Early career As
RBC Roosendaal were in financial trouble they were obliged to having youth players feature within their senior teams. In the 1988–89 season, Van Hooijdonk made his debut for RBC as a substitute. While playing as a sub for the club he soon scored three goals. With the club's main striker suffering from an injury Van Hooijdonk played almost the majority of the season's second half, scoring six goals in 32 matches. He signed his first professional contract with RBC soon thereafter. Van Hooijdonk made a greater impression in the following season becoming a key player for the team, scoring 27 times in 37 matches. Several teams went on to show interest in him such as NAC Breda. Van Hooijdonk didn't hesitate in signing a contract with NAC, and rejoined his boyhood club. NAC paid 400,000
guilders for the transfer of Van Hooijdonk. In returning to NAC, he was both positive in his outlook as well as determined to illustrate his quality. Van Hooijdonk succeeded at such going on to help the team win promotion to the
Eredivisie in 1993. During his time at the club he got his first call up, in December 1994, to play for
the Netherlands. During the rest of that season, he set a scoring streak in 11 consecutive Eredivisie matches. Within the 1994–95 winter break,
Celtic made a deal with NAC which saw Van Hooijdonk join up with the Scottish outfit at once. Altogether he scored 81 goals in 115 appearances for NAC.
Celtic Van Hooijdonk made his Celtic debut on 11 January 1995 in a league match against
Hearts at
Hampden Park. The striker made an instant impact for his new team by scoring a stunning opening goal. Hearts went on to equalise and so the game finished 1–1. Van Hooijdonk settled quickly at Celtic and he became an instant favourite with the fans. When Van Hooijdonk arrived at Celtic they had not won any trophies in six years. With Van Hooijdonk in tow Celtic won the
Scottish Cup of that season with him being the only goalscorer in the final against
Airdrie in May 1995. The following
1995–96 season, saw Van Hooijdonk in outstanding form for Celtic. He scored 32 goals, including 26 in the League which saw him finish as top scorer. Of particular note was his prowess at scoring from free kicks. However, despite Van Hooijdonk's goals and the attractive football being played by manager
Tommy Burns' side, Celtic still finished the season without any silverware. Van Hooijdonk's next season at Celtic,
1996–97, was an unhappy time for both the player and the club. A row with the Celtic chairman/owner,
Fergus McCann, would rumble on and as a result, he often ended up on the bench. The manager of the Netherlands national team
Guus Hiddink then told him he wouldn't be selected for such as long as he was not a regular at Celtic. He eventually left Celtic over a wage dispute towards the end of the 1996–97 season, stating that the reputed £7,000 a week rise he was being offered might be "good enough for the homeless" to live on "but not for an international striker." In total Van Hooijdonk scored 52 goals for Celtic in 84 appearances. He went on to join up with
Nottingham Forest in a deal worth up to £4.5 million.
Nottingham Forest Van Hooijdonk arrived as Forest were in deep relegation trouble, struggling to maintain their position in the
Premier League. He made his debut for Forest in a 1–1 draw against
Blackburn on 11 March 1997. It was hoped the arrival of van Hooijdonk would kick-start their survival, but he scored just one goal in his eight games for them that season. Although only one of those games was lost, the other seven were drawn and Forest were relegated. He immediately pledged his future to help the club regain its status. The following season was an unqualified success, both for him and Forest. Forest won the title and promotion in a competitive league (facing stiff opposition from
Sunderland,
Charlton and
Middlesbrough), with van Hooijdonk scoring 34 goals and building up a good partnership with strike partner
Kevin Campbell, who scored 23 times. During the 97–98 season, Van Hooijdonk clashed with manager
Dave Bassett over the setup of the team, and desired a move to
PSV Eindhoven.
Newcastle United also offered £7 million for him, but Bassett would only let Van Hooijdonk go for £10 million. He was a regular in the
Netherlands national squad, and was named in the Dutch squad for
1998 FIFA World Cup in France where he scored as a substitute in the match against
South Korea. After the World Cup had finished he discovered that the promised strengthening to the Forest squad to enable them to cope back in the Premier League had not transpired, indeed that his strike partner Campbell (who had an ongoing back injury) had been sold to
Trabzonspor for £2.5m. The club had also announced that
Scot Gemmill was dropped from the first team for refusing to sign a new contract, and that club captain and terrace hero
Colin Cooper was being allowed to leave to the team promoted alongside them as runners up,
Middlesbrough. Van Hooijdonk asked for a transfer. The club's new owners refused. Van Hooijdonk announced that he had been told previously that he could leave the club at the end of the 1997–98 season if he so wished, that he felt betrayed by the club's owners who had failed to deliver on their promises to him regarding the strengthening of the team, and that he felt he could no longer play for his employers. Forest, desperate for a striker, refused to allow him to be transfer-listed again, so van Hooijdonk announced his intention to strike. He kept fit by training with his former club
NAC Breda. Because of his behaviour, Van Hooijdonk received criticism both from fans and from his teammates, not least from team-mate
Steve Stone and manager
Dave Bassett. The club refused to listen to offers for him, as they needed a top striker and the stand-off lasted until early November when van Hooijdonk, realising that he had no choice, agreed to return and played in a game against
Wimbledon. By this time the club was again in relegation trouble: bottom of the league without a win in nine games. He played sporadically between then and the end of the season. He scored 6 goals in his 19 starts in the Premier League, including his first goal in his second game back against Forest's fierce rivals
Derby County, helping them to a draw. Infamously after this goal, most of his team-mates refused to celebrate alongside him, instead going to Scot Gemmill, the man who crossed the ball to him. He also scored a last-minute home equaliser against rivals
Liverpool with a trademark free-kick that protected Forest's proud unbeaten home run against them that went back to 1984. In another game against
Leicester City he scored to put Forest 1-0 up but was then sent off as they ultimately lost 3–1. Forest ended the 1998–99 Premier League season bottom and were relegated.
Ralf Rangnick, then coach of
VfB Stuttgart, wanted to bring Van Hooijdonk to Germany, but chairman Gerhard Mayer-Vorfelder refused, feeling that Van Hooijdonk was too expensive at the age of 30.
Vitesse At the end of the 1998–99 season he returned to the Netherlands with
SBV Vitesse in a £3.5m move to continue his career after and did much to convince his critics of his goal-scoring abilities when he helped the
Arnhem team to a
UEFA Cup spot with 25 goals in one season. He also returned to the Netherlands national team in this period.
Benfica Van Hooijdonk then signed a three-year deal for
Benfica in 2000 where he joined up with one of the former
Celtic F.C. 'three amigos'
Jorge Cadete. He eventually only played one season for them with 19 goals. At Benfica he faced the same structural problems as he faced at Nottingham Forest and the team used three different managers throughout the season. The new chairman at the club had no faith in Van Hooijdonk and he was set back into its
second team. Benfica was planning on selling him to another foreign club, but all Van Hooijdonk wanted was to return to his home country. At the end of the 2000–01 season, he signed for his fourth Dutch club,
Feyenoord.
Feyenoord While at
Feyenoord, he was noted for his free-kick ability and played a key role in the club’s
UEFA Cup 2001–02 campaign. He scored twice against
Borussia Dortmund in the final at
De Kuip and also contributed in earlier rounds against
SC Freiburg,
Rangers,
PSV, and
Inter Milan.
Later career Never one to settle down, van Hooijdonk joined
Fenerbahçe SK at the beginning of the 2003–04 season where he featured in 52 games for the Turkish club and scored 32 goals (24 in his first season). He was nicknamed
Aziz Pierre (means Saint Pierre in
Turkish) by fans. He wore the number 17, the same number that he wore for the
national team. He won the
Süper Lig title in
2003–04 (the first top-tier championship of his career) and again the following year in
2004–05 with Fenerbahçe. In mid-2005, he signed again for his former club, NAC, playing 17 games, scoring 5 goals. During the winter
transfer window of the 2005–06 season, he signed for another former club, Feyenoord, where he scored 8 goals in 37 appearances. On 17 October 2006, Van Hooijdonk announced his retirement at the end of the 2006–07 season. On 13 May 2007, he eventually played his final professional match after a draw with Feyenoord against
FC Groningen in the play-offs, having played 550 games (335 goals) in the highest leagues in 18 seasons of professional football. ==Personal life==