In football management, there is a rare and typically awkward moment when the game becomes irrelevant. That moment for Dick Advocaat occurred in February 2026, somewhere between the private anguish of discovering his daughter was gravely ill and the historic high of Curaçao, a Caribbean island of 150,000 people, qualifying for their first-ever FIFA World Cup. He quit. No haggling, no long farewell. In essence, family comes first, according to this statement.
It was the kind of choice that seems straightforward on paper but takes a different turn when you take into account what he was leaving behind. Advocaat had just accomplished what many saw as the most unlikely feat of his nearly four-decade coaching career at the age of 78. Part of the Dutch kingdom, Curaçao had qualified for the world’s largest sporting event despite having no domestic football infrastructure capable of competing with any major European league. He referred to it as “the craziest thing” he had ever done. After that, he departed.

When Cor Pot, his former assistant, made an appearance on the Dutch television show Vandaag Inside in March, the news felt like a collective exhale in Dutch football circles. The chemotherapy was effective. Advocaat expressed relief, according to Pot. It’s difficult to ignore Pot’s further remark that the experience had “cost him a few years of his life.” There is a lot of quiet work done by that phrase. It depicts a man hollowed out by powerlessness, witnessing a loved one battle something he is unable to help.
From the outside, it seems that Advocaat’s decision unnerved people because it was so tidy. His generation of coaches, who were developed through decades of hard professional football and seldom cared about public opinion, typically don’t leave a World Cup. The fact that he did, seemingly without hesitation, reveals something about his true nature beneath the stoicism of press conferences and tactical diagrams.
The replacement was Fred Rutten. Pot pointed out that no provision in his contract permits Advocaat to just walk back in. Advocaat did, however, return almost unavoidably; he was reportedly back on the Curaçao touchline as the World Cup drew near, a moment that reportedly brought him to tears during the playing of the national anthem. It’s unclear if that return was prearranged or if it was the result of both the gravitational pull of an incomplete story and better news.
Pot’s comment regarding Advocaat sounds like a loving remark about an obstinate old friend: “Dick sometimes says he’s stopping and then continues anyway.” Thus, you never know. Even Advocaat might not have known. It’s not the career-ending anyone had planned for a man who resigned in grief, came back with better news, stood on a touchline, and sobbed through an anthem.
This story sticks with you because, in the end, it has nothing to do with football. It tells the story of a 78-year-old man who accomplished a historic feat and realized right away that it meant less than being there for his daughter. Even if it is never included in the tactical analysis, it is important to recognize that instinct, which is to take a step back from the extraordinary and return to the essential.
FAQs
1. Why did Dick Advocaat resign as Curaçao coach?
His daughter was diagnosed with a serious illness requiring his presence.
2. What was the update on Dick Advocaat’s daughter’s health?
Chemotherapy is showing positive results, and Advocaat is reportedly relieved.
3. Who replaced Dick Advocaat as Curaçao head coach?
Fred Rutten, aged 63, was appointed as his replacement.
4. Did Dick Advocaat return to coaching Curaçao?
Yes, he returned after receiving encouraging news about his daughter’s recovery.
5. What is Dick Advocaat’s most notable achievement with Curaçao?
He led the island nation to its first-ever FIFA World Cup qualification.

