
There are times when football has nothing to do with the game. Dick Advocaat, a 78-year-old coach of Rangers, PSV, Zenit Saint Petersburg, and the Dutch national team, resigned as Curaçao’s head coach in February 2026 and returned home to be with his daughter. She had received a cancer diagnosis. He had just led the world’s smallest country in terms of population to qualify for the World Cup, but that would have to wait.
It’s the kind of choice that, although it seems straightforward when you say it aloud, it’s anything but when you actually make it. On that tiny Caribbean island, Advocaat had spent two years creating something truly remarkable. With a population of about 156,000, Curaçao had never made it to the World Cup. He managed to get them there. Then, in February, when the entire island was celebrating and the tournament was months away, he left. “I’ve always said that family comes before football,” he declared. “This is therefore a natural decision.” Short. subtle. The kind of thing a man says after coming to terms with his decision.
Advocaat did not go into detail about the precise nature of his daughter’s illness, and it was never made public. The man, a coach known in dressing rooms for being exact, sometimes blunt, and not prone to needless sentiment, seems to possess this restraint. Nevertheless, the emotional impact of what was taking place was conveyed through the words of people who were close to him. Speaking on the Dutch television show Vandaag Inside in the middle of March, his former assistant Cor Pot disclosed that chemotherapy was producing favorable outcomes. “He was deeply affected by it,” Pot stated. “It cost him a few years of his life, so to speak.” Tactical formations and statistics could never have the weight that that phrase does.
When word spread in March 2026 that the treatment was effective, it must have come with a sense of relief that only a parent waiting outside a hospital room can truly comprehend. Advocaat, who has stood on touchlines in Glasgow, Rotterdam, and Saint Petersburg, may have never felt so utterly powerless. You get tools from football. It provides you with a tactical change, a formation, and a substitution. You only have time and hope when you’re ill, and in March, that hope was being fulfilled.
Advocaat returned by May. His daughter’s recuperation and a somewhat strained relationship between the team and his replacement, Fred Rutten, influenced his return to Curaçao. This circumstance may not have been coincidental, but it set the stage for the federation and the team’s primary sponsor to advocate for Advocaat’s reinstatement. It’s difficult to determine if the timing was totally coincidental. Seldom are these things. However, the result remained the same: the Little General went back to the dugout.
What transpired was the kind of conclusion that football sometimes produces but seldom deserves: a 78-year-old man became the oldest manager in the history of the competition by guiding a small island nation into their first World Cup. When Curaçao took the field on June 14, Advocaat defeated Czech Miroslav Koubek to set the record. It should be noted that back in February, when he was sitting at home watching chemotherapy drip into a bag and hoping it was doing what it was supposed to do, no one would have predicted this record for him.
The human stories are often overlooked by the larger football community. Press conferences, transfer windows, results—there’s always more. But it’s difficult to ignore the four months leading up to Advocaat when you watch him on that touchline. The diagnosis of a daughter. A father’s choice. A tiny island is waiting. And then, discreetly, a return that defies the majority of reasonable expectations.
