Summing Up the Season
In 2002 Ajax finished with 73 points, in 2003 with 83 points
and this year with 80. Strangely enough the 83 point peak
of 2003 did not bring the Amsterdammers a Dutch
title, whereas 2002 and 2004 did. It's the same story
if we look at the number of goals the team scored: 96 goals in
2002-2003 was not enough for a Dutch
championship. Respective totals of 73 and 79 goals
were in 2001-2002 and this season.
More football logic: the departure of Cristian Chivu at
season's start was generally regarded as a major loss for Ajax.
His replacements in the Ajax defence, Julien Escudé and
Zdenek Grygera, were oft criticized. Remarkably, the
new, 'shaky' Ajax defence was Ajax's most
solid in the Eredivisie since 1997-1998. Only
31 goals were conceded, an average of 0.91 per game (last
year the opposition scored 0.94 goal per Eredivisie
game).
| |
PLAYED |
WON |
DRAWS |
DEFEATS |
POINTS |
GOAL DIFF. |
| 2000-2001: |
34 |
18 |
7 |
9 |
61 |
85-43 |
| 2001-2002: |
34 |
22 |
7 |
5 |
73 |
73-34 |
| 2002-2003: |
34
|
26
|
5
|
3
|
83
|
96-32
|
| 2003-2004: |
34
|
25
|
5
|
4
|
80
|
79-31
|
As for Ajax's own production: the team scored 2.32
goals per game on average (2.82 last season and 2.15 the
season before). Interestingly, no less than four non-Ajax
players contributed to Ajax's production, a remarkably
high number of own goals in one season. Zlatan Ibrahimovic was
Ajax's most productive man in the league with 13
goals, the same number as last season. Last year this was not
enough to beat Rafaël van der Vaart's 18 goals. This
season it was enough to become Ajax's Eredivisie
topscorer. The fact that Ibrahimovic became a more effective
player is underscored by the fact that he required 25 games for
his 13 goals last season (of which 13 full games). This season
he struggled with injuries, had 23 appearances but played the
'full 90' only five times. The runners-up on Ajax's list of
Eredivisie topscorers are 'the Wesleys' (Sneijder and
Sonck), who both netted 9 times.
Once again Ajax was a team without a true 'killer',
but more of a team in which almost everyone can
score a goal every once in a while. Just like last season
17 different Ajacieden found the net, not counting the
four unlucky gents of other teams who scored for Ajax
against their will. The fact that Ajax's squad had depth is
underscored by the fact the coach Ronald Koeman used no less
than 28 players in total, including six youth players who made
their Eredivisie débuts. Last season even more players
saw Eredivisie action (29).
The man regarded as Chivu's direct successor, Julien
Escudé, would have finished as the man who
played the most games for Ajax this season, if he
hadn't sustained an ankle injury in the final weeks of the
season. Due to that injury Maxwell leapfrogged him just before
the finish line. No other Ajacied saw more minutes of action
than the Brazilian, who was also voted 'Player of the Season'.
Both Escudé and Maxwell had 31 Eredivisie
appearances. Both played the full game 29 times and were
replaced twice. Those substitutions, however, cost Maxwell
54 minutes of Eredivisie action and Escudé 66
minutes. Moreover, Maxwell played the full 90 minutes in all of
Ajax's eight European fixtures, whereas Escudé missed
one.
Ajax's 'behaviour on the pitch' continued to improve: after
having picked up 45 yellow cards in the Eredivisie in 2001-2002
and 33 last season, 27 players were booked in the Dutch
league this year. Tomás Galásek received
most official warnings (5). The number of 27 includes
the two yellow cards John Heitinga picked up in The
Hague. Only one Ajacied was sent off directly: Rafaël
van der Vaart, for kicking Mark van Bommel in
the away game at PSV. Last season four Ajacieden were sent
off in the Eredivisie. Another two were handed suspensions
based on TV footage, which did not happen this season.

Final standings Eredivisie 2003-2004. [Image: NOS
Teletekst]
The domestic league was succesful for the Amsterdammers; the
team dropped out of both other competitions in the
earliest possible stage. The Champions League campaign will be
remembered as a painful disappointment. After having won
the first two home games the injury-battered team lost
three times straight and finished bottom. Remarkably,
Wesley Sonck, who had such a hard first season in
Amsterdam, was the scorer of four out of Ajax's six
Champions League goals. If we include the two Champions League
qualifiers against Grazer AK, Ajax scored nine goals in eight
European games. The Amsterdammers picked up 18 yellow cards in
those matches, including three for Rafaël van der Vaart
and two in one game (at Celta de Vigo) for Zdenek
Grygera.
The Amstel Cup campaign was not even a 'campaign' this year,
but a one game affair. Ajax suffered a 0-1 home defeat to NAC
Breda. One player was booked (Abubakari Yakubu)
and a meagre 19,910 saw Ajax in 'cup action' this
season (last season's attendances in Amstel Cup home
games were even some 25% lower).
AC Milan (Champions League) and NAC Breda (Amstel Cup) were
the only two teams to notch a win in the Amsterdam ArenA this
season. In the Eredivisie not a single opponent left Amsterdam
with three points. RBC Roosendaal, in fact, was the only team
to notch a draw at the ArenA (1-1). It is a fair conclusion
that the 2004 league title was mainly grabbed in home games.
Ajax was remarkably inconsistent 'on the road': nine
wins, four draws and four defeats. In the Champions League
all three away games were lost.
The largest victory of the season was the 28 September
demolishing of
Willem II (6-0). Ajax traditionally scores easily
against the Tilburgers, who conceded another five goals in
their home game against Ajax (2-5). The
largest victory in an away game was booked with the finish
line in sight:
0-5 at FC Zwolle. Some trivia: the last time two Eredivisie
opponents managed four goals against Ajax in one season, like
NAC Breda (4-2) and SC Heerenveen (4-1) did this
year, was in 1987-1988, and back then one of those
two times was actually a 6-4 win to Ajax...
On a more positive note: it's been a while since Ajax's
results in the traditional top fixtures were as good as
they were this season: both PSV and Feyenoord grabbed only
point against the Amsterdammers. Both teams stumbled in the
ArenA. Ajax was not only the champion this season, but also the
undisputed winner of the 'battle of the Big Three'. The last
time both PSV and Feyenoord lost in Amsterdam was in 1994-1995.
The last time Ajax did not lose a game against either of its
rivals was in 1995-1996.
One more positive statistic: attendance in the ArenA was
close to the maximum. Last season's impressive figures
were slightly surpassed. Ajax's 17 home games in the
Eredivisie attracted a crowd of 48,344 on average (last season:
47,571), whereas the European fixtures had an average
attendance of 48,991 people (last season: 47,218). (MP)