1915 - 1949: The Jack Reynolds Era
The first domestic trophies
In 1918 the atrocities of the trenches of the Great War
were as close as southern Belgium and northern France.
Certain foods and goods were rationed in The Netherlands.
Meanwhile, Ajax celebrated their first 'over-all'
championship of The Netherlands. A second title followed a
year later, this time secured without a single defeat. The man
largely responsible was the successor to John Kirwan: Jack
Reynolds, an Englishman. He would be in charge of Ajax for no
less than 25 seasons, only interrupted by three years
at city rivals Blauw-Wit ('Blue-White') and five
years in a German POW camp during World War Two.
Before Jack Reynolds, Ajax was just one of Holland's
football teams. After Jack Reynolds, Ajax was the
standard-bearer of Dutch football, having won eight national
titles and the first Dutch national cup. Reynolds' strict,
school teacher-like approach inspired a diligent striker from
his squad, who made his debut in the first season of football
after World War Two: Rinus Michels, who was to become Ajax's
coach twenty years later, in 1965, and lay the foundation for
the 'Golden Ajax' team of the early 1970s.
Football with wingers
Reynolds' was far ahead of his time, and his well-defined
football philosophy provided the foundation for the
professional club Ajax was to become. The Ajax philosophy
focused on attacking, skill and speed. Football with wingers.
Jack Reynolds introduced the typical Ajax style of play that
made 'Ajax' synonymous with attacking football. It would
continue to define the club long after his death in 1962. The
long stand opposite the main stand of new De Meer stadium,
which Ajax started playing in 1934 and was situated some two
miles farther down Middenweg, was named after him in 1965.
Birth of an everlasting rivalry
9 October, 1922, was a remarkable day in the Reynolds era,
as it was the first time for Ajax to play against a team from
Rotterdam, called Feyenoord. Ajax won 2-3. Or so they thought.
Feyenoord, however, filed a complaint against referee Boas, who
allowed Ajax's third goal, whereas the Rotterdammers claimed
that ball had not crossed the line. Football association NVB
decided to disallow the winning goal. Final result: 2-2. Ajax
protested for many months, in vain. Later that season, Ajax was
the first winner of an Ajax - Feyenoord confrontation (2-0),
but the Rotterdammers finished second in the table, one point
ahead of Ajax. The turbulence of 9 October, 1922 would never
end.
The most famous player of pre-war Ajax - and probably the
whole of The Netherlands - was Wim Anderiesen Sr., midfielder
from 1925 to 1940, who earned 46 Oranje caps, a pre-war Dutch
record. With him as one of the main players, Ajax created an
excellent reputation both in and outside Holland, but he
couldn't keep the first confrontation with a real European top
opponent from becoming a disaster. Ajax started optimistically
against Rapid Vienna, from Austria, but had apparently
overrated its own power. The 16-2 margin still stands as the
most lopsided defeat in club history.
The War and the Jews
The history of Ajax during World War Two, the story of Eddy
Hamel (the first American ever to play for Ajax) and Ajax's
much discussed reputation as a Jewish club, are described in
the book Ajax, De Joden, Nederland. Its author,
Simon Kuper, granted Ajax USA exclusive permission to translate
the book into English.
© Ajax USA and Menno Pot; all rights reserved.
Reproduction, redistribution or re-use of any kind prohibited
without written permission by the author.