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Dutch football league passport dispute could force 133-match replay

May 2, 20263 Mins Read
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A court ruling expected on Monday could clarify a growing legal dispute in Dutch football over player eligibility, after a passport dispute over a single player spiralled into a crisis engulfing 11 players across eight clubs.

In the worst case, the court’s decision could result in the Dutch Eredivisie being forced to replay 133 matches and potentially leave this season unable to reach a conclusion.

The case centres on Go Ahead Eagles defender Dean James, who was born in the Netherlands but obtained Indonesian citizenship in March 2025 to qualify for the Indonesian national team, making his debut for the side against Australia in March 2026.

Under Dutch law, choosing to take up a foreign nationality strips a person of their Dutch citizenship. However, whether the person has lost their citizenship must be assessed on an individual basis, as some exceptions exist.

If they are no longer a Dutch national, a player becomes a non-EU worker and requires a work permit to play professionally in the Netherlands. Non-EU players must meet a minimum salary threshold — set significantly above the average Eredivisie wage — to qualify for the permit.

James played for Go Ahead Eagles in their 6-0 victory over NAC Breda on 15 March.

NAC Breda, who are fighting relegation, subsequently complained to the KNVB and demanded the result be overturned and the match replayed.

The KNVB’s competition board rejected the request, ruling that neither James nor Go Ahead Eagles had been aware of the automatic legal consequences of his nationality change, and that no disciplinary measures were warranted.

NAC appealed, and a Utrecht court heard the case on Tuesday, with the ruling set for next week.

The KNVB has warned that a ruling in NAC’s favour would set a precedent forcing clubs to challenge the results of every match in which a similarly affected player featured.

Its lawyer told the court that 11 players across eight clubs are in the same legal position as James, having acquired the nationality of Indonesia, Cape Verde or Suriname — all former Dutch colonies whose national teams have actively recruited Dutch-born players with ancestral ties.

Taken off the pitch

Several clubs temporarily stood down affected players while their status was being clarified.

Some have since been cleared to play after obtaining residence stamps from the Immigration and Naturalisation Service, including NEC Nijmegen’s Suriname international Tjaronn Chery.

Replaying all 133 matches in which those players were involved at this stage of the season would be logistically impossible and would almost certainly prevent the 2025-26 season from being completed before the 2026 FIFA World Cup begins in June.

Go Ahead Eagles maintained that James holds Dutch nationality according to government records, with the club’s director saying he had checked James’ status on the Dutch government’s Mijn Overheid portal, which showed him as Dutch.

Clubs said they had received no warning from any authority. “Not a single government agency has said anything about it in the past two years,” Wilco van Schaik, general manager of NEC, said on The Boardroom podcast. “We all acted in good faith.”

Read the full article here

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