31 July 1912; 112 years ago (31 July 1912), as Excelsior 16 July 1927; 97 years ago (16 July 1927), as R.B.C. (Roosendaal Boys Combinatie) 23 October 1999; 25 years ago (23 October 1999), as RBC Roosendaal 2 December 2011; 13 years ago (2 December 2011), as RBC
RBC, previously known as RBC Roosendaal,[2] is a football club based in Roosendaal, Netherlands. RBC currently plays in the fifth-tier Vierde Divisie after bankruptcy in 2011, restarting the club in the tenth tier Vijfde Klasse.
RBC, the idea of Frans Mathijsen and Anton Poldermans, was formed on 31 July 1912. The club was initially called Excelsior and was renamed VV Roosendaal in 1920. On 16 July 1927, the club name changed to Roosendaal Boys Combinatie (RBC) because of the merger with Roosendaalsche Boys.
1950–1999: Hovering between amateurs and professionals
In 1955 the club turned professional and won the Tweede Divisie B in 1957. With the leagues restructured by the KNVB the club left professional football in 1971. Between the return to professional status in 1983 RBC was a successful amateur club.
On 23 October 1999, the club's name was officially changed to RBC Roosendaal.[2]
In 2000 the club reached the Eredivisie for the first time just for one season. Before 2001, RBC played its league games in stadium De Luiten, which had a capacity of 2,000 seats and 5,000 standing places. In 2001, RBC moved into its new 5,000 seater stadium. RBC returned in the Eredivisie in 2002 for four seasons.
In the 2004–05 season, RBC just avoided the relegation playoff. Relegation could not be avoided a year later, with RBC finishing bottom of the Eredivisie in the 2005–06 season.
On 8 June 2011, RBC Roosendaal was declared bankrupt after the board failed to repay the outstanding debts of €1.6 million; this led to an automatic revocation of the professional license from KNVB.[3] With RBC Roosendaal now out of Eerste Divisie, the board started working in order to register the club to the amateur Hoofdklasse league for the 15 June deadline.[4] On 14 June 2011, it was announced that RBC would not play in the Hoofdklasse.
On 21 September 2011, it was announced that the club would make a new start in Dutch football under the name RBC. RBC started season 2012–13 in the Vijfde Klasse, the 9th tier in Dutch football.[5] It played its games at Sportpark Rimboe in the village of Wouwse Plantage, just south of Roosendaal. On 7 April 2013, its first promotion since their restart was confirmed after beating VV Rimboe 10–1. It played the 2013–14 season in the Vierde Klasse. One week after winning promotion, it won the championship of the division. After the end of the 2012–13 season it was announced that RBC would return to its old ground, the RBC Stadion.[6] After finishing runner-up two consecutive seasons, RBC won a Vierde Klasse title in 2017 and it promoted to the Derde Klasse.
At the beginning of 2020 the club was again at the brink of a bankruptcy and was exploring a merger with RKSV Halsteren.[7] A merger agreement has been reached and was contingent to supporter input.[8] After already agreeing on a new name and colors, the clubs decided not to merge.[9]
In 2023, RBC won another promotion, reaching the sixth-tier Eerste Klasse after a 6–1 home victory against VV Virtus.[12] And a year later, in 2024, They won another promotion to the Vierde Divisie after staying unbeaten in the league.
^"Accommodatie". rbcvoetbal.nl. RBC. Archived from the original on 30 December 2019. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
^ ab"Historisch overzicht" [Historical Overview]. rbcvoetbal.nl. Archived from the original on 10 May 2021. Retrieved 6 January 2020. 23 oktober 1999 RBC verandert de naam in RBC Roosendaal. [23 October the name changes into RBC Roosendaal.]
^Kas, Dennis (18 January 2020). "Toekomst noodlijdend RBC in gevaar: fusie met Halsteren laatste redmiddel". BN De Stem. Retrieved 23 January 2020. Het voortbestaan van voetbalclub RBC hangt aan een zijden draadje. Een fusie met RKSV Halsteren, waarover momenteel 'verkennende gesprekken' gevoerd worden, is het laatste redmiddel. Er is geen plan B.