Queen's Cup: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 11:02, 22 February 2023

Queen's Cup
QC.png
Organising bodyRoyal Dutch Football Association
Founded1957; 67 years ago (1957)
RegionNetherlands
Number of teams2
Related competitionsEredivisie (qualifier)
Eredivisie II (qualifier)
Current championsAjax (18th title)
Most successful club(s)Ajax (18 titles)
Television broadcastersEleven Sports

The Queen's Cup (Dutch: Koninginnebeker) (alternatively named the King's Cup (Dutch: Koningsbeker) if the monarch is male) is Dutch football's annual match contested between the respective champions of the previous Eredivisie and Eredivisie II seasons. Based heavily on England's FA Community Shield match, the match's venue, since the game's foundation in 1957, has traditionally alternated between the King Frederick Stadium and the Johan Cruyff Arena, the largest stadiums in the country's northern and southern regions respectively.

Organised by the Royal Dutch Football Association, the match has normally been held to determine the "national winner" from the country's two separate but equally-ranked top domestic football leagues, with the winning team usually being crowned Nationale Kampioenen or "National Champions". In the meantime, proceeds from the game are otherwise distributed to community initiatives and charity organisations around the country, as well as to the other clubs in the Eredivisie and Eredivisie II.

Established in 1957, in line with the foundation of the Eredivisie the year before, its first edition was contested at the end of the 1956-57 season, with Eredivisie champions, Ajax winning the match 4-2 via penalty shootouts following a 3-3 tie against Eredivisie II champions, Royal Antwerp. Meanwhile, the current holders are also Ajax, whom defeated Club Brugge 3-2 to win their 18th title.