STARS OF QATAR 2022: Players to watch out for as Netherlands aim for first time victory at World Cup

How have the Netherlands never won the FIFA World Cup?

In 1974, “Total Football,” which had Johan Cruyff as concertmaster and Rinus Michels as conductor, nearly won the trophy, but finished second and went home. Four years later, the same team always won the same prize, albeit without Cruyff.

In a titanic Round of 16 match at Italia ’90, Ronald Koeman, Frank Rijkaard, Ruud Gullit, Marco van Basten, and the continental champions of ’88 lost to fierce rivals West Germany. Dennis Bergkamp and company worked plenty of magic before falling to Brazil in the France ’98 semifinals on penalties. After that, Wesley Sneijder, Arjen Robben, and Robin van Persie won bronze in Brazil and silver in South Africa, respectively.

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The aforementioned question is one that perplexes Louis van Gaal. It’s one he and his band of soldiers are determined to make extinct. FIFA+ spotlights five of the men who could help the Netherlands do so in Qatar.

Virgil van Dijk
Position: Centre-back
Age: 31

“Virgil van Dijk is the best centre-back on the planet right now – easy,” stated Rio Ferdinand earlier this year. “I’d go further,” interrupted Michael Owen. “I think he’s the best centre-half of all time.”

Positional GOAT contenders such as Bobby Moore, Franz Beckenbauer, Daniel Passarella, Franco Baresi, Marcel Desailly and Fabio Cannavaro all thrived in the World Cup. At the relatively old age of 31, Van Dijk, who has never even played in a UEFA EURO, will finally get his chance.

The Breda boulder has been central to the re-emergence the Netherlands with his impregnability, leadership and threat from set-pieces. Having won everything there is to win at club level with Liverpool, he now desperate to guide his country to the trophy that has somehow eluded some exceptional generations.

Van Dijk finished runner-up for The Best FIFA Men’s Player for 2019, but returned home with the plaudits of victor Lionel Messi, who labelled him “complete and magnificent”. Erling Haaland recently identified VVD as the toughest opponent he has ever competed against, saying: “He’s fast, strong and f*cking smart.”

Denzel Dumfries
Position: Right-wingback
Age: 26

A Dutch kid playing international football before he was on the books of a pro football club sounds like something from a Hollywood script, right? A kid named after actor Denzel Washington made it reality.

Dumfries made two appearances for Aruba as a 17-year-old in 2014, scoring a spectacular long-ranger against Guam. The uber-confident player swiftly informed the ABC Island nation he would not represent them in a competitive fixture, however, as he was certain he would one day wear orange in a World Cup.

Months later he was watching a giant screen in an Amsterdam square as Arjen Robben and Robin van Persie – along with current internationals Daley Blind and Giorginio Wijnaldum – helped write Netherlands’ earth-shaking 5-1 victory over Spain at Brazil 2014. Now Dumfries is set to realise his own wild dream.

The Rotterdammer’s maiden international expedition piqued the attention of Sparta Rotterdam, who whisked him from non-league Barendrecht. Eight years on and Dumfires can lay claim to having been one of the stars of UEFA EURO 2022, excelling for PSV and current club Inter Milan, interesting Bayern Munich, Manchester United and Real Madrid, and owning 35 Netherlands caps.

“I’ve never seen a player with such high energy,” said former Oranje right-back Mario Melchiot. “He has a real spring on him, a winning mentality, he’s physical, and he’s great going forward.”

Frenkie de Jong
Position: Midfielder
Age: 25

“I just love playing football, feeling the ball at my feet,” said De Jong. “All my life it’s all I’ve ever wanted to do.” So much so that on his last appearance for Ajax, with his side 4-1 up, he begged the referee to “please add extra time – I want to play as long as possible.”

De Jong is now set to perform on the biggest stage of all. A ball-retention and pass god, the Gorinchem native would be a perfect fit for the Dutch ‘Total Football’ of the 1970s or the Spanish tika-taka of in and around South Africa 2010, while he’s been likened to Franz Beckenbauer and his now-coach at Barcelona.

“With his skill, vision and passing he could be a new Xavi,” said Marc Overmars. Xavi himself recently showered his No21 in praise: “He’s spectacular with the ball at his feet. He’s strong, keeps possession, has incredible vision and can play the killer pass and split defences.”

The Willem II academy graduate has won 44 Netherlands caps, though he hasn’t scored in his last 34 internationals. Whether he can ripple Qatari nets is in question, but he seems destined to rewrite some World Cup passing statistics.

Ryan Gravenberch
Position: Midfielder
Age: 20

You will go a long way to find a more well-rounded midfielder than Gravenberch – and he only turned 20 in May. Young, perhaps, but by no means inexperienced. Gravenberch became the youngest player to appear for Ajax in the Eredivisie at the age of 16 years and 130 days, breaking Clarence Seedorf’s record. The 6ft 3ins players went on to make over 100 appearances for the club, helping them win five trophies and excelling in the UEFA Champions League before a recent move to Bayern Munich, for whom he has started admirably.

Gravenberch grew up idolising Zinedine Zidane, and attributes his ball control and skill to studying the Frenchman, but it’s Frank Rijkaard and Paul Pogba to whom he is most juxtaposed. “I’m kind of like a snake,” he said. “Long, quite narrow and I slip along everywhere. Paul Pogba is also a bit of a snake.”

“He’s very strong with great technique and balance,” said Bastian Schweinsteiger of the Amsterdammer, who is a fine tackler, boasts illimitable energy, can also get significant speed on his long-distance curlers and unleash thunderbolts.

Excellent defensively and offensively, Gravenberch could patrol in front of the defence or, if Georginio Wijnaldum fails to recover from injury, function in a more advanced midfield role.

Memphis Depay
Position: Forward
Age: 28

In their last 20 internationals Mo Salah has scored six goals, Karim Benzema and Kylian Mbappe 12 each, Robert Lewandowski and Lionel Messi 15 apiece, Harry Kane 16 and Erling Haaland 20. Depay has netted 21. He is, to the Oranje, as fundamental as oranges are to the Oranjebitter.

Depay’s cocktail of unpredictable skills, defence-fracturing through-balls and lethal finishes prompted current Netherlands coach Louis van Gaal to label him “one of the most difficult players to stop in the world”, Bastian Schweinsteiger to laud him as an ”unbelievable talent” and Georginio Wijnaldum to tell FIFA that “the team is doing so well because of Memphis. He’s a striker now but he does much more than score goals – he makes things happen, he gets assists.”

Depay, then 20 years old, traveled to Brazil in 2014. He assisted Robin van Persie in tying the score and scoring the winning goal in a 3-2 victory over Australia on his tournament debut, becoming him the youngest Dutchman to score a World Cup goal. In addition, he came off the bench to help his team win 2-0 against Chile so they could return home with the bronze medal.

The Barcelona player who is inching closer to Van Persie’s 50-goal mark will be crucial to the Netherlands’ prospects of winning their first gold medal in Qatar.

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