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UEFA Cup: Ajax up against Werder Bremen in third round

15 December: It wasn't exactly the easiest opponent in the bowl containing the names of the eight numbers three from the Champions League group phase, but the drive from Amsterdam could not have been shorter: Ajax face German powerhouse and Bundesliga league leaders SV Werder Bremen in the third round of the UEFA Cup. This was the outcome of the draw at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland. The Amsterdammers travel to Northern Germany first (14 February 2007). The return leg at the ArenA is one week later (22 February). A 'round of sixteen' encounter in March with the winners of Spartak Moscow - Celta de Vigo will be at stake.

The Club

Many of Europe's great football clubs were founded more or less 'by accident' and Werder Bremen is no exception: a group of 16 year-old boys attending a high school in the port of Bremen won a soccer ball in a competition in 1898, practiced a bit and established the Fussballverein Werder von 1899 (normally abbreviated as FV Werder) on 04 February of that year. The club was named after the ground where the it's first kickabouts took place: the Stadtwerder ground, right by the small island in the river Weser. The word Werder means 'river island'. Werder was founded as a football club, but the year 1920 saw the establishment of sections for sports such as tennis, cricket, athletics, chess and several others. The Fussballverein (FV) had become a Sportsverein (SV), the letters that are still in the club's name today.

Until 1963 Werder only enjoyed moments of glory on a regional level, but in 1963 the green and white belonged to the elite of German football clubs to establish the Bundesliga we still know today and were in fact one of the first clubs to clinch the German title in the new league structure (1965), thanks to star players such as Sepp Piontek and Horst-Dieter Höttges. However, Werder failed to maintain their position and the top and, eventually, tragically went down to the Second Bundesliga in 1980, only to return to the top flight one year later, with a manager at the helm who would become a living legend in Bremen: König ('King') Otto Rehhagel, who was in charge for nearly fourteen years and made Werder Bremen one of Germany's most succesful football clubs of the 1980s and 1990s, thanks to players such as Rune Bratseth, Uli Borowka, Dieter Eilts and famous forwards such as Karl-Heinz Riedle, Wynton Rufer and Klaus Allofs.

Today, Werder's trophy cabinet contains four German championship shields (1965, 1988, 1993, 2004), five German DFB Cups (1961, 1991, 1994, 1999, 2004), three German Super Cups (1988, 1993, 1994) and two pieces of 'European' silverware: the European Cup Winners Cup of 1992 and the Intertoto Cup of 1998.

The 'Rehhagel era' will always be legendary, but today's SV Werder Bremen team may well be the strongest side the club ever had. Werder play offensive, entertaining football, score almost three goals per Bundesliga game on average this season and were rather unfortunate to end up in a Champions League group with Chelsea and FC Barcelona. Werder impressed the world and grabbed ten points... but finished third - and continue their European safari in the UEFA Cup. Against Ajax.

The official SV Werder Bremen website has a comprehensive English version, including a lengthy club history.

The Roster

Today, SV Werder Bremen is coached by former player Thomas Schaaf, who accepted the job in 1999 and developed a spectacularly offensive football machine, with German international Miroslav Klose as its top goalscorer, Portugese star Hugo Almeida as his 'sidekick' upfront, German internationals such as Tim Borowski and Torsten Frings in midfield and an 'old friend' at the back: Finnish defender Petri Pasanen, formerly of Ajax, who joined Werder Bremen in July 2004.

Another Werder player followers of the Dutch Eredivisie might be familiar with is Danish midfielder Daniel Jensen, who played for SC Heerenveen before making the jump to the Bundesliga.

The Stadium

Werder Bremen still play their home games close to the old Stadtwerder ground where the club's founders played their first games of football. The atmospheric Weser Stadium, named after the river, has - according to its own official website - an official capacity of 42,358. That number, however, includes a few thousand standing places. For matches in UEFA competition only the 37,512 seats may be used.

The stadium was originally constructed in 1926, but underwent several changes over the years and was turned into a modern-looking, 'multifunctional' stadium for football games and arena concerts in 2004.

Ajax vs SV Werder Bremen: The History

The Werder Bremen games in February will be the 17th time since 1957 for Ajax to play a German side in UEFA competition, if you count all East-German (DDR) and West-German (BRD) sides from the years before 1989. Ajax played 14 different German clubs in total (there were three encounters with Bayern München), but SV Werder Bremen, remarkable, never came out of the bowl.

Ajax and Werder Bremen go way back, nonetheless. The first ever friendly fixture between the red and white from Amsterdam and Bremen's green and white (with a touch of orange, these days...) was played on 11 May 1913 in Amsterdam. Ajax won: 1-0. The second (and most recent) encounter with Werder Bremen was on German soil, 64 years later. On 24 May 1977 the two clubs settled for a 1-1 draw. Thirty years later, and 94 years after their first ever friendly in Amsterdam, Ajax and Werder Bremen meet for the third time.

For what it's worth: Ajax have a remarkably wonderful record against German opposition in UEFA competition. Ajax faced German opposition 16 times so far - and advanced no less than 14 times. Bayern München are the only German side to have knocked Ajax out of 'Europe'. That was in 1980. Bayern also beat Ajax on aggregate in 2004, but that was in the group phase of the Champions League. Ajax finished third in the group and continued their journey in the UEFA Cup.

For all other German teams Ajax were too high a hurdle: SC Wismut (1957), 1. FC Nürnberg (1968), Hannover '96 (1969), Carl-Zeiss Jena (1970), Dynamo Dresden (1971), Bayern München (1973), Hertha BSC Berlin (1975), Lokomotive Leipzig (Cup Winners Cup final 1987), Hamburger SV (1987), Rot-Weiss Erfurt (1991), 1. FC Kaiserslautern (1992), Bayern München (1995), Borussia Dortmund (1996) and VfL Bochum (1997) - they all crashed out against Ajax.

Reactions

"Out of the Champions League cast-offs Werder Bremen are easily the strongest side. They are a supreme candidate to lift the UEFA Cup at the end of the season. On a good day we could cause an upset. Nothing is impossible. However, we will have to be top in both games. I mean: they are the league leaders in the Bundesliga. I think it's a beautiful draw, anyway. An encounter between a German and a Dutch side is always something special."
- Henk ten Cate, Ajax head-coach.

"I don't need to say much about Ajax Amsterdam. They've won many, many Dutch titles. This is a very attractive draw. We continue to play teams from the 'Champions League category'. Ajax were almost always there in recent seasons. Our fans will also understand what the name of this opponent stands for. No-one can have any doubts about the attractivity of the UEFA Cup anymore."
- Thomas Schaaf, SV Werder Bremen head-coach.

"We are satisfied with this opponent, but that doesn't mean we'll take it lightly. Ajax proved themselves in Europe countless times and they are still of Champions League quality. However, you should look at the way we developed in recent years. We have a lot of confidence and we can make it to the next round."
- Klaus Allofs, SV Werder Bremen general manager.

"Ajax are a super opponent. They're a very big name. However, given the way we played in the Champions League we do not need to be afraid of them."
- Torsten Frings, SV Werder Bremen midfielder.

"Ajax are very strong, especially at home, so we will have to get a good result in the home leg. I look forward to these games. Ajax are a team that wants to play football, which is an advantage to us. Five or six former team-mates of mine are still there, but I am no longer in touch with any of them."
- Petri Pasanen, SV Werder Bremen defender and former Ajacied. (MP)

Sources: Ajax.nl, Werder.de, Wikipedia

Update 28 December 2006: SV Werder Bremen have announced that the first leg of the UEFA Cup encounter with Ajax will be played at Bremen's Weser Stadium on Wednesday 14 February 2007, kick-off time 20:30 CET. The return leg at the Amsterdam ArenA is eight days later: Thursday 22 February 2007, at 21:00 CET.

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