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Brondby it is! Ajax face Danish champions in CL qualifier

04 August: In theory, Dinamo Tbilisi could still advance to the third preliminary round to face Ajax, but no-one counted on it. After having won the away leg in Georgia ( 0-2), Brøndby IF also beat Dinamo in the return leg ( 3-1). The Danish champions are now officially the hurdle Ajax will have to jump in order to achieve Champions League qualification. The two teams will first meet in Copenhagen, Denmark, on Wednesday 10 August, 19:00 CET. The return follows two weeks later in Amsterdam: Wednesday 24 August, 20:30 CET.

It is the third time for Ajax to play in the third preliminary round of the Champions League. In August 2001 it went wrong against Celtic FC from Scotland: a fine 0-1 win in Glasgow was not enough to wipe out the dramatic home defeat of 1-3. Three years later, in August 2003, the Amsterdammers were more succesful, although it was a close shave: after a very hard-fought 1-1 draw in Austria, the modest Grazer AK were beaten by a 'golden penalty' from Tomás Galásek in the 104th minute of the return at the Amsterdam ArenA ( 2-1).

And now it's Brøndby IF. Time for an introduction...

The Club

The Brøndbyernes Idrætsforening, or Brøndby IF, is a relatively young club. Established on 03 December 1964, the club was a merger of two sides from the Copenhagen suburb of Brøndby: Brøndbyvester IF from West Brøndby, and Brøndbyøster IF from East Brøndby. Playing at a home ground that initially had no stands the ambitious club slowly but steadily climbed to the top of Danish football. Promotion to the top flight was a fact in 1982.

In their 23 years in the top division the yellow and blue from Brøndby developed into the dominant force in Danish football, winning ten Danish championships and five Cups of Denmark. The first domestic championship was grabbed in 1985; the tenth one followed this year, precisely twenty years after the first. Brøndby are champions of Denmark once every two years on average. Ten titles and ten runner-up positions in the last twenty seasons make Brøndby Denmark's number one football club -- by far. 

In those 23 years at the top flight no less than 28 Brøndby players saw action for the Danish national team. The list includes the name of Danish legends such as the Laudrup brothers (Michael and Brian, who both spent a season at Ajax late in their careers), goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel and - more recently - Ebbe Sand and Mattias Jonson.

Today, the first team of Brøndby IF is coached by Michael Laudrup, who played for Brøndby and Ajax and was the first 'BIF' player to be invited for the national team, back in 1982. Key players in his squad are veteran defender Per Nielsen (433 games for the club!), midfielder Kim Daugaard (380 games!) and - a familiar name for followers of Dutch football - Swedish striker Johan Elmander, previously of Feyenoord and NAC Breda. Brøndby still have a predominantly Danish roster. Many of their players won a handful of caps for their national team.

In 1998 the club had their only run in the Champions League so far. Their début was a highlight in club history (a 2-1 win over Bayern München), but they failed to grab another point after that shock start and crashed out in the group stage.

This season Brøndby entered the preliminary stages of the Champions League as the winners of the Danish 'double'. They were paired with Dinamo Tbilisi, champions of Georgia. In Tbilisi goals by Morten Skoubo and Johan Elmander gave Brøndby a 0-2 win. In Copenhagen two Kasper Lorentzen goals sealed the deal. Jonas Kamper added one more, so that Dinamo were brushed aside by a score of 5-1 on aggregate.

The Danish league, the SAS Liga, is already three games underway and Brøndby had a splendid start of the season: Midtjylland (3-0), Silkeborg (2-0) and EfB (2-3) were all beaten. The club's brace of convincing triumphs over Dinamo Tbilisi made the first weeks of 2005-2006 even more satisfying for Michael Laudrup's men. 

The official Brøndby IF website has a limited, but informative English language section you might want to check out.

The Stadium

On Wednesday 10 August, kick-off 19:00 CET, Ajax will play Brøndby at their Brøndby Stadium on the outskirts of the Danish capital. The ground was opened in 1965 as a football pitch with a sand embankment for the spectactors to stand on, but underwent five major face-lifts over the years and has developed into a modern all-seater. 29,000 people are allowed in for domestic league games. For UEFA games the security measures are more strict: a maximum of 26,000 people can attend Brøndby vs Ajax.


A fully modernized Brøndby Stadium. [Photo: Brondby.com - used with permission]

For those interested in tifo display: Ajax's Vak 410 and the Brøndby fanatics both know how it should be done. Take a peek at the photos taken at Brøndby Stadium prior to Brøndby vs Barcelona in February 2004.

Ajax versus Danish opposition

Ajax and Brøndby never met. Not in UEFA competition, not in a friendly. The only time Ajax faced Danish opposition in UEFA competition was a traumatic experience for the Amsterdammers. Ajax were paired with Brøndby's local rivals, FC Copenhagen, in the second round of the UEFA Cup in the fall of 2001. On 18 October Ajax settled for a 0-0 draw at Copenhagen's Parken. Two weeks later, on 01 November, nearly 37,000 Ajax fans at the ArenA saw the tragedy unfold: a single goal by Niclas Jensen knocked Ajax out.

Reactions

Ajax.nl published the first reaction of Ajax boss Danny Blind a couple of hours after the draw. Blind acknowledged the fact that the opponent might in theory be Dinamo Tbilisi ("we will follow them, too, just in case they pull off a stunt"), but almost exclusively reflected on Brøndby IF and the fact that he will meet his former Ajax team-mate Michael Laudrup again. Blind and Laudrup played for Ajax in 1997-1998. "I know Michael as a very nice person and a superb footballer. It will be very nice to meet him again," Blind said.

The Ajax head-coach feels that Brøndby are "not an easy opponent", but that Ajax "mustn't complain": "I am not saying we're extremely happy with this draw, or that we should beat them no matter what, but it could have been worse. Denmark is easy to get to. Which is nice, because we want to go there and see them play. The facilities are excellent and it's also a good thing that we play away first. (...) Brøndby play in a sort of 4-3-3 formation, albeit with wingers coming from midfield. It's a side that wants to play football, which is good for us. We're going for qualification and won't settle for less." (MP)

Sources: Brondby.com, Ajax.nl, UEFA.com

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