1986 - 1988: 'J.C.' Superstar
Cruyff does it again
No one in the world is as inpredictable as Johan Cruyff.
Ajax experienced it once again in July of 1985, when Cruyff
surprised everyone by returning to Ajax, becoming the coach of
all those young players who'd been his team mates only two
years earlier. Cruyff apparently believed in the talent of his
squad and - as usual - he was right. The first half of the
1980s had brought plenty of national prizes, but completely
lacked international succes. After Cruyff's return, it was the
other way round.
Beginning in 1986, PSV from Eindhoven became almost
unbeatable, winning four national titles in a row. But they did
not keep Cruyff from making himself immortal. He won the KNVB
Cup in his first season, beating suprising First Division
finalists RBC 3-0, qualifying for the European Cup Winners Cup.
After having made it through the winter break only two times in
fourteen dark seasons, the Cup was won, the first international
trophy for Ajax since the very same Johan Cruyff won his third
Champions Cup as a player in 1973.
A new European trophy
In the first rounds of the 1986-1987 campaign, Bursaspor
(Turkey) and Olympiakos Piraeus (Greece) were no problem in the
first rounds. The 3-1 quarter final victory over tough Swedes
Malmö FF was celebrated as a world championship. The semi
final! Ajax had forgotten what it felt like. The new generation
of Ajax youth beat Spanish cup holders Real Zaragoza in their
own stadium (2-3), on a pitch that looked like a swimming pool,
covered by over an inch of water. Johnny Bosman, Marco van
Basten's scoring mate up front, was sent off for hitting his
opponent. But two weeks later, the team would finish the job
without him in an enthralled Olympic Stadium. After Frank
Rijkaard's 3-0 goal in the last minute, the fences collapsed
and thousands of Ajax fans stormed the pitch to celebrate the
ticket to the final in Athens.
Some 20,000 Ajax fans joined their team to Greece, where
tedious East-Germans Lokomotive Leipzig were the last hurdle on
the way to the Cup. The final was boring, the opponents too
poor to bring Ajax in real trouble. Marco van Basten sealed
their fate with a liberating header: 1-0. The celebrations were
hardly finished as AC Milan offered the Ajax captain a
contract. To Johan Cruyff's regret, the striker signed. He said
goodbye in style, scoring twice in the KNVB Cup final against
FC Den Haag: 4-2, the epilogue to the first satisfying season
in a long, long time.
Another conflict with Johan
The next season, 1987-1988, Ajax walked over its first
European Cup Winners Cup opponents with remarkable ease.
Dundalk FC (Ireland), HSV Hamburg (Germany), Young Boys Bern
(Switzerland) - none of them scored a single goal. But it was
to become clear that this new period of glory was not going to
last for long. Van Basten was gone. Sonny Silooy left during
the season, to Matra Racing Paris. Frank Rijkaard followed
shortly after that. A conflict with Johan Cruyff was the reason
for his departure to Sporting Lisbon, who would loan him out to
Real Zaragoza and sell him to AC Milan later. The hardest blow
was yet to come. An escalating conflict about the budget for
new players caused the second unfriendly split between Ajax and
its most legendary apprentice. On 4 January, 1988, Johan Cruyff
resigned.
Stand-in triumvirate Barry Hulshoff, Spitz Kohn and Bobby
Haarms reached a second European Cup Winners Cup final, to be
played in Strasbourg. Modest KV Mechelen from Belgium, coached
by former Ajax coach Aad de Mos, seemed beatable, but a 10th
minute red card for Danny Blind added a new chapter to the
defender's unlucky international career: in Athens, the year
before, he had sprained his ankle on the beach, one day before
the final. Despite dominating throughout the game, Dutch
Mechelen striker Piet den Boer closed the book for the Ajax
ten: 1-0. One year after Ajax' glorious return, KV Mechelen not
only snatched the 1988 Cup Winners Cup away from Ajax, but
contracted Johnny Bosman as well. The plundering of one more
talented Ajax generation was, thereby, complete.
Van Basten finally wins 'the War'
PSV was more succesful, winning the European Champions Cup
that same year. Two European finalists; Dutch football had
reached a new peak, but whereas the 1974 generation couldn't
finish the job in style, the 1988 generation could. The
brilliant AC Milan threesome Marco van Basten, Frank Rijkaard
and Ruud Gullit won the European Championship for Holland at
Munich's Olympia Stadium, the very same place where it all went
dramatically wrong 14 years earlier. The final victory over the
Soviet Union (2-0) was fantastic, but the real victory had
already been booked in the June 21st semi-final in Hamburg's
Volkspark Stadium. One minute before the final whistle, Marco
van Basten pushed the ball past West German goalie Eike Immel,
making it 1-2. What happened in Holland that very second can
best be described as an earthquake.
As the orange party wound to a close, Ajax had to face the
hard reality: yet another self-built Ajax team had been
plundered. The hole waiting for the club had never been so
black.
Next:
1988-1991: ON THE EDGE
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