1966 - 1970: The Road to Glory
The 'Fog Game'
The 'fog game.' Mention those words to older Ajax fans and
you'll be on speaking terms. The 'fog game' is the first time
Ajax knew what it felt like to be better than Europe's best.
For the first time it actually seemed possible for this young,
self built Ajax team to become one of the best in the world.
The 'fog game' is legendary.
7 December, 1966... Ajax was playing Liverpool in the second
round of the European Champions Cup and 55,722 people in the
Amsterdam Olympic Stadium could not see a thing. A thick fog
was hanging over the Dutch capital. Italian referee Sbardella
claimed he could see both goals. None of the players could, but
the Italian wanted the game to be played.
A young Ajax team, almost relegated the year before,
disappeared into the fog. The team that emerged after 90
minutes was different. And only the people standing right
behind the Liverpool goal in the first half had been able to
witness the transformation.
Ajax had been brilliant. After having scored four in the
first half, the final result was 5-1. Amsterdam knew their team
was ready for the big time.
At least, that's what the legend says. The facts? Well okay,
Dukla Prague eliminated Ajax in the next round. But forget
about that. Just remember the 'fog game of 1966' as an early
prelude of the Golden Ajax. Everybody does.
Not quite ready yet
Johan Cruijff, left winger Piet Keizer, defenders Barry
Hulshoff, Ruud Krol and Wim Suurbier, midfielder Gerrie
Mühren - they all made their debut in the latter half of
the 1960s. Rinus Michels' first whole season as a coach ended
at the top of the table, the first of three consecutive
championships. The next step had to be the winning of a
European Cup, the first time for a Dutch club to achieve such a
feat.
May of 1969 saw Ajax reach its first European Champions Cup
final. FC Nürnberg, Fenerbahce, 1960s big timers Benfica
and Spartak Trnava had been swept aside. AC Milan, however,
proved to be of a different caliber. Thousands of Amsterdammers
travelled to Madrid's Bernabeu Stadium. They saw Ajax naively
walk straight into the Italian trap called catenaccio. Piereno
Prati scored three. Ajax was a piece of cake for the Italians -
and lost 4-1.
The European campaign, especially the heroic three game
battle against Benfica, cost Ajax the league title of that
season. Feyenoord grabbed it, qualified for the European
Champions Cup and won Europe's most prestigious trophy a year
later, in 1970, beating Celtic Glasgow in the final. But the
bitter taste of having lost the running-match would be
gloriously washed away soon enough.
Next:
1971-1973: THE GOLDEN AJAX
© Ajax USA and Menno Pot; all rights reserved.
Reproduction, redistribution or re-use of any kind prohibited
without written permission by the author.