1988 - 1991: On the Edge
No players; no money
Seeing a generation of players go is bad. Forgetting to make
good money out of it is worse. AC Milan bought Marco van Basten
for just over $500,000. Rijkaard left for practically nothing.
The conservative Ajax board of chairman Ton Harmsen was left
empty-handed. There were no players; there was no money.
Players such as the De Boer twins, Dennis Bergkamp and Bryan
Roy were still too young to take over. The new entries failed,
except for Swedish striker Stefan Pettersson, who slowly became
one of the biggest fan favorites in Ajax history.
German trainer Kurt Linder decided to play it safe: wingers
John van 't Schip, Bryan Roy and Rob Witschge were put on the
bench, as the team played a defensive 4-4-2 system - sacrilege
to the grumbling crowd at De Meer. The start of the 1988-1989
season was a disaster and is generally regarded as the deepest
financial crisis in Ajax history. Four out of the seven first
league games were lost, against mediocre clubs such as Fortuna
Sittard, PEC Zwolle and RKC. Coach Linder was gone after six
weeks. But the real problem was, as Johan Cruyff ha called it
earlier, the "grocer's attitude" of Ton Harmsen's board. They
could not appease the fans, nor stand the pressure, and
resigned. The once so proud ship called Ajax was drifting, out
of control.
Close to bankruptcy
The legacy of the board brought Ajax closer to the edge of
bankrupcty than ever before. The Fiscal Investigation
Department (FIOD) revealed iregularities in some transfer
procedures under Harmsen's reign. Ajax was hit hard and watched
nervously as some of its employees were arrested and taken into
custody. The first team experienced a remarkable resurrection,
booking twelve victories in a row, even beating the later
champions PSV twice. But stand-in coach Spitz Kohn could not do
better than second place. Nothing was won that season, but a
lot was lost.
The new board, with legendary 1970s chairman Jaap van
Praag's son Michael as the new chairman, started their job in
the most difficult circumstances thinkable. Former Ajax, Real
Madrid and Holland coach Leo Beenhakker was the man expected to
make a new start. It didn't seem to work. Linder had lost four
out of the first seven league games the season before;
Beenhakker lost three out of the first six. But that was
nothing compared to the disaster which was waiting for the club
on 28 September, 1989, in the first round of the UEFA Cup. Ajax
had already lost the away game against Austria Memphis Vienna
1-0. No problem, it seemed at De Meer, as Jan Wouters fired
home from long range just before half time.
The 'bar incident'
The score was even, but the second and deciding goal didn't
come. The game went into extra time. A Stanley Menzo slip
allowed the Austrians to tip in the equalizer. Two more goals
would now be required, an impossible mission. The crowd at De
Meer watched anxiously as frustrated F-Side hooligans
demolished the stadium fences and threw the pieces onto the
pitch. The inevitable happened: Vienna goalkeeper Wohlfarth was
hit in the neck by an iron bar. End of game, end of European
ambitions for the upcoming years and - it came really, really
close now - maybe the end of Ajax, depending on the UEFA
sanctions.
The future of Ajax was at stake as UEFA delivered its
verdict in Geneva. Ajax were fined an unspecified amount, and
the 1-1 score of the interrupted game was changed to an
'administrative' 0-3 defeat; those were expected. But that was
not all: Ajax was also banned from European Cup tournaments for
a season, and the first three European home games after that
were to be played at least 200 kilometres away from Amsterdam.
Devastating, for a club in financial despair. Mere survival was
now the one thing the club had to work for. New European glory
was out of the question - that was for sure.
"Betrayed and let down"
Ironically, the young team of de De Boer brothers, Richard
Witschge, Bryan Roy, Marciano Vink and Dennis Bergkamp won the
national title that year, the 23rd in total. It would have been
Ajax's first European Champions Cup performance since 1985,
were it not for the UEFA ban. More sadness: fan favorite Stefan
Pettersson tore his hamstring that season, which kept him off
the pitch for over six months. And coach Leo Beenhakker, on
whom the new Ajax board had based its future philosophy, signed
with Real Madrid halfway through the 1990-1991 season. "I feel
betrayed and let down by Leo," said Michael van Praag in an
emotional speech.
How much worse could it get?
Next:
1991-1997: THE VAN GAAL ERA
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