Ajax USA  

Merciless Bayern hammering kills Ajax hopes: 4-0

   

 4 (2) - 0 (0)
UEFA Champions League
Olympiastadion, Munich, Germany
Tuesday, 28 September, 2004

The conclusion that had to be drawn after six fixtures last season must now be drawn after only two: Ajax are not good enough to make any kind of impact whatsoever in the Champions League. German powerhouse Bayern München made this crystal clear at the Olympiastadion in the Bavarian capital, where Ajax received its most painful spanking in European competition since 1980-1981 (at the time it was a 5-1 pasting by... Bayern München). The Amsterdammers were clueless upfront, powerless in midfield and leaky in defense - and outclassed by the Germans on every aspect of the game. The man to translate these painful facts to the scoreboard was the only Dutchmen on the pitch who performed on an international top level: Roy Makaay. He netted three times, knocking Ajax out almost single-handedly: 4-0.

Let's get Ajax's good moments out of the way first. They had two. After 14 minutes one of Ajax's rare good attacks culminated in a sharp, low Wesley Sonck cross, which was only just missed by Rafaël van der Vaart. The red and white could have taken the lead there - and it would not even have been undeserved at that point: Ajax played well in the first twenty-odd minutes. The second (and last) good moment followed in the 67th minute, as Van der Vaart cut into the penalty box from the right (launched by Mauro Rosales) and released a low shot, which was saved at the near post by Oliver Kahn. The only other noteworthy moment from an Ajax point of view was a fine run across midfield by by Mauro Rosales, who was brutally mowed down by Salihamidzic. The defender was lucky to see 'only' a yellow card for the foul.


Mauro Rosales. [Photo: Ajax.nl]

And that was it, from an Ajax perspective. Otherwise it was a historically disastrous evening for Ajax.

The Amsterdammers looked okay in the first twenty minutes of the game, but even in that phase the hosts could have scored twice to decide the game even earlier than they did: after an erratic Grygera backheader to Bogdan Lobont, Pizarro managed to tap the ball past Lobont, but inches wide of the Ajax netting. Zé Roberto and Michael Ballack got open shooting opportunities from dangerous positions (also after poor Ajax defending), but saw their attempts go inches wide and get punched out of the goalmouth, respectively.

Ajax remained upright in the first twenty minutes, but nevertheless: the above moments of defensive negligence already heralded a disaster. The tragedy really started in the 28th minute, as Owen Hargreaves' long kick forward ripped the entire Ajax defense to shreds (where was 'last man' Johnny Heitinga?) and Roy Makaay's magnificent first-time volley from outside the penalty area slammed into the upper ninety behind Bogdan Lobont: 1-0.

The goal hit Ajax like a hammer. The Amsterdammers were painfully outplayed during the remainder of the first half. Nevertheless, they seemed to make it to the half-time break with 'only' a 1-0 deficit. The amateurishness of the Amsterdam outfit was best underscored by the fact that they eventually didn't: Roy Makaay's lethal backward header on a free kick from the right, mere seconds before the half-time whistle, made it 2-0 and effectively knocked Ajax out. "It was over after that second goal," coach Ronald Koeman said after the game.

No-one knows exactly what the Ajax boss told his men in the dressing room, but one thing's for sure: it did not help. The first fifteen minutes of the second half were even more devastating than the latter fifteen minutes of the first. Ajax's hopes to pull a goal back and - perhaps - get back into the game were blown to pieces in no-time. It must have been extremely frustrating for the Ajax coach to see how his defenders (with the exception of Nigel de Jong) continued their slapstick act. After only seven minutes Pizarro was allowed a free passage to the Ajax goal. The striker slipped past Lobont, who then decided to shamelessly push Pizarro over. Who else than Roy Makaay did the job from the penalty spot, for his hattrick against his countrymen: 3-0.

It all went lightning-fast in this phase. Ajax had hardly kicked off when Bayern's fourth was calmly tapped against the netting by Zé Roberto, after a truly wonderful attack using the full width of the pitch, via Pizarro, Kuffour and Makaay. The Ajax defense? Heaven knows what they were doing. A stuffing of historic proportions seemed ahead now. 6-0? 7-0? Bayern freewheeled, while Ajax staggered around the arena like living dead. A part of the 3,000 travelling Ajax supporters, meanwhile, got rid of their frustrations by starting a fight with German police.


Tomas Galasek eludes Owen Hargreaves. [Photo: Ajax.nl]

Ajax did not get hammered by 6-0 or 7-0 in the end, but for no other reason than the fact that Bayern took it easy in the latter twenty minutes. Koeman brought Nicolae Mitea for Tomás Galásek, who had a poor return to first team action after a month of injury trouble, and Daniël de Ridder for Mauro Rosales. With them in the team Ajax were actually allowed to knock the ball around during considerable stretches, and even look good every now and then. It was irrelevant. What mattered was the simple fact that Ajax were (once again) utterly incapable of even threatening the defense of an esteemed European opponent. It felt like Ajax were never going to score a goal against Bayern, a feeling Ajax supporters also had during the game against Juventus, two weeks ago.

"The first goal was particularly painful," said Ronald Koeman after the game, referring to Makaay's first. "Grygera was supposed to mark Makaay and Heitinga was supposed to cover him in his back. I did not say this once, but at least eight times or so. (...) Nigel de Jong and Maxwell were our only players able to keep up at this level. Which means we are not good enough to perform at this level. That's a harsh, but inevitable conclusion."

In theory, Ajax can still qualify for the second round of the Champions League. But that's in theory. In practice Ajax played 180 minutes of Champions League football against Juventus and Bayern München, in which the team never looked like they were going to score. Not the fact that Ajax lost the first two games has killed the Amsterdammers' hopes, but the way in which it happened. It explains the travelling fans' painful chants towards the end of the game: "Why don't you sell the whole lot?", "Everyone's got a striker except us" and "Zlaaaatan! Zlaaaaatan!" It marked the cynical end of a black, black night in Ajax's European history. Ronald Koeman: "We will now have to focus on making it to the UEFA Cup." (MP)

GOALS

  • 28'  1-0  Roy Makaay
  • 45'  2-0  Roy Makaay
  • 52'  3-0  Roy Makaay (penalty)
  • 55'  4-0  Zé Roberto

Referee: Sars (France)
Yellow cards: Obodai, Sneijder (Ajax), Salihamidzic, Ballack (FC Bayern München)
Attendance: 50,000

Ajax line-up: Lobont; Grygera, Heitinga (64. Escudé), De Jong, Maxwell; Obodai, Galásek (52. Mitea), Sneijder, Van der Vaart; Rosales (70. De Ridder), Sonck.

FC Bayern München line-up: Kahn; Kuffour, Linke, Lucio, Salihamidzic; Ballack, Frings (81. Hashemian), Hargreaves (81. Jeremies), Pizarro (58. Deisler); Zé Roberto, Makaay.

Other Group C result:

Juventus vs Maccabi Tel-Aviv  1-0 ( UEFA.com match report)

Group C standings:

  • FC Bayern München: 2-6 (5-0)
  • Juventus: 2-6 (2-0)
  • Maccabi Tel-Aviv: 2-0 (0-2)
  • Ajax: 2-0 (0-5)

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