Soccer-Dutch Eredivisie avoids chaos as court dismisses nationality lawsuit


Soccer Football - UEFA Europa League - RB Salzburg v Go Ahead Eagles - Red Bull Arena Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria - November 6, 2025 Go Ahead Eagles' Dean James reacts REUTERS/Angelika Warmuth

May 4 (Reuters) - A Dutch court on Monday dismissed a legal challenge ⁠by NAC Breda seeking to force a replay of their league match ‌against Go Ahead Eagles, a ruling that averted a potential logistical crisis for the Eredivisie.

NAC were contesting a 6-0 defeat on March 15, arguing that Go Ahead Eagles defender Dean James should not have ​been allowed to play because the defender had lost ⁠his Dutch nationality after taking Indonesian ⁠citizenship in order to represent the Asian country in World Cup qualifiers, rendering him ⁠ineligible ‌under Dutch football regulations.

The Utrecht court sided with the Royal Dutch Football Association (KNVB), which had declined to approve a replay. Although the KNVB acknowledged that ⁠James should technically have been ineligible because of the ​passport issue, it argued ‌that neither the club nor the player had been aware at the time ⁠that his change ​of nationality would automatically carry legal consequences.

"The KNVB’s competition management was entitled to decide that the match did not need to be replayed, despite the fact that one of the ⁠players was not eligible to play," the court said ​in a statement, adding that the KNVB's decision was taken with sufficient and reasonable consideration of all interests involved.

The verdict brings an end to a period of significant uncertainty ⁠for Dutch football. The KNVB had warned that a ruling in NAC's favour could have triggered a "snowball effect," potentially placing more than 130 matches under legal scrutiny.

For NAC, who were ordered by the judge to pay the KNVB’s legal costs, the ruling ​is a significant blow to their survival hopes. They are ⁠second bottom of the Eredivisie, six points adrift of the safety zone with two ​matches remaining in the season.

NAC could not immediately be ‌reached for comment, but they told Dutch ​media they would not appeal if the judge ruled against them.

(Reporting by Tommy Lund in Gdansk, Charlotte Van Campenhout in Amsterdam, editing by Ed Osmond)

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