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Goodbye to Witschge, Timmer back to AZ at season's end
25 March: At the end of the current season, the Ajax family
will say goodbye to a born and raised Amsterdammer and an in
thinkable every way typical Ajacied: Richard Witschge.
Technical director Leo Beenhakker and head-coach Ronald Koeman
told the 33 year-old left-footer that his expiring contract
will not be extended. Meanwhile, Ajax also decided not to
extend the loan of Henk Timmer. The 31 year-old will return to
AZ at season's end.
RICHARD WITSCHGE
The career of Richard Witschge (Amsterdam, 20 September
1969) had many ups and downs. He was part of the Ajax youth
crop which also brought forth the De Boer twins, Bryan Roy,
Marciano Vink and Dennis Bergkamp, to name but a few. He made
his official Ajax-1 début on 26 October 1986, in an
Eredivisie away game at AZ (1-6). He since played no less than
279 official games for Ajax, in which he scored 18 goals.
With Frank de Boer (left back) and Bryan Roy (left winger),
Witschge was soon regarded as the 'left flank future' of Dutch
football. Ironically, the man who now told him that his days at
Ajax are over (Leo Beenhakker) became Ajax's head-coach in 1989
and soon came up with an ironic expression that would haunt
Witschge for many years. Beenhakker felt that the generation of
Witschge and Roy was tremendously talented, but lacked the
fighting spirit and ambition to reach the top. He referred to
the youngsters in his team as the patatgeneratie, which
literally means 'French Fries generation'. Richard Witschge, 19
years of age at the time, was regarded as the most typical
representative.
The man who let him make his Ajax-1 début however,
the great Johan Cruijff, firmly believed in Witschge's
qualities and offered him a contract at FC Barcelona in 1991.
At that point, Witschge had won the 1986 and 1987 KNVB Cups,
the 1987 European Cup Winners Cup and the 1990 Dutch
championship with Ajax.
Witschge played regularly, but never really made his big
break in Barcelona, after which he moved to Girondins de
Bordeaux in France, where he had several excellent years and
built a reputation of a great football player. He also played
for Blackburn Rovers in England for a while, before moving back
home, to the Ajax of Louis van Gaal, in the summer of 1996.
Back in Amsterdam, he proved to have grown as a football
player and as a person and wa sone of Ajax's best for
several seasons. However, the Great Ajax of the mid-1990s was
collapsing. Witschge won the 1998 Dutch championship with his
team, as well as the Amstel Cups of 1998 and 1999, but these
achievements were overshadowed by Ajax's sportive misery.
After the disastrous 1999-2000 season Ajax slowly started
its recovery, but for Witschge the biggest difficulties were
yet to come and ushered in by the signing of Co Adriaanse as
the club's new head-coach. Witschge soon got into major
conflicts with Adriaanse, along with Aron Winter. The duo ended
up getting banned from the team. Witschge was loaned out to
Spanish side Deportivo Alavés in August of 2001.
His (second) return to Amsterdam was announced in March of
2002, shortly after the firing of Adriaanse and the arrival of
Ronald Koeman in the Amsterdam ArenA. The 2002-2003 season is
Witschge's 11th season as an Ajax-1 squad member since
1986.
He played 31 games for the Dutch national team in his
career, a number that could have been higher if he had not
gotten into a conflict with national coach Guus Hiddink, which
was a reason for Witschge to say goodbye to Oranje until
his unexpected comeback in August of 2001.
Richard Witschge has the typically fickle personality of an
Amsterdammer and enigmatic Ajacied. He was not always the
easiest player to work with for his coaches, but has always
been tremendously popular amongst Ajax fans. He can expect a
big last hurrah from the crowd in his final home game for Ajax.
HENK TIMMER
The Ajax career of Henk Timmer (Hierden, 03 December 1971)
has been significantly shorter than Witschge's. He was loaned
out to Ajax by AZ at the beginning of the season as Bogdan
Lobont, Maarten Stekelenburg and Joey Didulica sustained
injuries in a short period of time.
A second remarkable chapter was then added to Timmer's
career, who already spent a short period at Feyenoord for
similar reasons. He joined Ajax with immediate effect and got
to play two Eredivisie games and two Champions League games
(Inter away and Rosenborg BK at home) for Ajax. It seems
unlikely that he will make any more appearances this season.
(MP)
(Source: Ajax.nl)
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