasse Oost

: Winners: 1896–97, 1897–98, 1902–03, 1912–13, 1913–14, 1914–15, 1952–53

: Promoted: 1954–55

  • Tweede klasse Oost

: Winners: 1922–23, 1940–41, 1943–44, 1945–46, 1949–50

  • Gelderland Competition

: Winners: 1894–95, 1895–96

=Club Awards=

: Winners: 1989–90

Personnel honours

=European Golden Boot=

The following players have won the European Golden Boot whilst playing for Vitesse:

=Dutch Footballer of the Year (Golden Boots)=

The following players have won the Dutch Footballer of the Year whilst playing for Vitesse:

=Johan Cruyff Trophy=

The following players have won the Johan Cruyff Trophy whilst playing for Vitesse:

=Eredivisie Top Scorer=

=Eerste Divisie Top Scorer=

=Rinus Michels Award (Manager of the year)=

=UEFA's #EqualGame Award=

=Georgian Footballer of the Year=

Vitesse in Europe

File:Vitesse Arnhem vs Zulte Waregem (0-2).jpg

File:Vitesse sfeeractie (Ernemse Boys).jpg

{{main|SBV Vitesse in European football}}

  • Group = group game
  • Q = qualifying round
  • KPO = knockout round play-offs
  • PO = play-off round
  • 1R = first round
  • 2R = second round
  • 3R = third round
  • 1/8 = 1/8 final

class="wikitable"

! Season

! Competition

! Round

! Country

! Club

! Score

! Goalscorers Vitesse

rowspan="3" |1978–79

| rowspan="3" |Intertoto Cup

| rowspan="3" |Group

|{{flagicon|Italy}}

|Hellas Verona

|2–1, 0–2

|Bursac, Hofs / (-)

{{flagicon|Belgium}}

|RWDM

|0–5, 0–2

|(-) / (-)

{{flagicon|France}}

|Troyes

|5–3, 2–1

|Bleijenberg (2), Heezen, Mulderij, Bosveld / Bleijenberg, Beukhof

rowspan="3" |1990–91

| rowspan="3" |UEFA Cup

|1R

|{{flagicon|Ireland}}

|Derry City

|1–0, 0–0

|Loeffen / (-)

2R

|{{flagicon|Scotland}}

|Dundee United

|1–0, 4–0

|Eijer / Latuheru (2), Van den Brom, Eijer

1/16

|{{flagicon|Portugal}}

|Sporting CP

|0–2, 1–2

|(-) / Van Arum

rowspan="3" |1992–93

| rowspan="3" |UEFA Cup

|1R

|{{flagicon|Ireland}}

|Derry City

|3–0, 2–1

|Van den Brom (2), Van Arum / Straal, Laamers

2R

|{{flagicon|Belgium}}

|Mechelen

|1–0, 1–0

|Van den Brom / Cocu

1/16

|{{flagicon|Spain}}

|Real Madrid

|0–1, 0–1

|(-) / (-)

1993–94

|UEFA Cup

|1R

|{{flagicon|England}}

|Norwich City

|0–3, 0–0

|(-) / (-)

1994–95

|UEFA Cup

|1R

|{{flagicon|Italy}}

|Parma

|1–0, 0–2

|Gillhaus / (-)

1997–98

|UEFA Cup

|1R

|{{flagicon|Portugal}}

|Braga

|2–1, 0–2

|Čurović, Trustfull / (-)

rowspan="2" |1998–99

| rowspan="2" |UEFA Cup

|1R

|{{flagicon|Greece}}

|AEK Athens

|3–0, 3–3

|Laros, Perović, Machlas / Machlas (2), Reuser

2R

|{{flagicon|France}}

|Bordeaux

|0–1, 1–2

|(-) / Jochemsen

rowspan="2" |1999–00

| rowspan="2" |UEFA Cup

|1R

|{{flagicon|Portugal}}

|Beira-Mar

|2–1, 0–0

|Van Hooijdonk, Grozdić / (-)

2R

|{{flagicon|France}}

|Lens

|1–4, 1–1

|Van Hooijdonk / Kreek

rowspan="2" |2000–01

| rowspan="2" |UEFA Cup

|1R

|{{flagicon|Israel}}

|Maccabi Haifa

|3–0, 1–2

|Martel, Peeters, Amoah / Amoah

2R

|{{flagicon|Italy}}

|Internazionale

|0–0, 1–1

|(-) / Peeters

rowspan="3" |2002–03

| rowspan="3" |UEFA Cup

|1R

|{{flagicon|Romania}}

|Rapid București

|1–1, 1–0

|Peeters / Peeters

2R

|{{flagicon|Germany}}

|Werder Bremen

|2–1, 3–3

|Amoah, Verlaat (o.g.) / Levchenko, Claessens, Mbamba

3R

|{{flagicon|England}}

|Liverpool

|0–1, 0–1

|(-) / (-)

rowspan="2" |2012–13

| rowspan="2" |Europa League

|Q2

|{{flagicon|Bulgaria}}

|Lokomotiv Plovdiv

|4–4, 3–1

|Van Ginkel (2), Reis, Bony / Van Ginkel, Van Aanholt, Bony

Q3

|{{flagicon|Russia}}

|Anzhi Makhachkala

|0–2, 0–2

|(-) / (-)

2013–14

|Europa League

|Q3

|{{flagicon|Romania}}

|Petrolul Ploiești

|1–1, 1–2

|Reis / Van der Heijden

2015–16

|Europa League

|Q3

|{{flagicon|England}}

|Southampton

|0–3, 0–2

|(-) / (-)

rowspan="3" |2017–18

| rowspan="3" |Europa League

| rowspan="3" |Group

|{{flagicon|France}}

|Nice

|0–3, 1–0

|(-) / Castaignos

{{flagicon|Italy}}

|Lazio

|2–3, 1–1

|Matavž, Linssen / Linssen

{{flagicon|Belgium}}

|Zulte Waregem

|0–2, 1–1

|(-) / Bruns

rowspan="2" |2018–19

| rowspan="2" |Europa League

|Q2

|{{flagicon|Romania}}

|Viitorul Constanța

|3–1, 2–2

|Matavž, Linssen, Beerens / Matavž, Linssen

Q3

|{{flagicon|Switzerland}}

|Basel

|0–1, 0–1

|(-) / (-)

rowspan="7" |2021–22

| rowspan="7" |Europa Conference League

|Q3

|{{flagicon|Ireland}}

|Dundalk

|2–2, 2–1

|Bero, Openda / Bero, Gboho

PO

|{{flagicon|Belgium}}

|Anderlecht

|3–3, 2–1

|Dasa, Frederiksen, Tannane / Wittek (2)

rowspan="3" |Group

|{{flagicon|England}}

|Tottenham Hotspur

|1–0, 2–3

|Wittek / Rasmussen, Beró

{{flagicon|France}}

|Rennes

|1–2, 3–3

|Wittek / Huisman, Buitink, Openda

{{flagicon|Slovenia}}

|Mura

|3–1, 2–0

|Buitink, Openda, Huisman / Tronstad, Doekhi

KPO

|{{flagicon|Austria}}

|Rapid Wien

|2–0, 1–2

|Grbic, Beró / Openda

1/16

|{{flagicon|Italy}}

|Roma

|0–1, 1–1

|(-) / Wittek

UEFA Current ranking

{{updated|22 January 2025}}{{cite web|title=Uefa current ranking|url=https://www.uefa.com/nationalassociations/uefarankings/club/?year=2025|website=UEFA|access-date=22 January 2025|archive-date=20 March 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170320224158/http://www.uefa.com/memberassociations/uefarankings/club/index.html|url-status=live}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
RankCountryTeamPoints
122{{flagicon|NED}}Vitesse12.113

Dutch Cup finals

class="wikitable"

! Season

! Opponent

! Result

! Place

! Date

1911–12

|Haarlem

|0–2

|R.A.P.-terrein, Amsterdam

|26 May 1912

1926–27

|V.U.C.

|1–3

|Monnikenhuize, Arnhem

|19 June 1927

1989–90

|PSV Eindhoven

|0–1

|De Kuip, Rotterdam

|25 April 1990

bgcolor="#FAE614" | 2016–17

|bgcolor="#FAE614" | AZ

|bgcolor="#FAE614" | 2–0

|bgcolor="#FAE614" | De Kuip, Rotterdam

|bgcolor="#FAE614" | 30 April 2017

2020–21

|Ajax

|1–2

|De Kuip, Rotterdam

|18 April 2021

The winners of the cup compete against the winners of the Eredivisie for the Johan Cruyff Shield.

=Johan Cruyff Shield=

class="wikitable"

! Season

! Opponent

! Result

! Place

! Date

2017

| Feyenoord

| 1–1 (2–4 pen.)

| De Kuip, Rotterdam

| 5 August 2017

Club records

File:Вильфрид Бони.jpg to Swansea City for £12 million. (2013)]]

Domestic results

File:Vitesse League Performance.png

Below is a table with Vitesse's domestic results since the introduction of the Eredivisie in 1956.

class="wikitable collapsible" style="width: 100%; text-align: center"

! colspan=5 | Domestic Results since 1956

width="20%"|Domestic league

! width="20%"|League result

! width="20%"|Qualification to

! width="20%"|KNVB Cup season

! width="20%"|Cup result

2023–24 Eredivisie

|bgcolor="pink"|18th

|Eerste Divisie (relegation)

|2023–24

|quarter-final

2022–23 Eredivisie

|10th

| –

|2022–23

|first round

2021–22 Eredivisie

|6th

|– (losing UECL play-offs)

|2021–22

|quarter-final

2020–21 Eredivisie

|4th

|Europa Conference League (Q3)

|2020–21

|bgcolor="silver"|final

2019–20 Eredivisie

|7th

| –

|2019–20

|quarter-final

2018–19 Eredivisie

|5th

| –

|2018–19

|quarter-final

2017–18 Eredivisie

|6th (5th after EC play-offs)

|Europa League (Q2) (winning EC play-offs)

|2017–18

|first round

2016–17 Eredivisie

|5th

|Europa League

|2016–17

|style="background:gold;"|winners

2015–16 Eredivisie

|9th

| –

|2015–16

|second round

2014–15 Eredivisie

|5th (4th after EC play-offs)

|Europa League (Q3) (winning EC play-offs)

|2014–15

|quarter-final

2013–14 Eredivisie

|6th (8th after EC play-offs)

| – (losing EC play-offs)

|2013–14

|round of 16

2012–13 Eredivisie

|4th

|Europa League

|2012–13

|quarter-final

2011–12 Eredivisie

|7th (6th after EC play-offs)

|Europa League (winning EC play-offs)

|2011–12

|quarter-final

2010–11 Eredivisie

|15th

| –

|2010–11

|round of 16

2009–10 Eredivisie

|14th

| –

|2009–10

|third round

2008–09 Eredivisie

|10th

| –

|2008–09

|third round

2007–08 Eredivisie

|12th

| –

|2007–08

|second round

2006–07 Eredivisie

|12th (10th after IC play-offs)

| – (losing IC play-offs)

|2006–07

|third round

2005–06 Eredivisie

|11th (10th after IC play-offs)

| – (losing IC play-offs)

|2005–06

|second round

2004–05 Eredivisie

|7th

| –

|2004–05

|third round

2003–04 Eredivisie

|16th

| – (surviving promotion/relegation play-offs)

|2003–04

|round of 16

2002–03 Eredivisie

|14th

| –

|2002–03

|quarter-final

2001–02 Eredivisie

|5th

|UEFA Cup

|2001–02

|second round

2000–01 Eredivisie

|6th

| –

|2000–01

|bgcolor="#CD7F32"|semi-final

1999–2000 Eredivisie

|4th

|UEFA Cup

|1999–2000

|bgcolor="#CD7F32"|semi-final

1998–99 Eredivisie

|4th

|UEFA Cup

|1998–99

|quarter-final

1997–98 Eredivisie

|bgcolor="#CD7F32"|3rd

|UEFA Cup

|1997–98

|quarter-final

1996–97 Eredivisie

|5th

|UEFA Cup

|1996–97

|quarter-final

1995–96 Eredivisie

|5th

| –

|1995–96

|second round

1994–95 Eredivisie

|6th

| –

|1994–95

|second round

1993–94 Eredivisie

|4th

|UEFA Cup

|1993–94

|third round

1992–93 Eredivisie

|4th

|UEFA Cup

|1992–93

|round of 16

1991–92 Eredivisie

|4th

|UEFA Cup

|1991–92

|round of 16

1990–91 Eredivisie

|5th

| –

|1990–91

|quarter-final

1989–90 Eredivisie

|4th

|UEFA Cup

|1989–90

|bgcolor="silver"|final

1988–89 Eerste Divisie

|bgcolor="gold"|1st

|Eredivisie (promotion)

|1988–89

|quarter-final

1987–88 Eerste Divisie

|9th

|promotion/relegation play-offs: no promotion

|1987–88

|first round

1986–87 Eerste Divisie

|7th

| –

|1986–87

|quarter-final

1985–86 Eerste Divisie

|8th

|promotion/relegation play-offs: no promotion

|1985–86

|first round

1984–85 Eerste Divisie

|17th

| –

|1984–85

|second round

1983–84 Eerste Divisie

|11th

| –

|1983–84

|first round

1982–83 Eerste Divisie

|10th

| –

|1982–83

|second round

1981–82 Eerste Divisie

|8th

| –

|1981–82

|second round

1980–81 Eerste Divisie

|8th

| –

|1980–81

|first round

1979–80 Eredivisie

|bgcolor="pink"|17th

|Eerste Divisie (relegation)

|1979–80

|round of 16

1978–79 Eredivisie

|14th

| –

|1978–79

|second round

1977–78 Eredivisie

|9th

| –

|1977–78

|quarter-final

1976–77 Eerste Divisie

|bgcolor="gold"|1st

|Eredivisie (promotion)

|1976–77

|second round

1975–76 Eerste Divisie

|5th

|promotion/relegation play-offs: no promotion

|1975–76

|first round

1974–75 Eerste Divisie

|bgcolor="#CD7F32"|3rd

|promotion/relegation play-offs: no promotion

|1974–75

|first round

1973–74 Eerste Divisie

|bgcolor="silver"|2nd

|promotion/relegation play-offs: no promotion

|1973–74

|second round

1972–73 Eerste Divisie

|bgcolor="#CD7F32"|3rd

| –

|1972–73

|second round

1971–72 Eredivisie

|bgcolor="pink"|18th

|Eerste Divisie (relegation)

|1971–72

|first round

1970–71 Eerste Divisie

|bgcolor="#CD7F32"|3rd

|Eredivisie (promotion)

|1970–71

|second round

1969–70 Eerste Divisie

|7th

| –

|1969–70

|second round

1968–69 Eerste Divisie

|bgcolor="#CD7F32"|3rd

| –

|1968–69

|quarter-final

1967–68 Eerste Divisie

|5th

| –

|1967–68

|group stage

1966–67 Eerste Divisie

|8th

| –

|1966–67

|first round

1965–66 Tweede Divisie

|bgcolor="gold"|1st (group A)

|Eerste Divisie (promotion)

|1965–66

|group stage

1964–65 Tweede Divisie

|4th (group A)

| –

|1964–65

|first round

1963–64 Tweede Divisie

|9th (group B)

| –

|1963–64

|first round

1962–63 Tweede Divisie

|6th (group A)

| –

|1962–63

|second round

1961–62 Eerste Divisie

|bgcolor="pink"|10th (group A)

|Tweede Divisie (relegation)

|1961–62

|fourth round

1960–61 Eerste Divisie

|4th (group A)

| –

|1960–61

|group stage

1959–60 Eerste Divisie

|bgcolor="silver"|2nd (group A)

|promotion/relegation play-offs: no promotion

|not held

|not held

1958–59 Eerste Divisie

|10th (group B)

| –

|1958–59

|no participation

1957–58 Eerste Divisie

|5th (group A)

| –

|1957–58

|fourth round

1956–57 Eerste Divisie

|7th (group B)

| –

|1956–57

|second round

Statistics

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

| ({{As of|2021|12|10}})

! Eredivisie !! Eerste Divisie !! Tweede Divisie !! UEFA CUP !! UEFA Europa League !! Europa Conference League

{{left|Matches played}}

| 1228 || 852 || 120 || 36 || 18 || 14

{{left|Matches won}}

| 482 || 379 || 57 || 14 || 3 || 6

{{left|Matches drawn}}

| 342 || 215 || 34 || 9 || 5 || 4

{{left|Matches lost}}

| 404 || 258 || 29 || 13 || 10 || 4

{{left|Goals for}}

| 1868 || 1450 || 221 || 40 || 19 || 25

{{left|Goal against}}

| 1697 || 1192 || 165 || 37 || 32 || 20

{{left|Seasons}}

| 37 || 25 || 4 || 9 || 5 || 1

{{left|Best ranking}}

| 3 (1997–98) || 1 (1976–77, 1988–89) || 1 (1965–66) || – || – || –

{{left|Worst ranking}}

| 18 (1971–72) || 17 (1984–85) || 9 (1963–64) || – || – || –

=Club topscorers by season=

{{div col|colwidth=20em}}

{{div col end}}

=Player of the Season=

Vitesse's Player of the Season award is voted for by the club's supporters. It was first introduced in the 1989–90 season.

class="wikitable" style="display:inline-table; margin-right:1em"

! Year

! Winner

1990{{flagicon|Holland}} Theo Bos
1991{{flagicon|Holland}} René Eijer
1992{{flagicon|Holland}} Martin Laamers
1993{{flagicon|Holland}} Phillip Cocu
1994{{flagicon|Holland}} Glenn Helder
1995{{flagicon|Holland}} Chris van der Weerden
1996{{flagicon|Holland}} Arco Jochemsen
1997{{flagicon|Holland}} Edward Sturing
1998{{flagicon|Greece}} Nikos Machlas
1999{{flagicon|Holland}} Sander Westerveld

class="wikitable" style="display:inline-table; margin-right:1em"

! Year

! Winner

2000{{flagicon|Holland}} Michel Kreek
2001{{flagicon|Holland}} Victor Sikora
2002{{flagicon|Serbia}} Dejan Stefanović
2003{{flagicon|Ghana}} Matthew Amoah
2004{{flagicon|Holland}} Nicky Hofs
2005{{flagicon|Ghana}} Abubakari Yakubu
2006{{flagicon|Holland}} Youssouf Hersi
2007{{flagicon|Serbia}} Danko Lazović
2008{{flagicon|Holland}} Piet Velthuizen
2009{{flagicon|Holland}} Paul Verhaegh

class="wikitable" style="display:inline-table"

! Year

! Winner

2010{{flagicon|Holland}} Piet Velthuizen
2011{{flagicon|Serbia}} Slobodan Rajković
2012{{flagicon|Holland}} Alexander Büttner
2013{{flagicon|Ivory Coast}} Wilfried Bony
2014{{flagicon|Ghana}} Christian Atsu
2015{{flagicon|Holland}} Davy Pröpper
2016{{flagicon|Georgia}} Guram Kashia
2017{{flagicon|Holland}} Ricky van Wolfswinkel
2018{{flagicon|England}} Mason Mount
2019{{flagicon|Norway}} Martin Ødegaard

class="wikitable" style="display:inline-table"

! Year

! Winner

2020{{flagicon|Holland}} Remko Pasveer
2021{{flagicon|Holland}} Remko Pasveer
2022{{flagicon|Germany}} Maximilian Wittek

=Most appearances=

== All competitions ==

Image:Theo Bos 2011 1.jpg

Image:Raimond-van-der-gouw-1398447774.jpg

class="wikitable"

! Ranking

! Name

! Position

! matches

! First season

! Last season

1.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Theo Bos

|DF

| 429

| 1983/1984

| 1997/1998

2.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Edward Sturing

|DF

| 383

| 1987/1988

| 1997/1998

3.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} John van den Brom

|MF

| 378

| 1986/1987

| 2000/2001

4.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Martin Laamers

|MF

| 354

| 1986/1987

| 1995/1996

5.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Raimond van der Gouw

|GK

| 294

| 1988/1989

| 1995/1996

6.

| {{flagicon|Georgia}} Guram Kashia

|DF

| 292

| 2010/2011

| 2017/2018

== Eredivisie ==

class="wikitable"

! Ranking

! Name

! Position

! matches

! First season

! Last season

1.

| {{flagicon|Georgia}} Guram Kashia

|DF

| 244

| 2010/2011

| 2017/2018

2.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Davy Pröpper

|MF

| 133

| 2009/2010

| 2014/2015

3.

| {{flagicon|Curaçao}} Eloy Room

|GK

| 128

| 2008/2009

| 2016/2017

4.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Piet Velthuizen

|GK

| 125

| 2006/2007

| 2015/2016

5.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Jan-Arie van der Heijden

|DF

| 123

| 2011/2012

| 2014/2015

6.

| {{flagicon|Ecuador}} Renato Ibarra

|FW

| 122

| 2011/2012

| 2015/2016

== Europa ==

class="wikitable"

! Ranking

! Name

! Position

! matches

! First season

! Last season

1.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Theo Bos

|DF

| 17

| 1983/1984

| 1997/1998

2.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} John van den Brom

|MF

| 17

| 1986/1987

| 2000/2001

3.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Raimond van der Gouw

|GK

| 16

| 1988/1989

| 1995/1996

4.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Theo Janssen

|MF

| 16

| 1998/1999

| 2013/2014

5.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Martin Laamers

|MF

| 16

| 1986/1987

| 1995/1996

6.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Bart Latuheru

|FW

| 15

| 1989/1990

| 1995/1996

=Top goalscorers=

== All competitions ==

class="wikitable"

! Ranking

! Name

! Position

! Goals

! Period

1.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Jan Dommering

| FW

| 168

| 1929–1948

2.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} John van den Brom

|MF

| 110

| 1986–2001

3.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Gerrit Langeler

| FW

| 91

| 1916–1925

4.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Kees Meeuwsen

| FW

| 89

| 1929–1954

5.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Henk Bosveld

|MF

| 82

| 1968–1979

6.

| {{flagicon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} Boško Bursać

| FW

| 78

| 1974–1980

== Eredivisie ==

class="wikitable"

! Ranking

! Name

! Position

! Goals

! Period

1.

| {{flagicon|Ghana}} Matthew Amoah

| FW

| 61

| 1998–2006

2.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} John van den Brom
{{flagicon|Greece}} Nikos Machlas

|MF

| 60

| 1986–2001
1996–1999

3.

| {{flagicon|Ivory Coast}} Wilfried Bony

| FW

| 46

| 2011–2013

4.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Roy Makaay

| FW

| 42

| 1993–1997

5.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Bryan Linssen

| FW

| 41

| 2017–2020

6.

| {{flagicon|Serbia}} Dejan Čurović

| FW

| 41

| 1994–2000

== Europa ==

class="wikitable"

! Ranking

! Name

! Position

! Goals

! Period

1.

| {{flagicon|Germany}} Maximilian Wittek

| DF

| 5

| 2020–

2.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} John van den Brom

| MF

| 4

| 1986–2001

3.

| {{flagicon|Holland}} Bryan Linssen

| FW

| 4

| 2017–2020

4.

| {{flagicon|Belgium}} Bob Peeters

| FW

| 4

| 2000–2003

5.

| {{flagicon|Ghana}} Matthew Amoah

| FW

| 3

| 2000–2005

=Vitesse All Stars=

File:Henk Bosveld (1968).jpg conducted a survey in which fans voted Henk Bosveld (r.) as the best Vitesse-player of the twentieth century.]]

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
NamePosNatYears at ClubGamesGoals
align="left"|Bert JacobsCoach{{flagicon|NED}}1988–1993{{n/a}}{{n/a}}
align="left"|Just GöbelGK{{flagicon|NED}}1909–19241160
align="left"|Willem HesselinkDF{{flagicon|NED}}1892–19197938
align="left"|Theo BosDF{{flagicon|NED}}1983–19984291
align="left"|Edward SturingDF{{flagicon|NED}}1987–19883833
align="left"|John van den Brom|MF{{flagicon|NED}}1986–2001378110
align="left"|Theo Janssen|MF{{flagicon|NED}}1998–201424230
align="left"|Dik HerbertsFW{{flagicon|NED}}1947–195922049
align="left"|Toon HuibertsFW{{flagicon|NED}}1951–196846971
align="left"|Henk BosveldFW{{flagicon|NED}}1968–197919182
align="left"|Nikos MachlasFW{{flagicon|GRE}}1996–19999270
align="left"|Dejan ČurovićFW{{flagicon|SER}}1994–200010947

Other teams

=Vitesse II=

Vitesse's reserve team (Under-21) currently plays in the Beloften Eredivisie. It plays its home matches at Papendal and it is coached by Joseph Oosting.{{cite news|title=3. Liga / U 23 > Trainer|url=http://www.werder.de/u23/trainer.php|publisher=Werder.de|access-date=7 December 2010}}{{dead link|date=April 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} The team is composed mostly of professional footballers, who are often recent graduates from the highest youth level (Vitesse U19) serving their first professional contract as a reserve, or players who are otherwise unable to play in the first team.

==Honours==

The team's honours:

=Amateur team=

In 1984, it was decided to divide the professional and amateur sections of the club. The professional section was renamed SBV (Stichting Betaald Voetbal – "Professional Football Foundation") Vitesse whilst the amateur section became "(AVC) Vitesse 1892", who played their home matches at the Sportcomplex Valkenhuizen. In total, the club has won five trophies; one Derde Klasse title, one Vierde Klasse title, one Zesde Klasse title and two Arnhem Cups. In 2009, Vitesse 1892 was declared bankrupt. The amateur section has produced a number of professional players including Andy van der Meijde, Nicky Hofs, Léon Hese, Erwin van de Looi and Theo Janssen.

=Vitesse Legends=

{{unreferenced section|date=June 2022}}

Vitesse Legends are a beneficiary team that was initiated by Ben Snelders, Leo de Kleermaeker and Dik Herberts in the 1990s, competing in at least one match a year, usually in the name of charity and/or to bid farewell to retiring former Vitesse players. The team is made up of various members of the Club van 100 of Vitesse who will come out of retirement{{when|date=June 2022}} for this match to face the current Vitesse squad. Past participants have included Theo Janssen, Marc van Hintum, Edward Sturing, Ruud Knol, Remco van der Schaaf, Nicky Hofs, Erwin van de Looi, Glenn Helder, Philip Cocu, John van den Brom, Theo Bos, Martin Laamers, Michael Dingsdag, Roberto Straal, Frans Thijssen, Dejan Čurović, Jhon van Beukering and Huub Loeffen.

National team players

File:Willem Hesselink, monochrome and adjusted photo.jpg.]]

A number of Vitesse players have represented the Netherlands national team, the first official international being Willem Hesselink. He was one of the founders of Vitesse in 1892 at age 14. In 1905 he started in the first ever home match of the Netherlands national football team, a 4–0 victory against Belgium. Some historians attribute one of the goals scored to him. Just Göbel played 22 matches for the Dutch team, being best remembered for his numerous saves during the 2–1 win over England's amateurs and his bronze medal in the football tournament of the 1912 Summer Olympics. The record number of Vitesse players for the Netherlands was three, which occurred on two occasions in 1989. The following players were called up to represent the Netherlands national team in international football and received caps during their tenure with Vitesse:

{{div col|colwidth=28em}}

{{div col end}}

Notable former players

{{div col|colwidth=28em|small=yes}}

{{div col end}}

See also

Literature

  • Van Mierlo, Joost: Verspeelde Energie. Vitesse en Nuon, verslag van een explosieve relatie. SUN, Nijmegen 2001, {{ISBN|9789058750327}}.
  • Molenaar, Arjen: 111 Jaar Vitesse. De sportieve geschiedenis van Vitesse 1892-2003 Vitesse, Arnhem 2003, {{ISBN|9090173005}}.
  • Van Roosmalen, Marcel: Je hebt het niet van mij. Een tragi-komisch verslag over de soap bij Vitesse. Hard gras, Amsterdam 2006, {{ISBN|9046800962}}.
  • Van Roosmalen, Marcel: Het Jaar van de Adelaar. Hard gras, Amsterdam 2009, {{ISBN|9789046805664}}.
  • Van Roosmalen, Marcel: Geef me nog twee dagen. Hard gras, Amsterdam 2011, {{ISBN|9789071359446}}.
  • Bierhaus, Peter: Vites! 9 verhalen over onvoorwaardelijke liefde voor Vitesse. Ctrl-E, Arnhem 2011, {{ISBN|9789081345781}}.
  • Remco, Kok: Een Arnhemmer is niet voor Ajax. Lecturium, Zoetermeer 2014, {{ISBN|9789048431816}}.
  • Reurink, Ferry: Elke dag Vitesse. 125 jaar clubgeschiedenis in 366 verhalen. Kontrast, Oosterbeek 2017, {{ISBN|9789492411990}}.

Notes and references

{{Reflist}}

= Official websites =

  • [https://www.vitesse.nl/en Vitesse.nl] Official website of Vitesse Arnhem {{in lang|nl|en}}
  • [http://www.gelredome.nl/ GelreDome.nl] Official website of stadium GelreDome
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20100408172607/http://www.uefa.com/search/index.html#Vitesse UEFA.com] The Vitesse Arnhem Story

= General fan site =

  • [http://www.vitesse.org/ Official supporters site] {{in lang|nl}}

= News sites =

  • [http://www.skysports.com/vitesse-arnhem Vitesse Arnhem] at SkySports.com
  • [http://www.goal.com/en/team/vitesse/6hsriqr3ybvyg94w2k19oal50 Vitesse Arnhem] at Goal
  • [http://www.football-lineups.com/team/Vitesse_Arnhem/Eredivisie_2018-2019/fixture Vitesse Arnhem] at Football-Lineups.com

{{SBV Vitesse}}

{{Eredivisie}}

{{KNVB Cup Winners 1961-present}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Vitesse}}

Category:Football clubs in the Netherlands

Category:Football clubs in Arnhem

Category:Association football clubs established in 1892

Category:1892 establishments in the Netherlands