For months there have been attempts to mobilize the Dutch in New Zealand and a real orange march is also held at every Orange Lionesses World Cup game, but there will be no support from a huge orange mass for Andries Jonker’s team. Fewer than 2,000 Dutch fans bought a ticket for the Orange Lionesses, who face the United States in a packed stadium.
After weeks of fiascos on the ground, a haka riot And logistical challenges will finally get the ball rolling for Orange on Sunday. The World Cup in Australia and New Zealand begins for the Netherlands with the crucial game against Portugal. But as important as this match is: at the moment, the stadium in Dunedin is less than 30% full. Do you ask a New Zealander why? Then they answer: “Rugby”.
Wherever you go in New Zealand: the country breathes rugby. In Tauranga, home of the Orange Lionesses, you won’t pass a café without a rugby match on television. Cars are adorned with the flags of the All Blacks (New Zealand’s rugby team) and those landing at Auckland Airport head straight to the All Blacks Store for New Zealand Pride coffee mugs, scarves or teddy bears.
Tickets sold (last information on July 14)
Netherlands – Portugal: 7,954 (591 Dutch) – Capacity: 25,947
United States – Netherlands: 31,038 (1,083 Dutch) – Capacity: 34,500
Vietnam – Netherlands: 3,515 (226 Dutch) – Capacity: 25,947
“Football just isn’t the biggest sport,” says Ard van der Vorst of the Dutch Embassy in New Zealand. ,,Where everyone plays football in the Netherlands, everyone plays rugby here. But I can say: there has never been such a big tournament here so we are absolutely honored. The World Cup opener, in Auckland, was the biggest ever in terms of size.
This New Zealand in this opening game blow against Norway, was a welcome boost for the Women’s World Cup. A staggering 42,137 people, a record for a New Zealand football match, attended the stunt in packed Eden Park.
The game against the United States turns into a kind of magic match
Due to the location it is not a storm at Oranje Leeuwinnen duels
The fact that there are no storms yet at Dutch competitions in Dunedin is partly down to the location. Dunedin is located in the south of New Zealand. Only 1.1 million people live in the whole of the South Island, where only Auckland – on the North Island, which has 3.6 million inhabitants – already has 1.6 million inhabitants.
So while the Orange Kicky mascot has been popping up all over Australia and New Zealand in recent months to get the Dutch excited (there are around 40,000 in New Zealand, ed.) And there are also real Facebook and Instagram pages for “Orange fans in Aus/NZ”: the Orange Lionesses seem to be stoking the excitement themselves with their performances at the World Cup.
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‘Yeah, it’ll be fine’, is the motto of many New Zealanders. In other words: it will come. The question is whether this also applies to more fans in the World Cup matches against Portugal and Vietnam. Facing the United States, the replay of the 2019 World Cup final, the Orange will in any case have a full stadium. This duel is in Wellington, the capital. ,,Everyone is talking about this game,” says Van der Vorst. “It’s a bit like a magic match. We are going to make it a big party, as we can do very well in the Netherlands. »
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