Crisis looms at ArenA after home stumble against Heerenveen
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Holland Casino Eredivisie
Amsterdam ArenA, Amsterdam
Saturday, 16 October, 2004
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It's only October, but if Ajax don't return to winning ways
right now the 2004-2005 season may well turn into a
disaster overnight. A crisis is looming at the Amsterdam
ArenA, where Heerenveen were responsible for Ajax's
first defeat of the season and the first home stumble
in the Eredivisie since 15 December 2002. The result (1-3 to
the Frisian visitors) wasn't even the most worrying
thing. That was, once again, Ajax's utter tactical amorphism
and flabbergasting lack of direction, determination and
ideas.
Ajax vs Heerenveen was supposed to mark
Ajax's resurrection after a few rough
weeks. Galásek, Van der Vaart and Rosales were
unavailable due to (reportedly minor) injuries, but the
other signs were good: Ajax's Oranje internationals
played well for Holland on Wednesday (a 3-1 win over
Finland), coach Ronald Koeman had a positive and
clarifying talk with his struggling striker (Wesley Sonck) and
- last but not least - prodigal sons Hatem
Trabelsi and John O'Brien returned to the Ajax-1 squad.
Both players had their last Ajax-1 appearance in
February and were sidelined ever since due
to, respectively, a dragging contract crisis and a
frustrating string of injuries.

Hatem Trabelsi returned to Ajax 1
and was voted Man of the Match. [Photo: Ajax.nl]
Another interesting footnote: thanks to the KNVB's exchange
project with the Belgian football association, Ajax vs
Heerenveen was the first ever Ajax game in the Dutch
league that had a non-Dutch referee. Mr Verbist from Belgium
was slightly erratic to say the least, but could in no way be
blamed for the dramatic result.
Ajax (with Trabelsi and Julien Escudé in the starting
line-up, Maxwell in midfield, Johnny Heitinga as the team
captain and - finally! - Daniël de Ridder on the right
flank) were absolutely dreadful for 90 minutes and had
their by far weakest performance in many, many
months. The only exception was Hatem Trabelsi, who was booed at
by some, but applauded by at least as many others. The Tunisian
played like he's never been away and was eventually
voted 'Man of the Match'.
The announcement of the 'MotM', however, elicited
castigating whistling from the supporters, who felt
that there should be no such thing as a 'Best
Ajacied' in such a stultifying, pathetic parody
of a football game, in which Heerenveen did not even have to
play well to book their first ever win in
Amsterdam. It was inevitable. All they had to do was play
a tiny little tad better than Ajax. It was almost
impossible not to.
The first half was one of the weakest in recent Ajax
history. A tragicomic non-performance in which neither Ajax nor
Heerenveen were able to string more than two proper passes
together. There was no structure, no formation, no direction.
The only noteworthy moment in the first half hour was (perhaps)
a Wesley Sneijder shot that went just wide. And then, much
to the surprise of almost everyone, Ajax scored.
Sneijder's corner was flicked on with the head by Nigel de Jong
and adequately pushed against the netting first-time
by Yannis Anastasiou, the scorer of Ajax's only two goals in
the last four games. A goal out of nowhere, that wasn't
the result of any idea, attack or development
whatsoever.
The visitors were - believe it or not - even
more clueless than Ajax in the first half, but this
changed in the second. After less than two minutes the
Frisians issued their first warning (Bogdan Lobont tipped
Klaas-Jan Hunterlaar's header over the cross-bar). Five minutes
later they took finally advantage of Ajax's hapless
defending: Ugur Yildirim, one of the Eredivisie's revelations
of the season, cut to the middle from the right
flank and nicely curled the ball into the far corner with
his left: 1-1 (52').
Shortly thereafter one of the weakest Ajacieden on the
pitch (Maxwell) had an enormous chance to put his
team in the lead again, as he came face-to-face with
goalkeeper Vandenbussche. He wildly fired wide with his
'bad' right foot. However, Ajax's painful and highly
embarrassing collapse had already begun. The
atmosphere was bleak and ultra-negative by the
time Finnish midfielder
Mika Väyrynen ripped the Ajax
defense to shreds single-handedly - and fired past
Lobont: 1-2 (61').
It was a safe bet that Heerenveen's second goal
was the death-blow for Ajax. Ajax's only physically strong
striker (Anastasiou) was replaced at half-time due to
a minor injury and his replacement (Wesley Sonck) was
unable to change the tide, as usual. Understandably, the same
went for Young Ajax midfielder Stanley Aborah, who made
his official Ajax-1 début as a striker. He could
impossibly be expected to get the drifting ship that was Ajax
under control. It seemed like Ajax's third substitute to be
brought on was going to be John O'Brien. The American
was warming up throughout the second half, but
the unfolding disaster on the pitch made Ronald Koeman
change his plan: he brought Anthony Obodai instead.

Daniel de Ridder made a rare
start for Ajax 1. [Photo: Ajax.nl]
In spite of their total lack of ideas and chances Ajax could
have equalized in the 79th minute, as Daniël de Ridder
(who otherwise failed to convince Ronald Koeman of his
qualities) released a pristine volley from outside of the
penalty box. It slammed against the inside of the far post. It
was the only moment of beauty Ajax had to offer all night. It
would have been another goal 'out of nowhere' and one that
Ajax would not have deserved. The team's final 'offensive'
(?) was so clueless and uninspired that Heerenveen had all the
space in the world to make it 1-3 in the dying minutes: Johnny
Heitinga did not bother to mark Stefan Selakovic, who deftly
nodded home from an 89th minute corner kick. Tens of thousands
of Ajax supporters immediately stood up from their seats,
not interested in the final two or three minutes and sick
of this appalling spectacle, this flabbergasting display of
Ajax impotence.
On 16 October 2004 the frustration and the public anger of
the dramatic 1999-2000 season returned to the Amsterdam ArenA
for the first time during Ronald Koeman's appointment
as Ajax's head-coach. "There hasn't been a moment like this in
the three years I'm working here," Koeman said after the
game. "But we have to stay calm now. There is no point in
reacting to this in any other way, with Tuesday's game
coming up. Who knows it will all work out then."
The pressure is increasing. The upcoming week will be a
'Week of the Truth' for Ajax and Ronald Koeman.
Tuesday's Champions League home fixture against Maccabi
Tel-Aviv must be won if Ajax want to
keep their (tiny) chances of advancing in the
Champions League intact. In fact: a
defeat against the Isreali champions will even bring
the third slot in group C (good for a UEFA Cup slot after the
winter break) in serious peril. After that, on Sunday,
Ajax are due in Eindhoven for the first
confrontation with PSV, another game that must be won
in order to even stay close to the top of the league
table. The current difference is seven points, a defeat would
make it an unlikely ten.
At the start of the 'Week of the Truth' Koeman replied to a
journalist's question about his position that he
"would never throw in the towel right now". The Ajax
board, in its turn, doesn't even want to talk about a Koeman
dismissal. However, if the two upcoming games do not
bring the desired results, the race for silverware will be
effectively over for Ajax and the crisis at the ArenA will no
longer be looming, but violently raging on the
surface - just like in the dark centennial season of
1999-2000. Who could have predicted that two months ago...?
(MP)
GOALS
- 33' 1-0 Yannis Anastasiou
- 53' 1-1 Ugur Yildirim
- 61' 1-2 Mika Väyrynen
- 89' 1-3 Stefan Selakovic
Referee: Verbist (Belgium)
Yellow cards: Boukhari (Ajax),
Huntelaar (SC Heerenveen)
Attendance: 48,549
Ajax line-up: Lobont; Trabelsi (77.
Obodai), Heitinga, Escudé (64. Aborah), De Jong;
Pienaar, Sneijder, Maxwell; De Ridder, Anastasiou (46. Sonck),
Boukhari.
SC Heerenveen line-up: Vandenbussche;
Haarala, Hansson, Seip, Rzasa; Radomski, Bruggink,
Väyrynen (74. Breuer); Yildirim (66.Selakovic), Huntelaar,
Sikora (46. Hersi).
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