- Portret
Goalgetters: Lisanne Lejeune's eternal record
The Tulp Hoofdklasse Women broke the 20,000-goal mark in the first half of the season. A perfect occasion to zoom in on the biggest goal scoring machines in the women's league. In part 1: Lisanne Lejeune.
With an impressive total of 265 goals, Lejeune holds third place on the Hoofdklasse's all-time top scorer list. Throughout her career in the Hoofdklasse, she wore the shirt of HGC, where she caused an explosion of goals as a striker, especially in the mid-1980s.
The 1984-85 season marked the start of her rise. Lejeune hit 30 goals that season, but that was just a warm-up. In the following season, she became the first player ever to reach forty goals. And as if that wasn't enough, a year later she set an inimitable record with 46 goals. HGC and Amsterdam dominated the league at the time, but Lejeune's personal production was the crown jewel. Only her teammate Wietske de Ruiter came close, when she also scored 46 times for HGC in 1991-1992.
Lejeune's arsenal of weapons was deadly effective. Her velvet striking technique and masterful ball control made her an undisputed penalty corner specialist. The 1985-1986 season was her masterpiece: in 21 out of 22 matches, she found the net, and in eight of them she did so three times or more. Yet her career was not without obstacles. Knee problems forced her into a role as a defender a few years later, but even from that position she remained an indispensable force.
'We played with so much confidence back then. We knew that every ball in front of our stick could produce a goal. That confidence kept you calm in difficult moments. Moreover, I trusted my intuition blindly. I know that Tim Steens, our coach in that season, regularly tantalised me with statistics. He kept exact track of how many times I had scored from penalty corners and so on. That kept me on my toes,' Lejeune told Hockey.nl a few years ago.
Lejeune concluded her Hoofdklasse career after the 1993-1994 season. Her 265 goals remained a benchmark for decades, until Maartje Paumen (368) and Kim Lammers (319) surpassed her. Still, her name remains synonymous with an era when goal rain and dominance went hand in hand.