1974 - 1985: The Dark Years
Learning the art of losing
Jan Mulder, an obstinate left winger and nowadays a cynical
TV personality, once wrote in his column in newspaper de
Volkskrant: "I was part of the generation that taught Ajax how
to lose."
Mulder joined Ajax in 1973. He played no more than four
games in his first season, the year Ajax won its third European
Cup. He knows what glory tastes like, but his Ajax career
really started in the 1973-1974 season, as Ajax was collapsing
around him. Cruyff had gone. Barcelona was tugging at Johan
Neeskens' shirt sleeve as well.
The success story of Holland's greatest ever football
generation ended painfully at Munich's Olympia Stadium. The
whole world expected Johan Cruyff and his mates to win the
ultimate trophy in football, wearing the orange shirt of the
national team. Rinus Michels was hired to teach Oranje the
'total football' with which he made Ajax great.
1974's Oranje had a red and white spine. No-one was going to
keep Cruyff from making the Dutch dream come true. In the final
against tournament hosts West-Germany, Cruyff himself walked
straight through the defense from kick-off and was brought
down. Neeskens fired home from the penalty spot. Holland was on
its way, in the very first minute. 90 minutes later, the score
was 2-1 to Germany. What was brought home the following day was
not the World Cup but a national football trauma that was to
last for fourteen long years.
No future - the birth of hooliganism
Ajax won one more European Super Cup, beating AC Milan 6-0.
But they finished 3rd in the league of that year, and again in
1975 and 1976. European campaigns were consistently terminated
before the winter break. The dark era had begun, not only as
far as football was concerned. World economy collapsed in 1973,
with widespread pessimism as a result. 'No future' was the
motto of the musical punk movement of 1976.
Football had its own punk movement, named after a rather
uncivilized Irish family, called Hooligan. On 24 October, 1976,
as Holland was having to get used to mediocrity in both
football and daily life, De Meer stadium saw the ugly face of
hooliganism for the first time, when a group of FC Utrecht fans
climbed over the stadium fences, crossed the pitch and attacked
their Amsterdam enemies using very Dutch and very nasty
weapons: bicycle-chains.
Supporter's 'sides' began to emerg in larger Dutch cities.
The Amsterdam one named itself after their section at De Meer
stadium. They have determined the atmosphere at all Ajax games
since, sometimes in positive, sometimes in less positive ways.
The debate will never end, but it is fair to say that Dutch
football did not become more peaceful after the birth of the "
F-Side".
The Danish Invasion and the new 1980s breed
There were new heroes at De Meer. Right winger Tscheu-La
Ling, for example, and short left winger Simon Tahamata. There
were national titles to be celebrated sometimes (1977, 1978 and
1979). But Ajax had gotten used to being one of Europe's best.
The reality of the dark years between 1974 and 1986 painfully
proved that the mighty Ajax Amsterdam was no longer an
international superpower. The only time Ajax 'hibernated' in a
European Cup tournament (made it to the quarter finals) was in
1979-1980. Then, Nottingham Forest proved too strong,
eliminating Ajax in the semi-finals.
In the mean time, the development of international football
and the transfer system had caused the death of the traditional
'club man': few players spent their entire career at one club.
Football players had become 'career builders', which forced
Ajax to become less Dutch. The first cheap football country for
the Ajax scouting system to focus on was Denmark. Frank
Arnesen, S¢ren Lerby and Henning Jensen were contracted in
1979. Left winger Jesper Olsen followed two years later.
The time in which Ajax could rely solely on its vaunted
youth system was over. It remained the main source of talent,
however. The early 1980s saw several of debuts that brought
back hope for the future. Defender Sonny Silooy, midfielder
Gerald Vanenburg, right winger John van 't Schip and a strong
kid named Frank Rijkaard were said to be great talents. Striker
Wim Kieft, picked up from the streets of Amsterdam-East, proved
to be a real 'killer', but according to many observers at the
time, a 16 year-old named Marco van Basten was really the one
to watch.
Cruyff returns...
Pessimism slowly turned into optimism, especially when Johan
Cruyff was re-signed in 1981, scoring a brilliant goal against
Haarlem in his return to De Meer. 'Jopie', as Amsterdammers
call him, was back home. More national titles and two KNVB Cups
were won with him as a captain, but the fans were really
longing for was international success.
That seemed farther away than ever: from 1982 to 1986, Ajax
was eliminated in the first round of the European tournaments
five times in a row. Would it ever be possible to be part of
the European elite again? Apparently, even Johan Cruyff
couldn't make it happen.
... and leaves again
A historic disaster. That's the only way to describe the
board's decison to let Cruyff go after the 1982-1983 season.
'J.C. Superstar' was too expensive and too frequently injured.
The crowd reacted furiously. Riot police had to set chairman
Ton Harmsen free from outraged F-Siders during the turbulent
last home game of the season.
Cruyff took his revenge in a way only he could think of. To
the dismay of his home town, he did what nobody had expected:
he signed a contract with Feyenoord. With Cruyff wearing the
Feyenoord shirt in 1983-1984, the Rotterdammers won their first
national title since 1974, and their last one until 1991. 18
September, 1983, was a day of mixed emotions, as Ajax crushed
Feyenoord and their beloved 'Jopie', 8-2.
One more remarkable feat of arms from the 'Dark Years': On 3
October, 1984, Ajax booked its largest European victory ever.
The UEFA Cup first round away game against small-time amateurs
Red Boys Differdange from Luxemburg had ended in a scandalous
0-0 draw. The Ajax fans who had traveled along threw everything
they could find at their heroes. The players promised to make
up for the come-down in the home game - and they kept their
promise: five Marco van Basten and three Ronald Koeman goals
contributed to a 14-0 victory at De Meer.
Next:
1986-1988: 'J.C.' SUPERSTAR
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