Nice v Vitesse background
Sunday, September 17, 2017
Article summary
Nice's Wesley Sneijder will be hoping to take on Vitesse for the first time in over a decade as his new side bid to tighten their grip on top spot in Group K.
Article top media content
Article body
Nice's Wesley Sneijder will be hoping to take on Vitesse for the first time in over a decade as his new side bid to tighten their grip on top spot in UEFA Europa League Group K.
Previous meetings
• The sides are meeting for the first time in UEFA competition.
• Nice drew their only previous games against Dutch opponents, 1-1 and 2-2 against Ajax in this season's UEFA Champions League third qualifying round – enough to earn them an away-goals success.
• Vitesse have yet to win in four UEFA encounters with French clubs: W0 D1 L3 (L2 in France).
Form guide
• Nice kicked off Group K with their biggest UEFA Cup/UEFA Europa League away win to date – 5-1 at Zulte Waregem.
• Nice have won only one of their last five European home fixtures: W1 D1 L3.
• Vitesse have gone six games without a European away win since a 1-0 UEFA Cup success at Rapid Bucureşti in October 2002 (D3 L3). Those results have taken on a pattern – scoring draw followed by defeat without scoring; if that pattern continues, they are due a draw at Nice.
• Beaten by Napoli in this season's UEFA Champions League play-offs, Nice made their UEFA Europa League group stage debut in 2016/17 but failed to reach the round of 32.
• Fifth in the Netherlands last term, Arnhem-based Vitesse are featuring in the group stage of a UEFA competition for the first time having won the Dutch Cup, their maiden major trophy.
Links and trivia
• The journey from Arnhem to Nice is around 900km.
• The game is taking place the day after Vitesse's Luc Castaignos turns 25.
• Nice's Wesley Sneijder is Dutch; he last faced Vitesse with Ajax in a Dutch league game in December 2006, his side losing 4-2. His side had won all seven of his previous meetings with Vitesse, Sneijder scoring twice in the process.
The coaches
• Former Switzerland midfielder Lucien Favre has been in charge at Nice since May 2016. He made his name as a coach by winning back-to-back Swiss titles with Zürich, and subsequently enhanced his reputation with spells at Hertha Berlin and Mönchengladbach in Germany.
• Vitesse coach since 2016, leading them to their historic Dutch Cup triumph last season, Surinam-born Henk Fraser was capped seven times by the Netherlands as a defender, spending the bulk of his playing career at Feyenoord, where he was later a youth coach. He took his first senior job at Den Haag from 2014–16.