| Rank | Event | Year | Location | |
| Olympic Games | ||||
| 4 | Men | 2008 | Beijing, CHN | |
| World Cup | ||||
| 3 | Men | 2010 | New Delhi, IND | |
| Champions Trophy | ||||
| 3 | Men | 2011 | Auckland, NZL | |
| 3 | Men | 2010 | Monchengladbach, GER | |
| 4 | Men | 2009 | Melbourne, VIC, AUS | |
| EuroHockey Nations Championships | ||||
| 2 | Men | 2011 | Monchengladbach, GER | |
| 3 | Men | 2009 | Amstelveen, NED | |
Hobbies
Playing golf. (Athlete, 03 Dec 2009)
Education
Architecture
Language(s) spoken
Dutch, English
Club name
HC Rotterdam, Eindhoven, NED
Coach
Reinoud Wolff [club], Paul van Ass [national] (NED) (hockey.nl, 01 Dec 2011)
Position and style
Defence (Athlete, 03 Dec 2009)
Handedness
Left (Athlete, 03 Dec 2009)
Sporting relatives
He was scouted by Dutch football club PSV Eindhoven when he was younger, but he chose to play hockey instead. (World Hockey Magazine, 24 Sep 2007)
Debut
2004 for Netherlands, against New Zealand, International Tournament (World Hockey Magazine, 24 Sep 2007)
Injuries
He broke his foot in early 2005 and was out of action for 12 weeks. (World Hockey 2006)
Additional information
Start of sporting career
He started playing hockey in Eindhoven, Netherlands. (Athlete, 03 Dec 2009)
Most memorable sporting achievement
Competing in the Olympic Games. (Athlete, 03 Dec 2009)
Most influential person in career
Former Oranje Zwart coach and Australian hockey player Jay Stacy. (Athlete, 03 Dec 2009)
Awards
He was named on the International Hockey Federation's [FIH] 2007 All Star team. (fih.ch, 01 Dec 2011)
He was named player of the tournament at the 2007 EuroHockey Nations Championships in Manchester, England. (Athlete, 03 Dec 2009)
He was named the FIH Young Player of the Year for 2005. (Athlete, 03 Dec 2009)
Previous Olympics
Beijing 2008



