Ton du Chatinier (born 13 January 1958) is a retired Dutch football player. He later worked as an assistant manager to Hong Myung-bo of South Korea,[1] and alongside Hong as an assistant to manager Guus Hiddink at Russian side FC Anzhi Makhachkala.[2]
Playing career
Club
Du Chatinier was born in Utrecht and during his professional career, he played as a defender for his hometown club FC Utrecht only. His career was cut short by a groin injury.
Managerial career
Du Chatinier took over as a head coach at Utrecht from Willem van Hanegem at the end of 2008,[3] and was sacked by the club at the end of the 2010–11 season after missing out on the playoffs for a ticket to play European football.[4] He also managed Dutch amateur sides Spakenburg,[5] Elinkwijk and Kozakken Boys.[6]
In summer 2016, he was named manager of AFC for a third time.[7]
Personal life
In 2016, he was sentenced to 60 hours of community service for assault in a bar in Den Dolder.[8] Du Chatinier moved to France to live in a castle in the south of the country. but put it up for sale in 2024.[9] As of 2026, he still resides there.
Honours
- FC Utrecht
See also
References
- ^ Ton du Chatinier met Zuid-Korea naar WK – Telegraaf (in Dutch)
- ^ Ton du Chatinier wil ervaring bij Anzhi nu verzilveren – AD (in Dutch)
- ^ Du Chatinier maakt met Vonk seizoen af bij FC Utrecht – Voetbal International (in Dutch)
- ^ FC Utrecht stopt per direct met Du Chatinier – Volkskrant (in Dutch)
- ^ Du Chatinier naar Spakenburg – De Stentor (in Dutch)
- ^ Ton du Chatinier naar Kozakken Boys – De Voetbaltrainer (in Dutch)
- ^ Ton du Chatinier trainer AFC – RTV Utrecht(in Dutch)
- ^ Swart, Jurgen (19 August 2016). “Ex-speler en trainer FC Utrecht krijgt werkstraf voor mishandeling”. Algemeen Dagblad (in Dutch). Retrieved 24 May 2026.
- ^ Zeven, Martijn (5 June 2024). “Nederlandse voormalige voetbaltrainer zet Frans chateau te koop voor €2,25 miljoen”. Quote (in Dutch). Retrieved 24 May 2026.
- ^ “1985: JOHN VAN LOEN KOPT FC UTRECHT NAAR DE EERSTE KNVB BEKER”. totoknvbbekker.nl. 12 February 2018. Retrieved 17 October 2020.