
Ronnie Stam, Dutch footballers and the criminal underworld: ‘Once you're in, you never get out'
The shamed 41-year-old was about to be added to the list of footballers, or ex-footballers, who had been imprisoned for being enticed into the Dutch criminal underworld. And that list is getting bigger.
Advertisement
'It's painful for Dutch football,' Evgenii Levchenko, chairman of the Dutch professional footballers association (VVCS), tells The Athletic. 'It's not good for Dutch football and it's not good for the Dutch image. And it's very painful when you see so many big, talented players who don't understand they are killing the image of our football.'
Stam won the Dutch league championship with Twente in 2010 and was part of Wigan Athletic's squad the following year, albeit injured, when they beat Manchester City to win the FA Cup in one of the biggest shocks in the history of English football.
On Tuesday, however, he was sentenced to seven years in prison for his part in an international drug-smuggling plot — the latest case to explain why Levchenko and his colleagues are warning the nation's footballers their industry 'is not only a magnet for the rich and beautiful, but also for criminals'.
In June, the former Ajax winger Quincy Promes was extradited to the Netherlands in another high-profile case that has left Dutch football questioning itself.
Promes, who earned 50 caps for the Netherlands, was sentenced to six years in prison in February last year for trafficking 1,363 kilograms (3,005lb) of cocaine with a street value estimated at £65million ($82m). Since then, he had been living as a fugitive, first in Russia and then Dubai.
Then there is the story of David Mendes da Silva, another former Netherlands international, who was jailed for seven years in 2022 for helping to smuggle two consignments of cocaine, weighing 74kg and 105kg, into the country.
The Da Silva case particularly hurt Levchenko, given that they had once been team-mates at Sparta Rotterdam. 'I was talking to David a month before he was caught. I asked: 'What are you doing now, David?'. He said: 'Oh, nothing much — something here, something there'. We agreed we would have to get together. Everything, to me, seemed very normal. But, in the end, these guys all did something very stupid.'
Advertisement
Da Silva, whose career also included spells at Ajax, NAC Breda and AZ, was also convicted of bribing a shipping clerk with a €100,000 (£90,000; $120,000) payment. 'I let certain people get too close,' he admitted in court.
If that was the full extent of the issue — three multi-million-pound drug busts and three high-profile footballers in prison — it would still be shocking. Yet the Dutch authorities openly accept there have been numerous other cases whereby past and present players have hooked up with serious criminals, particularly in the last 10 to 15 years. Those players, in turn, have become involved in, or on the edges of, drug, money-laundering and match-fixing plots. And sometimes worse: weapons, shootings and death.
'The difficulty we have is that some players are so close to the criminals,' says Levchenko, VVCS chairman since 2019. 'They think they are friends. And that is the biggest mistake they can make.
'We hear it so often: 'Yeah, but he's my friend, I've known him all my life'. And I say: 'If he were your real friend, he would never transport drugs in your car. Or ask you to carry €1million of watches to different countries'. Because those are things that have happened.
'It can start with something so simple. 'Can I borrow your car? Can you look after these watches? Can you get a shirt signed for me? Fancy coming to my birthday party where I will introduce you to the other criminals?'. That is the start. And once you're in, you never get out.'
Are organised criminals deliberately targeting young, impressionable footballers?
Arno van Leeuwen, a retired Amsterdam detective, answered that question during an interview last year with BN DeStem, the Breda-based newspaper, in which he discussed his own experiences of liaising with Ajax and the Dutch football association (KNVB) to warn players of the dangers.
Advertisement
Van Leeuwen explained how, in many cases, the footballers and criminals had grown up in the same areas.
He started to notice the pattern more clearly in 2015 when an Amsterdam criminal known as 'Boeloeloe' was warned by the police that his life was in danger. Boeloeloe left the police station in a leased Mercedes. When Van Leeuwen's colleagues checked the number plate, they discovered it belonged to an Ajax youth player.
'So I thought, 'Let's check all those other Ajax lease cars through the system',' said Van Leeuwen. 'And what did I know? They were often lent to criminals.'
Further inquiries revealed that one of the cars had been the target of gunfire after a footballer lent it to a friend. A hail of bullets went through the rear window and lodged in the driver's seat. It was a shocking scene — so shocking that the police still use the photos in their presentations to clubs and KNVB officials.
Another of the Ajax player's cars was being driven around by the son of Gwenette Martha, a career criminal who was gunned down in 2014 and left with 80 bullets in his body. And Boeloeloe? He, too, was shot dead in a separate incident.
Promes signed for Ajax in 2019 and Van Leeuwen recalled the footballer being seen with well-known criminals. 'We told him: 'Those are guys who could be targets for assassinations. And you're driving around with them. If they come under fire, you're sitting next to them in the car'.'
According to a file from the Netherlands Public Prosecution Service, Promes was also linked to Piet Wortel, a notorious figure in the Dutch underworld.
Wortel was suspected of being involved in a litany of serious crimes, including drug trafficking and the 2019 murder of ex-footballer Kelvin Maynard, a Suriname-born right-back who was shot multiple times in his car in Amsterdam-Zuidoost.
Advertisement
Maynard, whose career included two seasons with Burton Albion in England's lower divisions, was gunned down by two masked assailants on a moped. His assassination was allegedly ordered in revenge for the theft of 400kg of cocaine, and shortly after, the 32-year-old had posted a photograph on social media showing him holding a huge wad of €50 notes.
Wortel, who is serving a three-year prison term for money laundering, denies any involvement. Promes has lodged an appeal against his conviction and is fighting an additional 18-month sentence, imposed in 2023, for stabbing his cousin.
The difficulty for the police, the clubs, the players association and other Dutch authorities is that there is a culture in modern-day football for many players flaunting their wealth. In that world, being rich is seen as the best way to get street cred. And, in the process, they romanticise a lifestyle of fast cars, expensive jewellery and attractive women.
Levchenko says he has personally asked elite footballers from the Eredivisie, Dutch football's top flight, to reconsider what they put on social media. But do they listen? One leading international, he says, recently posted a picture of himself wearing a €200,000 watch.
'All the stars love to show off their different way of life: the cars, the beautiful women, the watches. What they don't seem to understand is that the younger players are watching them. It's wrong of the big stars. But they want to show off.'
Another case relates to Romeo Castelen, a former Feyenoord and ADO Den Haag footballer who was arrested at Amsterdam's Schiphol airport in 2019 on suspicion of laundering €2.2million. Castelen, who made 10 appearances for the Dutch national team, had €139,000 in his pocket but claimed the money was earned through football, the watch trade and casino wins.
'In the football world,' his lawyer, Evelien de Witte, told a preliminary court hearing in Zwolle last year, 'it is considered cool to show off a wad of cash in the locker room.' Castelen, 42, denies any wrongdoing.
On other occasions, high-profile footballers have been seen on nights out with known criminals, often in VIP sections of bars. One infamous occasion goes back to 2013 when the waterside river party at Amsterdam's Scheepvaartmuseum turned into a shootout between rival gangs, leaving one man dead.
One Netherlands international, according to the police, allowed his Porsche to be used by criminals and the car ended up riddled with bullet holes. Another issue is the frequency with which the players' properties have been used for illegal purposes.
Advertisement
Reports in the Dutch media have alleged that Robin van Ouwerkerk, a feared criminal who gained international notoriety for allegedly creating 'torture containers' in Brabant, was the subject of an assassination plot while living in an apartment rented out by Karim Rekik, the former PSV youth-team player.
Marco Ebben, a convicted drugs kingpin who was shot dead in Mexico this year, was previously reported to have been hiding in the penthouse of former Feyenoord player Terence Kongolo (now at NAC Breda). Guns were found in a house rented by Jetro Willems, then a Groningen player, in the town of Barendrecht in 2023.
Willems, formerly of Newcastle United and now at NEC Nijmegen, said he was shocked by the discovery and it is important to make clear he was not treated as a suspect. Nor was Rekik, a former Manchester City player, or Kongolo, who played for Huddersfield Town and Fulham in the Premier League.
These stories are alarming, nonetheless, given the reputations of the criminals involved. The police advice is: if you are a footballer moving to a new city or country, rent out your property through a reputable estate agent — not via friends, or friends of friends.
'We once had a footballer who had transferred abroad,' Bob Schagen, another highly experienced Amsterdam detective, told the Het Parool newspaper in 2023. 'He had rented out his house through acquaintances. That house became a criminal hotbed. Someone else lived there who was later shot dead. In the end, that footballer himself was clearing out a cannabis plantation. You can become infected for life through criminal contacts.'
In Stam's case, the court in Breda was told he had established himself as one of the 'big boys' of the criminal underworld since retiring from playing in 2016.
He was arrested after the police intercepted six months of messages on encrypted phones — a favoured choice of communication for organised criminals — that showed him plotting to smuggle cocaine and MDMA with a street value running into millions of pounds.
Advertisement
Stam, who was raised in Breda and had two spells at the city's biggest football club, admitted that he had colluded with his accomplices, including his brother, Rudi, to smuggle 20kg of cocaine from Brazil to Germany. The payment, he said, was 'an amount worth one kilo.' But he insisted that was his only involvement.
He also alleged that gangland figures had turned up at a PSV youth-team fixture where his eldest son was playing. 'They threatened me on the sidelines at my son's game,' Stam told the court. 'A grenade was thrown at my house.'
The reaction can largely be summed up by Ronald Waterreus, the former Netherlands goalkeeper, in a column for De Limburger newspaper, where he expressed 'pure disgust' for Stam and was heavily critical of Promes, too.
Promes, Waterreus noted, had described his time in a Dubai prison as 'hell on earth'. Stam also complained about his circumstances, including the impact on his family, and did not turn up for his sentencing because 'those rides in the van from prison to court are hell'.
'Disbelief, sadness, anger,' Waterreus wrote. 'But perhaps most of all: anger. And that is mainly due to the 'victim' role in which these two gentlemen manoeuvre themselves. Wanting to be so tough as to deal in large quantities of drugs, with all the life-threatening consequences for society. Then acting like a whining toddler when you get the punishment that you asked for.'
Waterreus urged the courts to impose the 'severest possible' punishment. And that anger is exacerbated because, reputation-wise, these cases are painting a picture of Dutch football that the relevant people see as unwanted and unfair.
Levchenko, a former Ukraine international, has lived in the Netherlands since the age of 18 and played for six of their professional teams. Now 47, he is part of regular meetings with the clubs and players, of all ages, warning them not to follow the lead of Stam and all the others.
Advertisement
'It's not only the Netherlands,' says Levchenko. 'I have seen something similar in Bulgaria, in Ukraine and Russia. But this is a big, painful story for Dutch football because the whole world is watching the Netherlands.
'We are visiting the clubs, talking to the players, their mothers and their fathers, and what we are finding is that the young generation don't think too much about the future. They just think about the moment: 'OK, if I do this (crime), I can make a lot of money'.
'That is really not wise. We tell them: 'Guys, one wrong move and your career is over. Don't be stupid — don't just think it's easy money. The chance of you being caught is so big'.'
Spot the pattern. Connect the terms
Find the hidden link between sports terms
Play today's puzzle
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Liverpool to submit new offer for star 'very keen' to join
Time is running out in the transfer window and Liverpool are still in the race to complete multiple deals. It's been a long summer, and the next two weeks are going to be even crazier than anything that has happened in the lead up to this. 🚨2025/26 LFC x adidas range🚨 LFC x adidas Shop the away range TODAY LFC x adidas Shop the home range today! LFC x adidas Shop the goalkeeper range today LFC x adidas Shop the new adidas range today! Liverpool are far from being done in the transfer market. Richard Hughes wanted to rebuild Arne Slot's side this summer and the final pieces in the jigsaw are still yet to be secured. The first of those jigsaw pieces is Alexander Isak. He's been Liverpool's dream target for a long time and next week we should find a resolution to the saga that has been going on for the longest time. Liverpool may add another winger to the equation as well. Although it remains to be seen whether with such little time left they can find the right target. But the other key piece of the puzzle is Marc Guehi. 🔴 Like Isak, the Crystal Palace captain has long been on Liverpool's radar. In fact, the Reds have wanted to sign him since the beginning of the summer. Guehi has one year left on his contract and it's clear that he doesn't want to extend. He wants to leave the club. Whether it's in the next two weeks or next summer, the end result will be the same. So, it's in Palace's interest to make sure that he goes this summer. At least this way they won't lose him for nothing but they can actually get compensated for making Guehi into the player he is today. Liverpool have been working on a deal to do exactly that. They haven't yet succeeded but it looks like they are going to make another push for the Crystal Palace star.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Rattler rallies Saints to a 17-all preseason tie with the Jaguars after Lawrence's productive start
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Spencer Rattler connected with Dante Pettis for a 20-yard touchdown with 21 seconds left and scrambled for a 2-point conversion to help the New Orleans Saints salvage a 17-17 tie with the Jacksonville Jaguars in a preseason game Sunday. With no overtime in the preseason, the Jaguars crossed midfield in the final seconds — one week after kicker Cam Little made a 70-yard field goal. But Seth Henigan's pass over the middle bounced off of Chandler Brayboy's hands and into the arms of Saints safety Jonas Sanker, whose 40-yard return ended when he was pushed out of bounds at the Jacksonville 24 as time expired. Had Sanker run out of bounds a bit earlier, New Orleans (0-1-1) could have set up for a game-winning kick. Rattler, who relieved rookie Tyler Shough in the second half, went 18 of 24 for 199 yards, one TD and one interception. Mason Tipton, a second-year pro out of Yale, caught six passes for 100 yards, one week after his 54-yard touchdown catch from Shough against the Los Angeles Chargers. Parker Washington caught a 7-yard touchdown pass from Trevor Lawrence and Bayshul Tuten rushed for a 3-yard touchdown for Jacksonville (0-1-1). Lawrence played for two drives and had little trouble moving the offense while going 8 of 10 for 76 yards and a TD. However, his first drive ended with a turnover on the New Orleans 12 when Lawrence tripped as he turned to hand off to Tank Bigsby. The ball squirted loose and defensive lineman Vernon Broughton recovered. Shough, who started for the first time and played the whole first half, went 9 for 12 for 66 yards without a turnover. He led one scoring drive that concluded with Blake Grupe's 51-yard field goal after Chris Olave dropped a third-down pass that could have extended the series. Little converted from 53 yards as the first half ended to make it 17-3, making him 5 for 5 in the preseason, all on kicks longer than 39 yards. Rattler, a second-year pro competing with Shough for the starting spot, took over to start the second half and quickly led New Orleans into field goal range with the help of Christian Braswell's pass interference penalty on a deep pass intended for Tipton. That set up the first of Irishman Charlie Smyth's second-half field goals. The second kick, which made it 17-9, came after Rattler connected with Tipton for 45 yards down the right sideline. The Saints threatened to score one possession before the tying drive, but that series stalled when Rattler was intercepted by Keni-H Lovely at the Jacksonville 7. Jacksonville QB Nick Mullens, who took over for Lawrence in the second quarter, passed for 112 yards and led the Jags to 10 points. Mullens' 26-yard pass to tight end Hunter Long, who made a leaping grab in tight coverage, set up Tuten's TD. But Mullens saw a promising drive end in the third quarter when his pass over the middle was intercepted by Jaylan Ford at the Saints 15. Injuries Jaguars: Heisman Trophy winner and No. 2 overall draft choice Travis Hunter was scratched before the game with what the team has called an upper-body injury. Saints: Caesar Ruiz was examined in the injury tent in the second quarter after going down awkwardly as the pocket collapsed on Shough, who was sacked by Ventrell Miller and Jack Kiser. Up next Jaguars: Visit the Miami Dolphins on Saturday. Saints: Host the Denver Broncos on Saturday. ___ AP NFL:
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Met Police urged to scrap facial recognition at Notting Hill Carnival over 'racial bias' fears
Civil liberties and anti-racism groups have called on Met Police to abandon plans to deploy Live Facial Recognition (LFR) at this year's Notting Hill Carnival, warning of 'racial bias.' In a letter to Met Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley, 11 organisations, including Liberty, Big Brother Watch, and the Runnymede Trust, described LFR as 'mass surveillance' that 'treats all Carnival-goers as potential suspects.' It comes after Met Police announced plans to use facial recognition technology on the approaches to and from the event this year, though cameras will not be placed within the carnival boundaries themselves. Officers will use the cameras to identify individuals wanted by police, missing persons who might be at risk of exploitation and those subject to sexual harm prevention orders. The technology captures live footage and compares faces against a database of known offenders. But the groups have expressed their disappointment at the decision to reintroduce the technology at Carnival, warning that it may be 'less accurate for women and people of colour.' The letter states: "There is no clear legal basis for your force's use of LFR. No law mentions facial recognition technology and Parliament has never considered or scrutinised its use,' according to the BBC. "Notting Hill Carnival is an event that specifically celebrates the British African Caribbean community, yet the [Metropolitan Police] is choosing to use a technology with a well-documented history of inaccurate outcomes and racial bias." The letter also highlighted concerns over a 2023 National Physical Laboratory study, which found that the Met's NeoFace system showed reduced accuracy for women and people of colour, depending on the algorithm used. The Met says LFR is accurate and balanced across ethnicity and gender and has insisted it will help keep people safe. The force emphasised strict safeguards were in place and anyone passing a camera who is not on the watchlist will have their biometrics immediately and permanently deleted. Police will deploy around 7,000 officers each day during the August Bank Holiday weekend event, focusing heavily on public safety, particularly preventing knife crime and violence against women and girls. So far in 2025, LFR has been deployed 111 times across London, leading to 512 arrests. During Carnival weekend, alerts from LFR systems will prompt officers to investigate further, although an alert does not automatically mean an arrest. Met Police has been contacted by The Standard for comment.