Introduction
The history of sport has proved a fruitful field for research into processes of identification. According to Jeff Hill, the texts and practices of sports represent ‘structured habits of thought and behaviour which contribute to our ways of seeing ourselves and others’.Footnote 1 Sports rivalries in particular have received attention from sociologists and historians, as they allow investigations into community bonding and the process of ‘othering’.
The cultural relationship between ‘place’ and a sports club is often considered self-evident. As John Bale has claimed, there is ‘little doubt that it is through sport that current manifestations of localism (and regionalism and nationalism) are most visible’.Footnote 2 Others have argued that supporting a football club offers the possibility to ‘assert a kind of membership of the city’,Footnote 3 and that in the past teams have revitalized the distinctiveness of city images, making clubs vehicles for the promotion of ‘place’.Footnote 4
But how does such a deep relationship between place and club come into being, and is it truly inevitable? Some ethnographic studies offer valuable insight into how local football cultures engage in the practice of ‘continually (re)inscribing and policing physical, as well as, cultural boundaries’,Footnote 5 yet such studies generally lack historicity.Footnote 6 Analyses by historians, on the other hand, tend to underrate the relevance of continuing rivalries to club identification,Footnote 7 or fail to engage truly with historical city images, despite the fact that there is often a perceived relationship.Footnote 8
The aim of this article is to provide a historical analysis of the rivalry between two football clubs, Vitesse Arnhem and NEC Nijmegen, explicating the various ‘axes of enmity’Footnote 9 between them and examining how the cities’ images inform, and are informed by, this rivalry. This will provide insight into the practice of ‘othering’ in an everyday context, helping to explain fundamental societal hostilities and shed light on why groups preserve or even nurture these hostilities. This article is intended to bring more depth to the field of research concerned with the relationship between city identification and sport identification, which remains underdeveloped.Footnote 10 Furthermore, by envisioning historical football rivalries as part of both cultural history and urban history, it aims at countering the ‘ghettoization’ of sports history.Footnote 11
There are several basic assumptions underlying this article. Both city and club identities are taken to be social constructs.Footnote 12 Identification, then, is viewed as an active process. In both cases, identities are enacted in the utterances and practices of agents inside and outside the club and/or city.Footnote 13 The process of identification ‘purifies’ one's in-group, encouraging ‘othering’, or ‘the production of difference, competition and rivalry’.Footnote 14
Here, this process of cultural differentiation is examined mainly through the analysis of historical discourse and historical actions. This allows for studying a city (and a football club) not as a physical entity, but as memory, as experience and as symbol. Newspaper articles and (ethnographic) travelogues, as well as some scholarly literature, were used to gauge the popular images of the cities of Arnhem and Nijmegen. The main periodical used was De Gelderlander, the biggest regional newspaper of the Netherlands, which reports on the whole province of Guelders. It has a historically large, fairly representative readership, both from the Nijmegen area and beyond.Footnote 15 For most of the twentieth century, regional newspapers were widely read and, thus, potentially had a meaningful impact on Dutch public opinion.Footnote 16 Additional material was used for examining the football clubs, including, in particular, commemorative books celebrating the history of NEC and Vitesse, as well as other clubs from the Guelders province. Furthermore, the Vitesse archive was consulted – the NEC archive was still under construction. Lastly, informal interviews were held with prominent figures from both fan clubs.
Arnhem and Nijmegen
The cities of Arnhem and Nijmegen lie close together and are very much alike. Both cities are situated in the east of the Netherlands in the province of Guelders (see Figure 1). Arnhem and Nijmegen's city centres are only 12 miles apart, yet they are separated by two rivers: the Rhine (running through Arnhem) and the Waal (through Nijmegen). In 2016, Nijmegen had 172,000 inhabitants, compared to Arnhem's 154,000, making them the tenth and fourteenth largest cities of the Netherlands. Their current demographic makeup is very similar: their populations’ age distribution, average personal income, country of origin, as well as property prices, unemployment levels and crime figures are all comparable.Footnote 17 Both cities saw rapid urbanization after their relatively late industrialization at the turn of the twentieth century.Footnote 18 While Nijmegen has hosted a university since 1923, making it a comparatively well-educated city, Arnhem's inhabitants are currently relatively highly educated as well. Today, moreover, many people commute between Arnhem and Nijmegen, making it even harder to pinpoint major differences between the populations of the two cities.
In describing the relationship between Arnhem and Nijmegen, observers often make a distinction between the two by referring to (what they perceive as) the cities’ distinct identities. The way in which a city's image is shaped by various actors determines how a place ‘achieve[s] coherence and how that coherence reproduces itself’.Footnote 19 This coherence makes the city into a ‘culturally constructed space’, existing of a ‘collection of symbols and images’.Footnote 20 While a city's image may be based on physical qualities, such as architecture and urban planning, it may also be determined by cultural qualities, such as a city's ‘character’. As I will demonstrate, the two types are often related. There are different agents, different discourses and different agendas that influence these socially constructed images.
A comprehensive study on historical city image exists for neither Arnhem nor Nijmegen. The following is an attempt to provide such an analysis. In addition to secondary literature on the cities of Arnhem and Nijmegen in the pre-modern and modern era, Dutch newspapers (1880–2016) were searched for specific keywords (‘typically Nijmegian’, ‘Arnhem custom’, ‘ . . . character’, ‘ . . . nature’, ‘ . . . habit’, ‘ . . . trait’, ‘ . . . practice’, ‘ . . . attribute’). Travelogues and ethnographic books with ‘Arnhem’ or ‘Nijmegen’ in their title were also part of the sample.
The historical image of Nijmegen
Since the end of the nineteenth century, Nijmegen's tourist office has tried to present the city as both green and ancient.Footnote 21 At that time, many people sought to escape from industrialization, and started looking for green oases to live in.Footnote 22 Nijmegen's politicians kept manufacturers at bay and the city came to be known as a true ‘pensionopolis’.Footnote 23 After the First World War, factory jobs finally came to Nijmegen, causing the city partly to lose its affluent image.Footnote 24 Subsequently, the balance tipped more and more toward presenting Nijmegen as the ‘oldest city of the Netherlands’. As of 2016, the city's history has been ‘museumized’, leading one scholar to remark that no other Dutch city asserts its historical image as much as Nijmegen.Footnote 25 According to some, the rediscovery of the city's purported Batavian–Roman roots has helped strengthen urban self-confidence among average Nijmegians.Footnote 26
Professional historians have (implicitly) affirmed city officials’ branding of Nijmegen as a 2,000-year old settlement, despite a profound lack of ‘cultural continuity’ in the region.Footnote 27 The consequence is that the city itself is ascribed a particular mentality by observers, derived from its long history of fighting against foreign powers: ‘autonomous, wayward, and self-assured’.Footnote 28 Its pride, conveyed through symbols, myths and architecture, is seen as stemming from attempts by Nijmegen's rulers to construct a sovereign city-state. The city's history is repeatedly cited as an influence on its present-day character.Footnote 29
Both in the past and today, Nijmegen was often labelled both a Roman Catholic city and a progressive city. Historically, Catholicism was the religious denomination of the majority of the city's inhabitants, and the instalment of a Catholic university in 1923 increased its visibility.Footnote 30 While secularization set in during the 1960s, to some Nijmegen was still a ‘Catholic city’ in the 1980s,Footnote 31 or even the 2000s.Footnote 32 Nijmegen's political image, however, is determined by its alleged progressivism. Student activism and the instalment of a progressive city council in 2002 yielded the nickname ‘Havana on the Waal [river]’.Footnote 33 According to the authoritative history of Nijmegen, there is no city in the Netherlands with a greater cultural heritage from the 1970s.Footnote 34 Occasionally, these two disparate parts of Nijmegen's image are brought together: in 1997, LGBT rights group Villa Lila argued that ‘promoting progressive developments on the axis of religion and homosexuality’ was a ‘typical Nijmegian tradition’.Footnote 35
Perhaps the most prominent aspect of Nijmegen's image is ‘folksiness’: to many, the city is convivial and inhabitants enjoy the good things in life.Footnote 36 Nijmegen, so it is said, has ‘a particular atmosphere of geniality’.Footnote 37 In 2009, its mayor called the city ‘cosy and informal’.Footnote 38 It is often described, moreover, as the ‘most Southern city of the Northern Netherlands’, referring to the stereotypical image of the Southern, majority Catholic Netherlands as festive, jovial and care-free.Footnote 39 A small survey among Nijmegians (1986) found that 64 per cent saw their city as ‘cosy and lively’.Footnote 40 Such recent, clichéd characterizations of the city and its inhabitants hardly ever come with a demographic, historical or localized specification. The implication is that all of Nijmegen is – and has always been – folksy, cosy and ‘Burgundian’.
The historical image of Arnhem
In many ways, the image of Arnhem is fundamentally different from that of Nijmegen. However, to observers, the city's history is equally important for explaining its present-day character. Before growing in size in the eighteenth century, Arnhem was a relatively modest town that missed out on the Dutch Golden Age. It acquired ‘the allure of a local capital’ around 1700,Footnote 41 and has been the official capital of the province of Guelders since 1817. The nineteenth century was a period of growth and modernization for Arnhem.Footnote 42 During these years, officials actively built a city image of which many parts are still intact today.Footnote 43
The physical surroundings of Arnhem have historically played a significant role in its image. In the nineteenth century, Arnhem was – somewhat romantically – known as a ‘beautifully situated, green city’ and an ‘anti-industrial’ city.Footnote 44 This ‘green’ image dates from at least the seventeenth century.Footnote 45 According to some, the council ‘preferred white collars over black hands’.Footnote 46 While this is a simplification, if not a falsehood,Footnote 47 Arnhem's green image has stuck. A small survey among Arnhemmers (i.e. the city's inhabitants) from the beginning of the twenty-first century found that they saw their city as ‘cherishing its tranquillity and its greenness’.Footnote 48 Another modest poll reported that they thought of their city as a ‘park city’, not an ‘industrial city’.Footnote 49
A second, more ubiquitous characterization of Arnhem's history is that of a well-off, luxurious city. Writing about nineteenth-century life in Arnhem, one historian stated that ‘a luxurious lifestyle . . . typified the city. Arnhem had allure.’Footnote 50 This image has proven persistent. Similarly, an impressionistic ethnography of the province of Guelders (1970) characterized Arnhem as a city of ‘genteel administrators’: a ‘well-situated bourgeoisie’ that is ‘too well-fed and too well-dressed’. The author accused (historical) Arnhemmers of pompousness, a ‘certain mimicking of aristocratic manners’.Footnote 51 Another more recent portrait of both Arnhem and Nijmegen (2008) calls the former ‘a city that attempts to be dignified, efficient and understated’, but always comes up a little short. To the author – who is from Nijmegen – Arnhem is ‘a somewhat formal, civil middle-class city’.Footnote 52 The reputation of Arnhem as a rather reserved city has a long history: in 1906, De Gelderlander also referred to the ‘world-famous stiffness’ of Arnhem's social life.Footnote 53 A component of these characterizations is Arnhem's image as a historically conservative city.Footnote 54 The city was known as a ‘white collar city’ until long after the Second World War.Footnote 55
‘Arrogant’ is another popular characterization of Arnhemmers. In 2013, Arnhem-born Vitesse footballer Davy Pröpper explained his lack of popularity among supporters: ‘I'm not the prototype of an Arnhemmer . . . Whiny, tough, arrogant, big-mouthed – doesn't describe me.’Footnote 56 To some, Arnhemmers’ arrogance is a historical fact: ‘there is an air of smugness and complacency around them . . . formed and strengthened through the centuries’.Footnote 57 Curiously, most Arnhemmers seem to have a similarly negative opinion. A small-scale survey from 2004 found that the top five traits Arnhemmers assigned to themselves were: (1) surly (2) standoffish (3) passive (4) stubborn (5) sporty.Footnote 58 Recently, one journalist proclaimed: ‘if you've got a room filled with people who are enthusiastic about the city, chances are none of them are from Arnhem’.Footnote 59 The question is, though, which ‘Arnhem’ observers are describing when alluding to arrogance, stiffness, green pastures and liberalism. There is an apparent class bias to this dominant image. It should be no surprise that many Arnhemmers and outsiders declare the city to be historically very divided.Footnote 60
Relations between the two cities
The closeness of Arnhem and Nijmegen means that they have an extensive history together. Often, specific parts of this history are highlighted to present a coherent idea of the two cities and their (supposedly inherent, long-standing) differences. Contemporary scholars and journalists contend that the animosity between Arnhem and Nijmegen has a ‘long tradition’,Footnote 61 making them ‘sworn enemies since olden days’Footnote 62 who are currently each other's ‘polar opposites’.Footnote 63 Historians often present the French Revolution and its consequences as an important turning point. Ancien régime Nijmegen had been one of Guelders’ principal cities, but, by the end of the eighteenth century, ‘jealous sister cities’ like Arnhem were looking to rid it of its pretenses.Footnote 64 The French Revolution cemented Arnhem's status as capital of the province of Guelders. It became the fastest growing town of the Netherlands in the nineteenth century. The popular interpretation is that the older, illustrious Nijmegen was forced to concede.Footnote 65 Apparently, now Arnhem had come to stand for prosperity, Nijmegen for poverty.Footnote 66
In comparing the two cities, observers essentialize certain differences. For many of the cities’ inhabitants, the neighbouring ‘other’ helped – and helps – cultivate their own city image. Thus, Arnhem is seen to have developed a ‘Protestant-conservative climate’ while Nijmegen was a ‘nearly completely Catholic city’.Footnote 67 In opposition to Nijmegen as the ‘most Southern city of the Northern Netherlands’, Arnhem was often called the ‘most Northern city of the Southern Netherlands’.Footnote 68 A recent survey among Arnhem policy-makers found that they thought Nijmegen was a city of ‘Southern conviviality’, especially in contrast to their own ‘strict and elitist’ city.Footnote 69 One politician, having worked in both cities, remarked in 1985: ‘Nijmegians are more casual, easier. The mentality is so different!’Footnote 70 That same newspaper special on the relationship between the two cities (titled ‘Back to back’) surveyed people from the Western Netherlands on their view of Arnhem and Nijmegen. According to 66 per cent of them, people in Nijmegen knew how to have fun – which was said of Arnhemmers by just 18 per cent.Footnote 71 Nijmegen is often compared to Arnhem in this way, and comes out ‘more colourful, folksier and more wayward’.Footnote 72
Not everyone agrees with this clichéd opposition between Arnhem and Nijmegen. A small survey from 2000 found that the ‘time-honoured rivalry’ between the two had dwindled.Footnote 73 And in 2013, in a series of newspaper articles intended to welcome the new mayor of Arnhem, a supporter of Vitesse told a journalist that she had hated living in Nijmegen: ‘Surly crowd, those Nijmegians! Awful.’ To her, Arnhem was the real cosy city of the region.Footnote 74 Another local told the same newspaper that he actually enjoyed visiting Nijmegen, though he joked that ‘the best thing about Nijmegen is the last train to Arnhem’.Footnote 75 Such comments remind us that the experience of city life is multifarious, and that images are selective. To some, the rivalry between the two cities is playful or even non-existent.
Many observe one major common character trait between the two cities, namely: ‘nuilen’, meaning a critical disposition – or ‘whining’. This habit is described as both typically NijmegianFootnote 76 as well as ‘Arnhems’ (i.e. typical of Arnhem) in contemporary newspaper articles.Footnote 77 One Arnhemmer explained the city's paradoxical mentality, connecting a fondness for Arnhem with one for Vitesse: ‘We scold the Vitesse team when things go bad, but we're proud as a dog with seven dicks when they do well.’Footnote 78
Not only are the city images discussed above clear generalizations, they are often created with a certain goal in mind. Place branding is part of these efforts, a tool that has grown more purposeful over the course of the twentieth century. It has always been an instrument for helping cities compete in the ‘arena of interplace competition’. Because of the expanding mobility of money and people, these intensifying urban rivalries are no longer frivolous. In fact, they are about competing over limited financial, human and cultural resources and partly determine a city's future.Footnote 79 Historically, local politicians have played a role as well, comparing their city (favourably) to neighbouring competitors.Footnote 80 Others, however, including politicians themselves, have recently pointed toward the role of the media, who are ‘out to create oppositions that aren't even there’.Footnote 81 It should be noted that a myopic view can lead to the conclusion that individual cities, such as Arnhem and Nijmegen, are wholly unique in many ways. Yet well-known Dutch historian Johan Huizinga's characterization of the Dutch in general, for instance, overlaps with many popular ideas about Nijmegians and Arnhemmers.Footnote 82
Localism
While the promotion of city images is not a new phenomenon, certain trends are visible. In the Netherlands, interest in, and the promotion of, local culture – localism – has seen a significant rise since at least the 1980s.Footnote 83 Social geographer Ben de Pater asserts that in the past two centuries the country has changed from a ‘mosaic of closed-off regional societies’ to one where such societies were ‘taken up by larger inter-regional frameworks’. As part of deliberate nineteenth-century nation building, school curricula converged and national holidays were created. A continuing transport revolution and the rise of new media meant increasing inter-regional contact. As a consequence, local cultural identities weakened – a development that was furthered in the 1970s by processes associated with the term ‘globalization’. However, De Pater signals a counter reaction with its starting point in the 1980s, in which associations have fought to protect their local cultures against what they saw as ‘Hollandization’. A renewed ‘local awareness’ was born, encouraged by local and regional media, which were able to ‘stimulate the social cohesion from which they themselves profit’.Footnote 84
The process of ‘othering’ has proved important for the celebration of local cultures, as seen in the oppositional images of Arnhem and Nijmegen. In an essay on what he called the ‘folklore of small differences’, Dutch philosopher Cornelis Verhoeven observed that for places, the rivalry with a neighbour is what produced local identities.Footnote 85 These constructed differences, this process of ‘bordering’,Footnote 86 means that small differences are taken to be significant, and are magnified ‘with the use of symbols and media’.Footnote 87 As said in the introduction, many scholars contend that such processes of inclusion and exclusion are the most apparent in sports. To borrow a phrase from John Hoberman, sportspersons, sports clubs and supporters become ‘proxy warriors’ for their respective local cultures.Footnote 88 I will now turn to these proxy warriors.
The history of NEC and Vitesse
The rise of organized football in the Netherlands was similar to that of other western European countries, though professionalization came comparatively late. The first football clubs were founded at the end of the nineteenth century, mostly by men from the (higher) middle class. In the inter-war period, those with more modest incomes followed. NEC and Vitesse were exemplary of this general trend. Vitesse was founded in 1892 by highly educated young men. Among its players was the occasional doctor, and even one baron. NEC's precursor, Eendracht, was founded in 1900, by a group of boys from the relatively impoverished lower city of Nijmegen. In 1910, this club merged with NVV Nijmegen, and became known as NEC.
Before the nationalization and professionalization of Dutch football in 1954 most matches had a fairly local or regional character. NEC and Vitesse played in the so-called Eastern district, where clubs from two provinces competed against each other: Guelders and Overijssel (to the north-east of Guelders). Only the champions of the Eastern district played at a national level to determine the winner of the national championship.
When NEC and Vitesse played their first match in 1916, the cultural difference between the two teams must have been felt both on and around the field. According to one reporter, NEC had chased the ball ‘like devils’.Footnote 89 In the inter-war period, teams that were seen as ‘proletarian’ were often accused of foul play. Their style was seen as very different from that of ‘gentlemen's teams’ such as Vitesse. Explicit references to class differences were often taboo for sports journalists, but they did frown upon harsh (or even ‘too enthusiastic’) play. References to this rougher style were code for a club's ‘modest’ origins and were used to delegitimize its results.Footnote 90 In reality, harsh play was not exclusive to ‘proletarian’ clubs.Footnote 91 Regardless, in 1923, a plan was devised to start an exclusive elite competition – which included Vitesse. However, it was quickly abandoned. There was already an explicit class divide in Dutch society, and some felt that it should not be brought into the world of sports.Footnote 92 In the 1930s, increasingly successful ‘proletarian’ clubs such as NEC supposedly changed their playing style somewhat,Footnote 93 while ‘gentlemen's clubs’ like Vitesse started losing more often. One newspaper saw the latter's relegation in 1935 as a sign of the times: ‘In the world of sports we now see the decline of the third estate and the rise of the fourth. Here, the working man overtakes the middle-class [“burger”] sportsman.’Footnote 94
In the years before and after the Second World War, clubs became progressively more mixed in terms of class, yet the perceived sharp contrast between NEC and Vitesse was upheld by supporters and journalists. As was stated in NEC's commemorative book, published in 1950, which conceived of the club's pre-war rise as one long struggle against an arrogant enemy: ‘Leading members of the ruling classes, at the beginning of this century, looked down upon those simple men [and] their silly plan.’Footnote 95 Half a century later, not much had changed in the anniversary books of Jaap van Essen (2000) and Michel Gunsing et al. (2001), commemorating a hundred years of NEC history. NEC was still considered a real ‘proletarian’ club. Ex-manager Leen Looyen was interviewed, who proclaimed that there was an observable difference between NEC and ‘frigid institutions’ such as Vitesse.Footnote 96 In a small survey from 2001, carried out for a report on NEC's image, supporters and non-supporters from Nijmegen also maintained that NEC was in fact a ‘proletarian’ club.Footnote 97
Reckoning with Vitesse's elitist history has proven more difficult. Early commemorative books only implicitly referenced the prevailing mindset with phrases such as ‘noblesse oblige’ and ‘Good old Vitesse’.Footnote 98 In a book written for the club's one-hundred-year anniversary (1992), the club's ballot committee, which was meant to secure its culture via exclusivity, featured as a funny factoid from a distant past.Footnote 99 A more recent book (2011) included an interview in which a supporter argued that even though the board of Vitesse may have been elitist, ‘its supporters had been regular people’.Footnote 100 So while the club was occasionally called a ‘sophisticated white collar club’,Footnote 101 its self-image was adjusted somewhat over time. However, a perceived opposition in social class is a good foundation for club rivalries, meaning class differences between NEC and Vitesse are still maintained by many.Footnote 102
Nationalization and the appropriation of city images
The nationalization and professionalization of Dutch football in 1954 has been of great consequence to processes of club identification. In the 1934/35 season, NEC's opponents were based – on average – just 19 miles away. Only 20 years later, the distance was 56 miles (as the crow flies; see Figure 2) and the Eastern district in which NEC and Vitesse had played ceased to exist.
At the highest levels, intra-city rivalries became scarce. In 1922/23, Vitesse had played three other teams from Arnhem, but after 1954, it would never play a competitive match against another team from Arnhem again. NEC's board opted for the club's professionalization because Quick Nijmegen, the city's most well-known team, declined. NEC's wish for Nijmegen's representation at the highest level therefore meant that the city lost its intra-city confrontation as well.Footnote 103 As in other European countries, nationalization meant that most professional clubs soon became the sole representative of their city, region or even province.Footnote 104
The consequence was that from the 1950s onwards, Vitesse and NEC increasingly started presenting themselves as typically Arnhems and Nijmegian. Club officials and supporters appropriated aspects of the city image and city culture. The clubs had been quick to use their uniforms to reference their respective cities. The earliest kits of both clubs were in Nijmegian red and black, ‘with a hint of green symbolizing the grass’,Footnote 105 and Arnhem blue and white. Club songs were another vehicle to claim actively the representation of one's city. The NEC march of 1934 contained no references to Nijmegen, but the current club song, written in 1966, opens with: ‘There, on the banks of the Waal, lies the old imperial city’, and assigns players the task of upholding the colours of ‘[stadium] Goffert, club and city’.Footnote 106 Before the war, Vitesse supporters sang: ‘Thou, club of Guelders’ premier city . . . Again and again your glory caresses the heart of Arnhem.’Footnote 107 Currently, fans sing: ‘Here in the city on the Rhine, you can't escape being a Vitesse supporter.’
Emblems, an important part of a club's branding, were changed to reflect city representation. Early emblems featured little more than the club name, its colours and the founding year. Since the 1960s, NEC's emblem has incorporated the image of Nijmegen's coat of arms, and the current emblem (since 2000) also prominently features its two-headed eagle. Vitesse's emblem was changed in 1984 and now markedly resembles Arnhem's coat of arms (see Figure 3).Footnote 108 More recently, mascots were authorized by both clubs. Since 2011, NEC's costumed character ‘Bikkel’, a legionnaire, forms a way to appropriate Nijmegen's Roman history. Earlier, in 2008, Vitesse adopted a live eagle, alluding to both Arnhem's crest as well as its name, found in sources since 893 (Arnhem is derived from ‘Arend-heim’, or ‘Home of the eagle’). These are not random policies. Especially since the 1990s, many football clubs in the Netherlands have actively managed club identification, as have NEC and Vitesse. They now see themselves as businesses in the ‘experience economy’.Footnote 109
Clubs are discursively made into representatives of their city and their city's culture – by insiders and outsiders. Journalists have described Vitesse–NEC matches as ‘Arnhem versus Nijmegen’ since the 1930s.Footnote 110 Now, historians present NEC as the vehicle of the Nijmegian sense of community,Footnote 111 while the Dutch public thinks of ‘Vitesse’ when they hear the word ‘Arnhem’.Footnote 112 Consequently, when discussing the two cities or their rivalry, many twenty-first-century books and articles mention the clubs as well.Footnote 113
The purported mentality of the inhabitants of Arnhem and Nijmegen is projected onto the clubs. For his book on derby games (2008), journalist Menno Pot interviewed an NEC fan: ‘Arnhem is the capital, you know, a little elitist. Arnhem has more financial possibilities.’Footnote 114 Even the eagle of Vitesse was accused of ‘typical Arnhem arrogance’.Footnote 115 Like Nijmegen in relation to Arnhem, the less affluent NEC, with its ‘anti-social’ supporters, is made into the folksy underdog.Footnote 116 In 2004, historian Jan Brabers declared that Nijmegians have an ‘innate inferiority complex’, and that ‘while the factories in Nijmegen were running at full speed, the ladies and gentlemen of Arnhem sipped their tea before leaving for the city’. This, he claims, is directly visible in the relationship between NEC and Vitesse.Footnote 117 The only purported shared trait of NEC and Vitesse supporters is their whining, or ‘nuilen’. The cynicism of both crowds is often explained by their respective urban cultures.Footnote 118 Any differences between city culture and club culture were and are neglected, leading to De Gelderlander’s recent conclusion that ‘Vitesse is synonymous with FC Arnhem’.Footnote 119
Recently, the clubs have started acting as more than ‘proxy warriors’: they seem actively to aggravate existing animosity. A representative survey (2009) asked Arnhemmers and Nijmegians to describe each other. Apart from reiterating some of the stereotypes described above, the two groups proved quite fond of each other. In fact, 40 per cent of respondents claimed it was mostly the rivalry between NEC and Vitesse that fuelled hostility. Mayor Thom de Graaf concluded that Nijmegen and Arnhem were like oil and water, ‘above all in football’.Footnote 120 City identification and a complex mix of other identifications have strengthened the footballing rivalry, yet in recent years the enmity between the clubs is seen as worsening the relation between the cities.Footnote 121
Thus far, most cited observers have presented the rivalry between Arnhem and Nijmegen, and Vitesse and NEC, as both natural and everlasting. However, it is in fact perpetual selective affirmations that in part create animosity. In the following, I will try to answer two questions that arise from the selective nature of the described processes: (a) Have Vitesse and NEC always been considered perfect representatives of their respective cities? (b) Do football clubs always derive their ‘place’-based identity from their city?
Fluctuations in representativeness and derby sentiment
Before the Second World War, the most popular team of Nijmegen was Quick. It was considered Vitesse's ‘sister club’; games between the two soon became legendary.Footnote 122 Before the professionalization of Dutch football in 1954, Quick and Vitesse had played in the same league for 32 seasons. In contrast, NEC and Vitesse had only squared off in five seasons. Though games between the latter two also grew more popular in the 1930s and 1940s,Footnote 123 NEC still had to reckon with its Nijmegian competitor. Quick had also adopted the red and black of Nijmegen in 1908, and supporters sang with pride of Quick as the city's oldest and most acclaimed representative.Footnote 124 NEC's early decades, then, were defined by a struggle for the representation of Nijmegen, symbolically contested in the intense intra-city Nijmegian derby.
Even after Quick's ‘relegation’ to the amateur level in 1954, the perceived bond between NEC and the city of Nijmegen remained in flux. Moreover, Vitesse's team was seen to be losing touch with Arnhem. By 1971, the press worried about the derby's local character: ‘Will players care about the derby this Sunday? . . . If you put the two teams together, there are few true Arnhemmers and Nijmegians.’Footnote 125 Not just the ‘derby experience’ of players mattered: there was also a crisis in derby sentiment among supporters. On average the 74 derbies between NEC and Vitesse saw 16 per cent more spectators than their other competition games.Footnote 126 Yet the 1980s exhibited a near 50 per cent drop in the number of derby spectators, partly influenced by the rise of hooliganism and the decline of the level of play (see Figure 4).Footnote 127 Players and journalists were disappointed (‘the real derby atmosphere is a thing of the past’)Footnote 128 and sometimes even embittered (‘according to our informants from Arnhem, Vitesse is bringing at least fifteen supporters to Nijmegen’).Footnote 129 Recent characterizations of a ‘deep sense of enmity’ between NEC and Vitesse, that is ‘unique to the Netherlands’,Footnote 130 or of the two clubs being ‘everlasting rivals’,Footnote 131 are therefore in ways an invention of tradition.
Other ‘place’ identifications
The convergence of club identification and city identification may seem a self-evident choice for supporters, club officials and journalists. However, football clubs are involved in many other types of ‘place’ identification. A club like De Graafschap from the province of Guelders evokes clear regional identification: its supporters fancy themselves ‘superfarmers’, projecting a rural, unpretentious club culture.Footnote 132 Then there is SC Heerenveen, whose emblem is a near-exact copy of the Frisian flag. Supporters cultivate a provincial image for SC Heerenveen, even singing the official anthem of the province of Frisia before home games. Historically, Dutch clubs such as Willem II and Prinses Wilhelmina have tried to adopt a national image, deriving the club name from a member of the royal family, and donning the colours of the Dutch national flag. Internationally, even non-royal clubs can acquire a national image, like Mohun Bagan of Kolkata, which sprang forth from (and inspired) Indian nationalism in the 1920s, or Juventus of Turin, which was known as the ‘Team of Italy’ in the 1930s.Footnote 133 Internationally oriented clubs like Manchester United may even, in part, encourage a global image, which their rivals might call a ‘placeless’ image.Footnote 134 Deploying the image of one's city for club identification is therefore not necessarily the most logical choice, let alone an inevitable one.
In fact, the story of NEC and Vitesse itself is marked by more than just city identification. In a 1900 meeting, Vitesse changed its club colours from Arnhem blue and white to the colours of Guelders. The club's president proclaimed that Vitesse could don the yellow and black in good conscience as it was ‘one of the best clubs of Guelders’ and ‘set in the capital of that province’.Footnote 135 On other occasions, too, Vitesse claimed the representation of the whole province of Guelders. Many years later, in 1992, the provincially backed energy company PGEM decided to sponsor Vitesse. The same year, Vitesse's board deliberated changing their name to ‘Vitesse Gelderland [“Guelders”]’.Footnote 136 The club also built ‘Gelredome’ in the 1990s: a state-of-the-art stadium, financed in part by the provincial government, named after the province of Guelders. For critics from NEC, it was further proof of the entanglement of provincial politics and Vitesse as a football club.Footnote 137 ‘Best not to affront localist fervour’, one newspaper warned, while emotions ran high.Footnote 138 To NEC supporters, the construction of Gelredome, and provocative statements from Vitesse's chairman, confirmed the negative image of Arnhemmers and Vitesse supporters. One NEC player proclaimed: ‘Here [in Nijmegen] they don't appreciate the haughty tone.’Footnote 139
Over the last few decades, the press and other media have played an increasingly important role in the continuing enmity between the clubs – and the cities. As in other countries, through selection and presentation choices, the media created their own reality, the ‘sports media reality’.Footnote 140 On top of that, journalists were often supporters, and wrote commemorative books, or even became club board members.Footnote 141 Newspapers also promoted Guelders rivalries: in the late 1970s, De Gelderlander even helped organize a Guelders cup. Such hype could improve sales figures, but regional newspapers like De Gelderlander also drew their legitimacy from the idea that Guelders was a separate cultural entity that needed its own media.
Vitesse's provincial claim had mixed success since it partly magnified existing oppositions within Guelders. Provincial identification in Guelders was and is comparatively weak. It is felt and presented as a patchwork of different cultural regions,Footnote 142 and has historically been mostly a political construction.Footnote 143 The perceived divide between Arnhem and Nijmegen, but also between Arnhem and other parts of Guelders, made projecting a provincial image for Vitesse difficult to achieve.
Conclusion
City identities and club identities are never completely synonymous. Yet the histories of NEC and Vitesse reveal many similarities between the two, which are often purposefully created and selectively maintained. Both NEC and Vitesse have increasingly appropriated and utilized the symbols and images of their respective cities. The process of ‘othering’ helped create an oppositional identity – a process that can occur for both cities and football clubs.
As the history of NEC and Vitesse shows, football clubs offer various avenues for (place-based) identification. Their perceived identities are complex and layered – they can be simultaneously urban and provincial, for example. Football club identification is dependent on the agents and circumstances involved, while the perception of the ‘other’ strongly shapes and limits possibilities.Footnote 144
Over the past decades, the increasing mobility of the Dutch population has perhaps somewhat diminished the sense of uniqueness of the inhabitants of the two cities, which is potentially detrimental to existing mutual hostilities. The world of football, however, with its symbols and songs, its celebration of urban culture and its physical clash over regional dominance on the field, continues to provide a sphere of unreserved localism. Hence, more recently, the enmity between the football clubs has actually served to cultivate stereotypes and animosity between inhabitants of Arnhem and Nijmegen. This development affirms that a city's image is much more than a mass of shifting representations with an influence on local tourism, but that it has had – and still has – a genuine effect on the lived experiences of urban populations. Furthermore, it testifies to the historical importance of (spectator) sports for experiencing city culture and for the development of city identification.
While this article provides evidence of the historical (re-)emergence of local pride and inhabitants’ sense of a city's character, further studies could expand on this topic by examining the question of individual agency in greater detail. Specifically, an approach incorporating oral history would expose the everyday language which has historically constructed and modified club and city image, thereby extending insight into the interaction between the two types of representations. Such a ‘bottom-up’ strategy allows for examining interesting points of friction: how do people navigate between local and regional identities, both inside and outside of sports? Which historical identifications and images have existed not just between, but also within, groups of supporters? Such much-needed research would elucidate further what this article has tried to show: that football identification processes reflect and influence both a broader societal need for a place-based identity, and the desire for a coherent image of both self and the other.