Abe Lenstra
Lenstra, photographed in 1951
Personal information
Full name Abe Minderts Lenstra
Date of birth (1920-11-27)27 November 1920
Place of birth Heerenveen, Netherlands
Date of death 2 September 1985(1985-09-02) (aged 64)
Place of death Heerenveen, Netherlands
Position(s) Striker
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1936–1955 Heerenveen 395 (471)
1955–1960 SC Enschede 107 (65)
1960–1963 Enschedese Boys 88 (40)
Total 590 (576[1])
International career
1940–1959 Netherlands 47 (33)
Managerial career
1946–1947 Heerenveen (player-coach)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Abe Minderts Lenstra (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈaːbə ˈmɪndərt͜s ˈlɛnstraː]; 27 November 1920  2 September 1985) was a Dutch footballer and national football icon in the 1950s who played as a forward. He is regarded as one of the greatest players ever to hail from the Netherlands. He was also a Frisian legend, most notably with the club where he made his name as a football player, Heerenveen.[2]

Career

Lenstra played for a host of clubs such as SC Enschede, Enschedese Boys, PH: DOS '19, WSV, DOS Kampen and vv LTC. However, it was with VV Heerenveen (the previous name of current day sc Heerenveen) where he first was selected for the Dutch national team. When in 1954 professional football was introduced in the Netherlands the already 34-year-old Abe Lenstra moved from VV Heerenveen to the bigger SC Enschede. It was in Enschede where he missed his best chance of ever winning the Dutch title: in 1958 SC Enschede lost the first and last Eredivisie final ever after 180 minutes from DOS Utrecht. In 1960, he made the move to the rivals Enschedese Boys, where he ended his professional career in 1963.

With the national team, for which he played a total of 47 caps scoring 33 goals,[3] he struck a partnership with other internationals such as Faas Wilkes and Kees Rijvers. He was known to stand by his principles and objected to play for the national squad if he was not selected for the position he favoured.

It was Lenstra who put the name of sc Heerenveen on the footballing map, where the club was also fondly referred to as 'Abeveen'. In 1977, long after he retired from football, he was diagnosed with having a brain haemorrhage and spent the remainder of his life using a wheelchair. He died in 1985, just a few days before the first ever international match in the stadium that a year later would bear his name.

Career statistics

Appearances and goals by club, season, and competition. Only official games are included in this table.[4][5][6]
Club Season League League Play-Off Dutch Cup Total
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Heerenveen 1936/1937 182042002222
1937/1938 1713004112124
1938/1939 182500101925
1939/1940 162100001621
1940/1941 142000001420
1941/1942 173286002538
1942/1943 182777002534
1943/1944 161983002422
1944/1945 00000000
1945/1946 191897112926
1946/1947 19301015003945
1947/1948 20281013003041
1948/1949 18211012002833
1949/1950 1730105002735
1950/1951 212941002530
1951/1952 262900002629
1952/1953 261900002619
1953/1954 252400002524
1954/1955 342800003428
SC Enschede 1955/1956 332500003325
1956/1957 301700003017
1957/1958 211100002111
1958/1959 271800002718
1959/1960 251500002515
Enschedese Boys 1960/1961 271300433116
1961/1962 332000123422
1962/1963 2370011248
Total 57855980711218680648

Legacy

Today, his name has been closely associated with sc Heerenveen and its stadium: The (first and second) Abe Lenstra Stadion has been named in his honour as a lasting memorial.

Honours

Heerenveen

SC Enschede

Individual

See also

References

Yme Kuiper, 'Abe Lenstra (1920–1985). Van Us Abe tot nationaal idool,' in: Fryslân, Nieuwsblad voor geschiedenis en cultuur, jg. 6 (2000), nr. 2, pp. 50–53. Online site

  1. "Prolific Scorers Data - Abe Lenstra - Additional Data".
  2. "Abe Lenstra". Olympedia. Retrieved 22 October 2021.
  3. "Abe Lenstra - Goals in International Matches". The Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Archived from the original on 14 March 2013.
  4. "Delpher » Kranten, Boeken & Tijdschriften". www.delpher.nl.
  5. {https://www.goldengoals.nl/berichten/911840_abe-lenstra-cijfers-per-seizoen
  6. "Voetbalarchieven | Statistieken Nederlandse voetbalgeschiedenis". Voetbalarchieven.
  7. "Abe Lenstra - Goals in International Matches". Archived from the original on 14 March 2013. Retrieved 18 April 2014.
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