1991 - 1997: The Van Gaal Era
"Straight-forward, fair and righteous"
Ajax needs to fall deep in order to climb high. No one at
Ajax even dared to be that optimistic at the time, but the new
man in charge apparently believed it. A little too much,
according to many, who hated him from the moment he spoke his
first words as an Ajax coach at the press conference announcing
his appointment: "I am a straight-forward, fair and righteous
person. Which may sometimes seem harsh."
Louis van Gaal was his name, and he had already been part of
a coaching triumvirate with Hulshoff and Kohn a few years
before. His career as a player never brought him to a higher
level than Sparta Rotterdam and FC Antwerp in Belgium. His
voice was loud, his language blunt. From now on everyone at
Ajax was going to listen to him - and him only. Some older
Ajacieden recognized the schoolteacher-like approach of Rinus
Michels in it. His enemies, including many journalists,
chuckled over his poor start in the league, which included a
defeat at FC Utrecht. Calls for Johan Cruyff rolled from the
F-Side stands.
He achieved what was most important, however. Ajax's return
to the European spotlight, after a year on the sideline, was
expected to last more than one or two rounds. Swedish
Örebro BK and former East-German Second Bundesliga team
Rot-Weiss Essen were pushed aside, albeit by two poor away
victories and two not-quite sparkling 3-0 victories at Rhein
Stadium in Düsseldorf, Germany, the location Ajax had
chosen to serve the remainder of the UEFA sentence. Spanish
Osasuna Pamplona were considered a tougher opponent. Two 1-0
victories, thanks to two Dennis Bergkamp goals, suggested that
this new Ajax team might be good enough to do better than
'reasonable'. The new breed looked better internationally than
many had expected. Slowly, Louis van Gaal's plans for the team,
in which the partnership of provider Wim Jonk and finisher
Dennis Bergkamp was the main weapon, came to the surface.
The trilogy completed
The quarter final brought the good old nights of European
Cup football back to Amsterdam's Olympic Stadium, where AA
Ghent was crushed 3-0. Semi final opponents Genoa were beaten
2-3 in Italy, in one of the most spectacular European Ajax
games ever. The red Roman candles, the thousands of scarfs, the
singing and the pride returned. Once again, Dennis Bergkamp was
the man to finish it off in a nervous 1-1 draw in Amsterdam.
Ajax had survived the balancing at the edge - and reached the
UEFA Cup final right away, once more with a self-built team
consisting of real Ajax players, most of them from their own
youth system. The two-game final brought Ajax to Turin, where
Torino Calcio saw Wim Jonk fire an incredible long distance
shot in the upper corner of the goal. 2-2 was the final
result.
European topscorer Dennis Bergkamp was to miss the second
leg of the final, at the electrically charged Olympic Stadium
on 13 May, 1992. The flu forced him to watch the game on TV
from his sickbed. The Italians pressed in a nerve-wracking game
in Amsterdam, hitting the post twice, and the cross-bar once,
three minutes before the final whistle. Rob Alflen played for
Bergkamp. And Ajax lost its hero when Stefan Pettersson broke
his collar bone against the corner flag. The final whistle was
a liberation: 0-0. Louis van Gaal had completed Ajax' trilogy
of Champions Cup, Cup Winners Cup and UEFA Cup, and captain
Danny Blind could finally lift a European trophy above his
head, after his first two European finals had seemed cursed. He
didn't know it yet, but the best was yet to come.
Van Gaal and the 'New Generation'
Being succesful for a number of consecutive years had become
almost impossible for a club team from a smaller football
nation. The entire Serie A was waiting at the sideline. Inter
Milan snatched the Jonk and Bergkamp 'super duo' away, dreaming
of a similar Dutch Invasion that made their rivals AC Milan big
in the late 1980s. John van 't Schip, almost 30 now, chose for
an Italian adventure at Genoa, in the fall of his career.
Marciano Vink joined him, and midfielder Michel Kreek gave it
an unsuccesful Serie A try at Padova. Louis van Gaal had built
something beautiful in a remarkably short period. At the end of
the day, he had to start all over again.
And that's what he did, knowing that the next generation
emerging from 'Voorland', Ajax's youth complex behind De Meer,
was even better than the previous crop. As usual during the
process of building, the 1992-1993 season saw a European
elimination against Italian dream team Parma and too many
stumblings in the league. But the KNVB Cup (number 12 for Ajax)
was won in great style: after having humiliated Feyenoord in
Rotterdam (0-5), a 6-2 win over SC Heerenveen followed in the
final. The crowd, usually skeptical during the building of a
new top team, was confident this time. 80,000 people joined the
official Ajax Fan Club, thereby showing their faith in the new
generation of Ajax rookies, lead by Edgar Davids, the greatly
matured De Boer brothers, goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar, newly
bought left winger Marc Overmars, Finnish talent Jari Litmanen
and - one year later - Amsterdam street kids Patrick Kluivert
and Clarence Seedorf.
The 'Golden Ajax' mark 2
1994 brought Louis van Gaal's first Dutch championship - and
the first qualification for the prestigous and lucrative
Champions League, the reconfigured European Champions Cup
competition, in which PSV had failed miserably so far. Louis
van Gaal completed his squad for that year with smartly scouted
Nigerian strikers Finidi George and Nwankwo Kanu. And to the
utter delight of the fans at De Meer, prodigal son Frank
Rijkaard decided to finish his career at home and - more
importantly - in style. Ajax-haters waiting for the team to
fail only had one happy day that season, as Feyenoord striker
Mike Obiku ended Ajax' Amstel Cup (new name of the KNVB Cup)
campaign in the quarter final, by a 'golden goal' in 'sudden
death' extra time.
The 1994-1995 Champions League brought the miracle that
football experts considered impossible in the era of
commercialized football: Ajax won the thing - without losing
one single game. AC Milan, Casino Salzburg and AEK Athens
couldn't stop Ajax in the group stage. Hajduk Split (3-0) and
Bayern Munich (5-2) got the worst of it in the red and white
vortex of the Olympic Stadium. And in the final at Vienna's
Ernst Happel Stadium, Franco Baresi's AC Milan - for the third
time that season - was forced to its knees after an 87th minute
goal by 18 year-old Patrick Kluivert, another Ajax striker in
the respectable tradition of Cruyff, Van Basten and Bergkamp.
The fourth European Champions Cup was ready to be shown to a
crowd of over 250,000 at Amsterdam's Museumplein. Frank
Rijkaard seemed a better player than ever, but decided to call
it quits, ending his career with a golden Champions League
medal in his pocket, after an Eredivisie season without one
single defeat.
Litmanen: "Not done yet"
As usual, foreign clubs were coveting the Ajax players, but
- following the lead of new hero Jari Litmanen - almost the
entire team decided to stay. The Ajax team of 1995 stuck
together, knowing they were not done yet. This generation was
capable of reviving the 'Golden Age' of the 1970s. Ajax won the
national title again, not unbeaten this time, but with even
more points in total than the year before. Danny Blind scored
the decisive penalty in the shoot-out in Tokyo, against
South-American champions Grêmio from Brazil, bringing the
World Cup to Amsterdam again. In the mean time, Real Zaragoza
was crushed 4-0 for the European Super Cup.
And, last but not least, the Champions League group was
topped with even more impressive statistics than the year
before. Ferençvarós Budapest, Grasshoppers
Zürich and Real Madrid were the opponents; the Swiss were
the only team to grab one point against Ajax. Real Madrid
re-lived their 1973 nightmare, in a historic display of power
at Bernabeu stadium. The referee overlooked no less than two
Jari Litmanen goals, both times missing that the ball had
crossed the goal line. It didn't matter: the 0-2 victory was
enough for a standing ovation by the Madrid crowd. Borussia
Dortmund did not have a chance in the quarter finals, losing
twice without scoring a goal.
It all seemed to be over, however, when Greek champions and
semi-final opponents Panathinaikos won 0-1 in Amsterdam. But
Ajax had saved some of the best for last. Encouraged by an
emotional last-minute telegram from Frank Rijkaard, Jari
Litmanen made the roaring stadium drop completely silent as
early as in the 3rd minute. 87 minutes later, the score was
0-3. A second consecutive final was reached.
Two finals, only one Cup
This Ajax team seemed to be made of stainless steel, but the
first little hair-line cracks were appearing. Rumors circulated
about Finidi George and Nwankwo Kanu being underpayed, as well
as rumors about racial conflicts between the so-called 'Cable'
(the circle of Surinam friends Reiziger, Seedorf, Davids and
Kluivert) and the rest of the team. The nastiness would later
reach its climax in the Dutch national team at Euro 1996. But
the fact remains: Ajax played its worst European game in over
two years against a mediocre Juventus team, in the Champions
League final in Rome, Italy. A Jari Litmanen goal wiped out an
early Ravanelli strike, but the penalty shoot-out saw Ajax
stumble. Whereas Juventus was perfect from the spot, Sonny
Silooy and Edgar Davids each missed, handing the trophy to the
Italians.
As usual, the team was about to fall apart, although the
exodus was not as bad as in the past: Patrick Kluivert
considered himself too young to go, the De Boer brothers
announced they wanted to spend the rest of their careers with
Ajax, and Van der Sar stayed, as did Blind and even Jari
Litmanen. But Sonny Silooy left, for the second time in his
career, this time to Arminia Bielefeld in Germany. Michael
Reiziger and Edgar Davids set off for AC Milan, and the
immensely popular Nigerians Finidi and Kanu wanted something
else as well; Betis Sevilla and Inter Milan were their new
clubs.
Farewell to De Meer
The end of each season is departure time at Ajax; the fans
are used to that. But the 1995-1996 season ended with the most
painful of goodbyes: the 26th national title was won against
Willem II (5-1), on 28 April, 1996, in the very, very last home
game at the place where everything had happened. Ajax was
leaving the holy grass of De Meer. The futuristic Amsterdam
ArenA was almost finished, in the South-Eastern suburb of
Bijlmermeer.
Next:
1996 - Present: AJAX AT THE ARENA
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