Landstede Hammers is a Dutch basketball club based in Zwolle. The club plays in the BNXT League, the Dutch top tier division. The club was founded as Cees Lubbers The Hammers in 1995. In 1999, the club’s name was changed into Landstede Hammers. In 2001, the club received its current name Landstede Basketbal as the team became part of the same-named educational institution in Zwolle. The home games of the club are played in the Landstede Sportcentrum.

Quick Facts Leagues, Founded ...
Landstede Hammers
Landstede Hammers logo
LeaguesBNXT League
European North Basketball League
Founded1995; 29 years ago (1995)
History
List
  • Cees Lubbers The Hammers
    (1995–1996)
    Landstede Hammers
    (1996–1999)
    Landstede Basketbal
    (1999–2019)
    Landstede Hammers
    (2019–present)
ArenaLandstede Sportcentrum
Capacity1,200
LocationZwolle, Netherlands
Main sponsorLandstede
PresidentGerrard Vinke
General managerAleksandar Todorov
Head coachGaëlle Bouzin
2021–22 positionBNXT League, 9th of 21
Championships1 Dutch League
2 Dutch Supercups
Retired numbers1 (7)
Websitelandstedehammers.nl
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Landstede Basketbal game in 2011

In its existence, Landstede won the DBL championship one time in 2019. In 2017, the club captured its first trophy when it won the Dutch Supercup.

History

The club was founded as Cees Lubbers/The Hammers and was based in Meppel in the first season of the club. The club played with the license of Red Giants Meppel, and moved to Zwolle, partly because arena 'Het Vledder' in Meppel diid not meet requirements.[1] After a short time Landstede became the main sponsor of the club, that was named Landstede Hammers and later Landstede Basketbal. In the 2004–05 season Landstede reached the Dutch Finals for the first time in club history. It lost 4–0 to Amsterdam. In 2010 the club got a new arena in the Landstede Sportcentrum.

In 2017, Landstede won its first trophy in team history by winning the Dutch Supercup over Donar, winning 77–69.[2]

In the 2018–19 season, Landstede finished in the second place in the regular season. The team had a 28–6 record in the regular season, and had All-DBL Team performers Noah Dahlman and Kaza Kajami-Keane on its roster. In the playoffs, Landstede defeated New Heroes Den Bosch 1–3 in the semi-finals. In the finals, Landstede beat defending champions Donar to win its first domestic championship.[3]

On 22 September 2019, Hammers won its second Supercup trophy after beating ZZ Leiden 78–66 in its home arena.[4] In the 2019–20 season, Landstede played in the FIBA Europe Cup, which marked the club's first European appearance in 19 years.[5] On 19 August 2019, the club announced they returned to the name Landstede Hammers.[6] In its first FIBA Europe Cup season, Landstede advanced past the regular season before losing six straight games in the second round.

Since the 2021–22 season, Hammers plays in the BNXT League, in which the national leagues of Belgium and the Netherlands have been merged.[7]

The Hammers will join the European North Basketball League (ENBL) in the 2023-24 season, which makes them the first Dutch team to play in the league.[8]

Club identity

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Landstede Basketbal used until 2019

When founded, the club was named Cees Lubbers The Hammers, named after main sponsor Cees Lubbers. The name Hammers stayed with the team through its supporters, who used its nickname for the following years. From 1996, the team was known as Landstede Hammers after new sponsor Landstede. In 1999, the club was named Landstede Basketbal, a name they kept for 20 years. On 19 August 2019, the club announced they returned to the name Landstede Hammers.[9]

The team has a supporters' club which was founded in 2016 and is known as SV Hammers.[10]

The mascot of the Hammers is the bird "Victory".

Honours

Domestic competitions

Friendly competitions

Players

Retired numbers

More information N°, Player ...
Landstede Hammers retired numbers
Player Position Tenure Ceremony date
7Nigel van OostrumGuard2016–202230 April 2022[13]
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Current roster

More information Players, Coaches ...
Landstede Hammers roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.No.Nat.NameHt.Age
F 0 United States Penn, Dylan 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in) 25 – (1999-11-19)19 November 1999
SG 2 Netherlands Olsthoorn, Jasper 1.94 m (6 ft 4 in) 16 – (2007-11-25)25 November 2007
SG 3 Netherlands Issidorides, Kiron 2.03 m (6 ft 8 in) 18 – (2006-02-27)27 February 2006
SG 4 Netherlands Vrecken, Nino 1.92 m (6 ft 4 in) 21 – (2003-07-19)19 July 2003
SG 5 United States Anderson, Quincy 1.95 m (6 ft 5 in) 25 – (1999-09-21)21 September 1999
F 6 Netherlands Stolk, Coen 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) 27 – (1997-06-26)26 June 1997
SF 8 United States Turner, Chandler 2.01 m (6 ft 7 in) 23 – (2001-09-05)5 September 2001
SF 9 Netherlands Elbers, Merlijn 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) 24 – (2000-05-31)31 May 2000
PG 13 Netherlands van der Vuurst de Vries, Boyd 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in) 25 – (1999-08-16)16 August 1999
F 23 United States Sutherland, Luke 2.01 m (6 ft 7 in) 23 – (2000-12-20)20 December 2000
C 25 Netherlands Edwards, Kai 2.06 m (6 ft 9 in) 22 – (2002-10-08)8 October 2002
C 33 United States Golden, Bryce 2.06 m (6 ft 9 in) 25 – (1999-11-11)11 November 1999
Head coach
  • Belgium Gaëlle Bouzin
Assistant coach(es)
  • Netherlands Roberto Oosterwolde

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (DC) Dual citizenship
  • (DP) Development player
  • (I) Import player
  • Injured Injured

Updated: November 1, 2024
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Notable players

Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA-sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationalities not displayed.

More information Criteria ...
Criteria

To appear in this section a player must have either:

  • Set a club record or won an individual award while at the club
  • Played at least one official international match for their national team at any time
  • Played at least one official NBA match at any time.
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Individual awards

Club records

Bold denotes still active with team. As of 14 April 2021:

More information Category, Player ...
Category Player Record
Games playedAlexandre De Sa336
Points scoredNikki Hulzebos2,211
ReboundsNikki Hulzebos1,464
AssistsScott Ungerer664
StealsNikki Hulzebos320
BlocksNikki Hulzebos168
Three-point field goalsSherron Dorsey-Walker244
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European record

More information Season, Competition ...
Season Competition Round Club Home[A] Away[A] Agg[A]
2000–01 FIBA Korać Cup Portugal CAB Madeira 67–68 74–84 141–152
2019–20 FIBA Europe Cup Israel Ironi Nes Ziona 88–94 90–96
2nd
Austria Kapfenberg Bulls 89–64 100–67
Cyprus Keravnos 78–72 85–88
Latvia Ventspils 87–89 74–111
4th
Ukraine Kyiv-Basket 68–77 76–89
Hungary Körmend 90–94 80–87
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Notes
  1. ^ a b c
    Landstede points are listed first.

Arenas

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The Landstede Sports Center has been the club's home arena since 2010
More information Arenas, Arena ...
Arenas
Arena City Tenure
Het VledderMeppel1995–1996
StilohalZwolle1996–2010
Landstede SportcentrumZwolle2010–present
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Season by season

More information Season, Tier ...
Season Tier League Regular season National playoffs Basketball Cup European competitions
Finish Pld W L Win% Pld W L Result
1995–96 1 Eredivisie 8th
1996–97 1 Eredivisie 7th
1997–98 1 Eredivisie 7th
1998–99 1 Eredivisie 8th
1999–00 1 Eredivisie 4th
2000–01 1 Eredivisie 11th 3 Korać Cup
R1
0–2
2001–02 1 Eredivisie 5th
2002–03 1 Eredivisie 8th
2003–04 1 Eredivisie 5th
2004–05 1 Eredivisie
2nd
Runner-up
2005–06 1 Eredivisie 5th
2006–07 1 Eredivisie 10th
2007–08 1 Eredivisie 7th
2008–09 1 Eredivisie 9th
2009–10 1 Eredivisie 9th
2010–11 1 DBL 9th Fourth round
2011–12 1 DBL 5th 28 12 16 .429 2nd in Group B of the second stage (2–2)

Lost semifinals (Leiden, 1–3)

Semifinalist
2012–13 1 DBL 5th 36 19 17 .528 Lost quarterfinals (Aris, 0–3) Runner-up
2013–14 1 DBL 5th 36 22 14 .611 Lost quarterfinals (Leiden, 1–2) Quarterfinalist
2014–15 1 DBL 4th 28 20 8 .714 Won quarterfinals (Rotterdam, 2–0)

Lost semifinals (Den Bosch, 4–3)

Semifinalist
2015–16 1 DBL 1st 28 22 6 .786 Won semifinals (Den Bosch, 4–2)

Lost finals (Donar, 1–4)

Semifinalist
2016–17 1 DBL 2nd 28 20 8 .714 Won semifinals (Leiden, 4–3)

Lost finals (Donar, 1–4)

Runner-up
2017–18 1 DBL 2nd 34 24 8 .750 Lost semifinals (Leiden, 0–4) Semifinalist
2018–19 1 DBL 2nd 34 28 6 .824 Won quarterfinals (Aris, 2–0)

Won semifinals (Den Bosch, 3–1) Won finals (Donar, 4–2)

Runners-up
2019–20 1 DBL 1st[a] 20 17 3 .850 Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic Semifinalist 4 FIBA Europe CupT163–9
2020–21 1 DBL 4th 21 13 8 .619 Won quarterfinals (Feyenoord, 180–158)

Lost semifinals (Leiden, 1–2)

Semifinalist
2021–22 1 BNXT League 9th 30 14 16 .467 Won quarterfinals (Feyenoord, 2–0)

Lost semifinals (Leiden, 0–3)

3 1 2 Quarterfinalist
2022–23 1 BNXT League 7th 30 14 14 .500 Lost quarterfinals (Aris, 1–2) 5 3 1 Runners-up
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  1. The 2019–20 season was cancelled in March 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic. At the time, Landstede was first in the standings but no champion was named.

Head coaches

The Hammers have had four different head coaches in their history, with Herman van den Belt coaching the team the most seasons.[14]

More information Dates, Name ...
Dates Name Honours Notes
1996–2000Netherlands Marco van den Berg
2000Germany Peter Krüsmann
2000–2009Netherlands Herman van den Belt
2009–2010Netherlands Marten Scheepstra
2010–2023Netherlands Herman van den BeltDBL champion: 2019
Dutch Supercup: 2017, 2019
2023Netherlands Mark van Schutterhoef
2023–2024Belgium Jean-Marc Jaumin
2024–presentBelgium Gaëlle Bouzin
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References

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