Summing Up the Season
Before the start of the 2000-2001 season, new Ajax coach Co
Adriaanse said he had three goals for this year: bringing youth
players into the team, playing offensive football and finishing
somewhere in the top 5 of the Eredivisie table. Looking at the
plain facts, he succeeded in all three of them: players such as
Rafaël van der Vaart (18), Cedric van der Gun (22), Andy
van der Meyde (21), Yakubu Abubakari (19), Petri Pasanen (19),
Pius Ikedia (20) and Daniël Cruz (20) were offered plenty
of playing time, Ajax' 85 goals made them the most productive
team in the Eredivisie and - most importantly - Ajax finished
third on the table, thereby earning the right to play
preliminary games for the Champions League.
However, there were reasons for the fans to be dissatisfied
as well. You can see why if we compare this season's results
with the results of last season:
PLAYED WON DRAWS DEFEATS POINTS GOAL DIFF.
1999-2000: 34 18 7 9 61 72-51
2000-2001: 34 18 7 9 61 85-43
Apart from the goal difference (more goals scored, less
goals conceded than last year, doubling the difference from +21
to +42) Ajax booked exactly the same results as last season, as
far as the numbers of wins, draws, defeats and - logically -
points are concerned. It was good enough to finish two
positions higher on the ranking: 3rd, versus 5th last
season.
Ajax' 85 goals are unrivalled. Champions PSV come closest:
73 goals. On the other hand, no less than six clubs conceded
less goals than Ajax. The largest home victory was the 9-0
goalfest against Sparta, whereas the largest away victory was
booked in the first round of the UEFA Cup, humiliating Belgian
opponent AA Ghent, 0-6 (the largest-but-one European away
victory in club history, second only to 1979's 1-8 win at
Helsingin JK). The largest league victory in an away game was
the 0-3 win over NAC, in Breda. Shota Arveladze became the
topscorer, with 18 goals (in 27 games, an average of 0.66 per
game). Nikos Machlas' average is almost exactly as good: his 12
goals in 19 games make for an average score of 0.63 per
game.
The largest defeat of the season was suffered in the very
first away game of the season, at Sparta (3-0). The three home
defeats Ajax suffered were all by one goal: 0-1 against PSV,
3-4 against Feyenoord and 1-2 against Vitesse.

Final table, 2000-2001 (TeleText)
One of the most remarkable facts of this season's Eredivisie
campaign were the bad results against Holland's traditional top
opponents: the four games against Feyenoord and PSV only
brought Ajax one point (a 1-1 draw in Eindhoven). The last time
the score was that bad, was in 1984-1985, which was also the
last time that Feyenoord won both its league games against
their Amsterdam rivals. Looking at their budget, Vitesse is
Holland's fourth club. Ajax also lost both ties against the
Arnhem team. One point out of six games against the three
biggest clubs. Not much.
Last year's 41 yellow and 7 red cards formed a doubtful club
record. This year, the Ajacieden's behaviour was much better.
Only one Ajacied was sent off: goalkeeper Fred Grim, in
Utrecht, but the referee's decision was later overruled by the
KNVB, which made Grim the only Ajax player to have played in
all 34 league games. 39 times, an Ajax player was booked. It
will be surprising to many that two gracious players, Andy van
der Meyde and Richard Witschge, top the list of bookings, with
five each.
The biggest sportive disappointment of the season were
probably the Amstel Cup and UEFA Cup campaigns, if you can even
call them 'campaigns' in the first place. For the record: the
domestic Amstel Cup campaign lasted eight minutes longer than
last year's. Back then, Ajax lost in the first round after 90
minutes; Vitesse needed a 'golden goal' after eight minutes of
extra time to eliminate the Amsterdammers in the first round:
1-2 at the ArenA. The UEFA Cup campaign was an even bigger
disaster than last year's: back then, Ajax was eliminated in
the third round by a Spanish opponent (Real Mallorca). This
season, Ajax stumbled in the second round, against a modest
opponent from Switzerland (Lausanne Sports).
Finally, despite the higher number of home victories and the
increasing number of goals, the average number of spectators
attending home games dropped to 36,689 from 40,873 last season,
when Ajax had the highest average attendance in Holland. This
season, Feyenoord home games were watched by an average of 920
more people, at 37,609 per game. (MP)