AFC Ajax: Difference between revisions
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===List of Ajax Managers=== |
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*[[Henk ten Cate]] (2006 -) |
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*[[Danny Blind]] (2005 - 2006) |
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*[[Ruud Krol]] (interim, 2005) |
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*[[Ronald Koeman]] (2001 - 2005) |
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*[[Co Adriaanse]] (2000 - 2001) |
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*[[Hans Westerhof]] (interim, 2000) |
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*[[Jan Wouters]] (1999-2000) |
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*[[Morten Olsen]] (1997-1999) |
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*[[Louis van Gaal]] (1991-1997) |
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*[[Leo Beenhakker]] (1989-1991) |
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*[[Kurt Linder]] (1988) |
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*[[Johan Cruijff]] (1985-1988) |
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*[[Aad de Mos]] (1982-1985) |
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*[[Kurt Linder]] (1981-1982) |
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*[[Leo Beenhakker]] (1979-1981) |
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*[[Cor Brom]] (1978-1979) |
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*[[Tomislav Ivic]] (1976-1978) |
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*[[Rinus Michels]] (1975-1976) |
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*[[Hans Kraay]] (1974-1975) |
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*[[George Knoebel]] (1973-1974) |
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*[[Stefan Kovacs]] (1971-1973) |
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*[[Rinus Michels]] (1965-1971) |
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*[[Vic Buckingham]] (1964-1965) |
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*[[Jack Rowley]] (1963-1964) |
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*[[Joseph Gruber]] (1962-1963) |
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*[[Keith Spurgeon]] (1961-1962) |
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*[[Vic Buckingham]] (1959-1961) |
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*[[Karl Humenberger]] (1954-1959) |
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*[[Walter Crook]] (1953-1954) |
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*[[Robert Thomson]] (1950-1953) |
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*[[Walter Crook]] (1948-1950) |
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*[[Robert Smith]] (1947-1948) |
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*[[Jack Reynolds (football)|Jack Reynolds]] (1945-1947) |
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*[[Dolf van Kol]] (1942-1945) |
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*[[Wim Volkers]] (1941-1942) |
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*[[Vilmos Halpern]] (1940-1941) |
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*[[Jack Reynolds (football)|Jack Reynolds]] (1928-1940) |
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*[[Stanley Castle]] (1926-1928) |
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*[[Harold Rose]] (1925-1926) |
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*[[Jack Reynolds (football)|Jack Reynolds]] (1915-1925) |
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*[[John Kirwan (soccer player)|John Kirwan]] (1910-1915) |
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==Trivia== |
==Trivia== |
Revision as of 21:33, 13 October 2006
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Full name | Amsterdamsche Football Club Ajax N.V. | ||
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Nickname(s) | Godenzonen ("Sons of the gods") Joden ("Jews") | ||
Founded | March 18, 1900 | ||
Ground | Amsterdam ArenA, Amsterdam | ||
Capacity | 51,628[1] | ||
Chairman | John C. Jaakke | ||
Manager | Henk ten Cate | ||
League | Eredivisie | ||
2006-07 | Eredivisie, 1st | ||
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Amsterdamsche Football Club Ajax (Euronext: AJAX) also referred to as Ajax Amsterdam, AFC Ajax, or simply Ajax (pronounced Ah-yahx), is a football club from Amsterdam, Netherlands. The club is historically one of the three clubs that dominate Eredivisie football, the other two being Feyenoord Rotterdam and PSV Eindhoven.
Ajax is one of the five teams which has earned the right to keep the European Cup; they won consecutively in 1971-1973. In 1973, they completed The Treble by winning the Dutch Eredivisie, KNVB Cup, and the European Cup; to date they are the only team to keep the European Cup and accomplish the European Treble. They are also one of only three clubs (with Juventus FC and FC Bayern Munich) to have won all three major European trophies at least once (the European Cup, the European Cup Winners Cup and the UEFA Cup). They were the first team to win what has become the UEFA Intertoto Cup.
History
The club was founded in Amsterdam on March 18, 1900 by Floris Stempel, Carel Reeser and the brothers Han and Johan Dade. Ajax originally played in an all black uniform with a red sash tied around the players' waists, but that uniform was soon replaced by a red/white striped shirt and black shorts. Red, black and white are the three colors of the flag of Amsterdam. However, when, under manager John Kirwan, the club got promoted to the top flight of Dutch football for the first time in 1911 (then the Eerste Klasse or 'First Class', later named the Eredivisie), Ajax were forced to change their colors because Sparta Rotterdam already had the exact same outfit. Special kits for away fixtures did not exist at the time and according to football association regulations the newcomers had to change their colors if two teams in the same league had identical uniforms. Loosely inspired by the kit of Arsenal, Ajax opted for white shorts and white shirt with a broad, vertical red stripe over chest and back, which still is Ajax' outfit.
Ajax dominated European club football during the early 1970's by winning the European Cup in 1971 with coach Rinus Michels, in 1972 and 1973 with coach Stefan Kovacs. Their most famous players where then Johan Cruijff, Piet Keizer, Sjaak Swart and Johan Neeskens. From the 1960's onwards Ajax had developed the concept of total football, ending the traditional division of labour between defenders, midfielders and attackers. All players were to participate in all aspects of the game, in an organization that would fill gaps when a player moved to a different position. There is some debate amongst footballing cognoscenti as to whether or not the system was developed organically through the talent of the players, or whether it was part of an over-arching tactical scheme from manager Rinus Michels.
The club is also famous for its youth program that has introduced many great footballers - Cruijff being the best example. Ajax has also expanded its talent searching program to South Africa and the United States with Ajax Cape Town and Ajax Orlando respectively. Its satellite club is Ajax Cape Town of South Africa from where youth players have been drafted into the Eredivisie squad, such as Steven Pienaar and Aaron Mokoena. In 1995, the year that they won the UEFA Champions League, the Dutch national team was almost entirely composed of Ajax players, with goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar, players such as Michael Reiziger, Frank de Boer and Danny Blind in defense, Ronald de Boer, Edgar Davids and Clarence Seedorf in midfield, and Patrick Kluivert and Marc Overmars in attack. The team was coached by Louis van Gaal, and also featured foreign stars such as Jari Litmanen, Nwankwo Kanu and Finidi George. Its current successes are mostly domestic, notwithstanding some minor successes in the 2002-03 Champions League. Its youth team continues to develop talented individuals like Wesley Sneijder, John Heitinga, Hedwiges Maduro, Urby Emanuelson, Maarten Stekelenburg and Ryan Babel. At the 2006 World Cup, Sneijder, Heitinga, Babel, Maduro and Stekelenburg were included in the national squad.
Since their success with the 1995 Champions league, Ajax have struggled to rediscover their European form. Most recently in 2005, popular coach, Ronald Koeman resigned after Ajax' defeat to AJ Auxerre in the UEFA Cup tournament despite having a squad packed with international experience, declaring himself drained of any inspiration to further guide the team to any success. This resignation was also the aftermath of Koeman's long-standing spat with then football director Louis van Gaal who had questioned Koeman's managerial abilities after Ajax' dry spell in the domestic league which even saw them languishing in fifth position at the beginning of 2005. Former Ajax-player Danny Blind, who, aside from working as Koeman's technical coach and advisor, had virtually no top-level manager experience, was unveiled as their new coach. This season also saw the departure of key players Rafael van der Vaart and Nigel de Jong to Hamburger SV, while four others (Hatem Trabelsi, Tomas Galasek, Steven Pienaar and Maxwell) revealed that they will leave the club at the end of the 2005-2006 season. Blind was sacked on May 10, 2006 after only 422 days in charge. New coach Henk ten Cate, who won the Champions League and Primera Division last season as the assistant of Frank Rijkaard with FC Barcelona gave youngsters a shot to enter the selection of the first team. Ten Cate has recently shared that youngsters Jan Vertonghen, Rydell Poepon and Robbert Schilder will be included in the selection, whereas Greek forward Angelos Charisteas has been told that he must search for a new club, as he doesn't fit in Ten Cate's system. Ten Cate has announced that he wishes to win the Eredivisie again this year.
Ajax missed out on a Champions League place in 2006/2007 after their defeat against FC Copenhagen (3-2 on aggregate). As a result, Ajax played against I.K. Start from Norway in the first round of the UEFA Cup September 14th and 28th, and won the match 9-2 on aggregate(2-5 away and 4-0 home).
Stadium
Ajax' first stadium was built in 1911 out of wood and was simply called The Stadium. Ajax later played in the stadium that was built for the 1928 Summer Olympics, held in Amsterdam. This stadium, designed by Jan Wils, is simply known as the Olympic Stadium. In 1934, Ajax moved to De Meer Stadion in east Amsterdam, where they would play until 1996. During big European fixtures the club would often play at the Olympic Stadium, where the capacity was higher.
In 1996, Ajax moved to a new home ground in the southeast of the city known as the Amsterdam ArenA that was built at the cost of $134 million. The stadium is capable of holding approximately 52,000 people. The average attendance in 2004/05 was 48,600 people. The Arena has a retractable roof and was the example for other modern stadiums built in Europe in the following years. In the Netherlands, the Arena had earned a reputation for having a terrible grass pitch caused by the removable roof that, even when open, takes away too much sunlight and ventilation from the ground, and by the NFL Europe's Amsterdam Admirals who play their home games on it.
The much loved De Meer stadium was torn down and the land was sold to the city council.
Rivalry
Although Ajax have been vying for the championship with PSV Eindhoven in recent years, its main rivalry is with Feyenoord of Rotterdam, culminating every year in the "Klassieker". It is a match between the two largest cities of the Netherlands, one of which identifies with artists and creativity (Amsterdam) and one with hard labour (Rotterdam). There have been many clashes between the supporters of both clubs, of which the Beverwijk clash in 1997 was the most infamous, resulting in the murder of Ajax supporter Carlo Picornie.
Satellite clubs
The following clubs are affiliated with Ajax Amsterdam:
Honours
National
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International
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Players and managers
Current squad (2006/2007 season)
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Players on loan Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Notable former Ajax players
Trivia
References to Jews
The Ajax fans have the tradition of using Jewish and Israeli symbols to express their allegiance. Regularly, the supporters wave large Star of David flags and scream Joden! Joden! ("Jews! Jews!") to fire up their team. Die-hard Ajax supporters call themselves "F-Siders" or "Joden" -- Dutch for "Jews" -- a nickname that reflects the team's and Amsterdam's Jewish roots. The nickname for Ajax fans dates back to before World War II, when Amsterdam was home to many of the Netherlands' 140,000 Jews and the Ajax stadium was located near a Jewish neighborhood. Most Dutch Jews were killed in the Holocaust, and little remains of Amsterdam's old Jewish quarter. But the tradition survived. Ajax currently has no Jewish players, the last player with Jewish roots being Daniël de Ridder.
The problem is that in an increasingly bizarre way, opposing supporters use anti-Semitism to express their antipathy towards Ajax. This is expressed in slogans such as Hamas, Hamas, Jews into the gas (Hamas, hamas, joden aan het gas) or producing hissing sounds that imitate the flow of gas. This however, does not withhold the 'Jewish' supporters from celebrating the Bombing of Rotterdam by Nazi Germany when facing Feyenoord with songs like Rotterdam, fucking town, in the war they rightly bombed it down! (Rotterdam, kankerstad, in de oorlog lag je lekker plat). Songs like this (using the melody of ´Tulips from Amsterdam´) were sung from the stage, i.e. organised, at the celebration of the winning of the Dutch Cup in 2006.
The hardcore Ajax fans however, are proud of their outsider image as "Jews" and feel encouraged to show more Israeli/ Jewish signs. The Jews who support Ajax are split on this matter. Dutch authorities have tried to tone down the Jewish symbols of support for Ajax, hoping to lead to a decrease of anti-Semitic counter-incidents. However, the head of the European Board of Jewish Deputies has signalled his support for the F-siders, noting that anti-Semitism in Europe would be lessened if more non-Jews identified with Jewish culture.
As of 2006, an evaluation on this matter is still highly debatable.
See also
Bibliography
- Simon Kuper, Ajax, The Dutch, The War, Orion, London, 2003, ISBN 0-7528-4274-9
External links
- Official
- Ajax.nl - Official website of AFC Ajax (Dutch)
- Ajax.nl - Official website of AFC Ajax (English)
Reference: Ajax and the Jewish issue
- Unofficial
- AjaxForum.nl - Forum of Ajax Amsterdam(Dutch)
- AjaxExtra.nl - Dutch fansite of AFC Ajax (Dutch)
- Ajax USA - American fansite of AFC Ajax (English)
- AjaxSupporters.de - German fansite of AFC Ajax (German)
- Ajax Fr - French speaking fansite of AFC Ajax (French)
- Ajax en France - French fansite of AFC Ajax (French)
- Polish Ajax info site (Polish)
- Ajax Portal (Hungarian)
- Superajax.com - Russian fansite of AFC Ajax (Russian)
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