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De Jong brace saves Ajax at Sparta's Castle: 1-2

1 (0) - 2 (0)
Eredivisie
Sparta Stadium, Rotterdam
Sunday, 02 October, 2005

Stekelenburg; Trabelsi, Grygera, Escudé, Maxwell; Galásek, Sneijder, Lindenbergh; Rosales, Charisteas, Mitea.

That's a more than acceptable Ajax starting line-up for the Eredivisie away game at Sparta Rotterdam, you would say, but until the day before the fixture it was in fact the list of unavailable players due to suspension (Lindenbergh), illness (Escudé) or injury (the rest). On match day the good news was that Zdenek Grygera was fit and ready to play and that 'only' ten absentees remained. In default of captain number one (Escudé), captain number two (Galásek) Grygera was the captain of an Ajax team that was absolutely hopeless for one hour and went 1-0 down, but eventually left Rotterdam with three very, very hard-fought points: 1-2.


Nigel de Jong scores Ajax's equalizer: 1-1. [Photo: Ajax.nl]

"We have put up an absolute non-performance for one hour," said Danny Blind after the game, while some of his players admitted that the Ajax boss was outraged at half-time, preaching fire and brimstone about all the things his team did not have in the first 45 minutes: determination, fighting spirit, attitude. "I didn't say a single word about the football itself," said Blind. "Working hard is also part of the game of football. That's what I was hammering at."

And for a reason. From an Ajax perspective there was precisely one noteworthy moment in the first half. One chance. You can hardly say that Ajax 'created' it: a typically bad thru-pass coincidentally hit the back of a Sparta defender and dropped in front of Markus Rosenberg, who suddenly had an unmarked shooting opportunity. The struggling Swede could have done himself a big favour by at least firing on goal, but he wildly hammered it yards wide.

Apart from that moment the first half was dominated by Sparta, who overwhelmed Ajax in the opening minutes, got to take a series of corner kicks and caused unrest in the Ajax goalmouth several times. Ajax could have sustained damage in this phase, but didn't thanks to Hans Vonk. The veteran goalkeeper was criticized after last week's Arsenal game, but kept his team upright at The Castle, where he superbly punched a Ricky van den Bergh free-kick out of the top corner (7') and saved miraculously when Steve Olfers and Jason Oost had scoring chances from close range in a 24th minute scrimmage in front of the Ajax goal. A Sparta lead at half-time would not have been undeserved.

In spite of Danny Blind's half-time tirade Ajax's bungling continued after the break until the inevitable happened in the 52nd minute: a low cross from former Ajacied Anthony Obodai from the right flank was slotted home from close range by Sjaak Polak, who was surrounded by apathetic Ajax defenders. 1-0. How were Ajax going to turn this game around...? For almost a full hour they had completely failed to impose their will on the opposition. There were no chances. No determination. No ideas. Only two outfield players were doing well, namely Urby Emanuelson, the only Ajacied with an aggressive forward drive and an occasional acceleration across midfield, and Edgar Manucharyan, who played from the start for the first time and had a good game on the left wing.

They were unable to make the difference. Ajax's attacking forces were the weakest part of the team. Markus Rosenberg failed to hold up the ball a single time, Ryan Babel was so slow and undecided that he destroyed almost every speedy attack and Steven Pienaar's passes were invariably erratic and uninspired. The situation seemed hopeless.

Until the 60th minute, in which Danny Blind took a major risk by taking off both of his unbelievably poor strikers (Rosenberg and Babel) and replacing them with Yannis Anastasiou (his first appearance this season!) and former Sparta man Nourdin Boukhari. No world beaters by any means, but the duo added a healthy work ethic and some badly needed determination to the side. Even if we do not blame Markus Rosenberg for wasting his only scoring chance and losing almost every ball he received, it is still quite embarrassing that there was actually more movement upfront after the arrival of Anastasiou, who is generally deemed slow and a bit static for an Ajax striker... Finally Ajax had a striker capable of holding up the ball.

Ajax levelled the score only four minutes after the almost ceremonial 'changing of the strikers': Nigel de Jong clinically tapped a low Pienaar cross into the net at the far post, after what was arguably Ajax's first decent attack over the right flank (64'). It marked the beginning of the end for the home side, who were visibly tired and dropped back to their own penalty area, visibly afraid to concede another goal. As you'd expect a second Ajax goal became inevitable because of that very fear. Best buddies Pienaar and De Jong once again did it together: this time the cross was high and De Jong's finish a header: 1-2 (75').

De Jong dedicated both of his goals to his mate Luciano van den Berg by lifting up his jersey, revealing a T-shirt with Van den Berg's picture and name on it. The player of Dutch First Division side Stormvogels Telstar died in a car crash less than two weeks ago. Making personal statements via T-shirts is officially against the international FIFA rules. After his second goal referee Bossen showed De Jong the yellow card for showing the 'Luciano' T-shirt. "It was worth a booking," said De Jong after the game. "The first time the referee told me: 'I'll give you a break'. The second time he told me he had no other choice than to book me. Fair enough. I can respect that."

Ajax could have added a decisive third goal from one of their counter-attacks in the dying minutes, but they didn't, so that Sparta vs Ajax ended in style: with Sparta pressure and an Ajax defense pulling out all the stops to secure the win. Boukhari and substitute Juanfran were booked for bringing down an opponent from behind and the travelling Ajax fans had to hold their breath once more in stoppage time, when Sparta got to take a free-kick from a very dangerous position. Davy de Fauw fired into the Ajax 'wall'.

All's well that ends well, as they say. Especially because rivals Feyenoord lost at FC Utrecht (3-1).

"If we ever had the chance to beat Ajax, it was today," said Sparta coach Wiljan Vloet, shaking his head in misery. Indeed, it was a rather lucky escape for the Amsterdammers, who can use the two-week break that lies ahead (a number of Ajacieden will play one or two World Cup qualifiers with their respective national teams; several others will get some useful rest). Against Heracles Almelo, on Saturday 15 October, the starting line-up will hopefully look a bit more like today's injury list... (MP)

GOALS

  • 52'  1-0  Sjaak Polak
  • 64'  1-1  Nigel de Jong
  • 75'  1-2  Nigel de Jong

Referee: Bossen
Yellow cards: Vermaelen, De Jong, Pienaar, Boukhari, Juanfran (Ajax), Gudelj, Obodai (Sparta Rotterdam)  
Attendance: 9,342

Ajax line-up: Vonk; Grygera, Heitinga, Vermaelen; De Jong, Maduro, Pienaar, Emanuelson (78. Juanfran); Babel (60. Boukhari), Rosenberg (60. Anastasiou), Manucharyan.

Sparta Rotterdam line-up: Ponk; De Fauw, Olfers, Zoontjes (83. Kinet), Gudelj; Obodai, Michels, Polak; Van den Bergh (58. Cvetkov), Oost, Rose (50. Bouaouzan).

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