AZ
HOLLAND'S NEW FOOTBALL POWERHOUSE?
Has AZ really become a new powerhouse in
Dutch football? It's starting to look like it: since 2003,
under head-coaches Co Adriaanse and then Louis van Gaal,
AZ have consistently been one of The Netherlands' best
football sides and by all accounts
the most entertaining team in the country. AZ
play the football that Ajax want to play, according to
some. They finished 5th in 2004, 3rd in 2005, 2nd in 2006
and 3rd in 2007. They lost the cup final of 2007 to Ajax
after an endless series of penalties, were literally 10
seconds away from the 2005 UEFA Cup final (against
Sporting Lisbon) and tragically dropped the 2007
championship shield at Excelsior, on the very last day
of the season. Yes, AZ have been top drawer in recent
years, just like in their golden years around 1980. The only
difference: they somehow failed to clinch an actual trophy
since 2003.
And so, the year 1981 - for now - remains the highlight
in the history of the modest local pride of Alkmaar, a
town of some 90,000 inhabitants. The date was 03 May 1981
and AZ required a win over Feyenoord, in Rotterdam,
in the last league game of the season. They did the
job in spectacular style (1-5) and the championship shield
was theirs. It was a historic moment: since the
start of the professional Eredivisie in 1956, the hegemony of
Holland's traditional 'Big Three' (Ajax, PSV and Feyenoord) was
only interrupted by DOS (1958), Sparta (1959) and DWS
(1964). After AZ's unlikely 1981 triumph it never happened
again.

The great Hugo Hovenkamp (31 caps
for Holland and
an AZ' 67 player throughout the era of glory), proudly
showing
one of the three KNVB Cups he won with the Alkmaar
club.
The title of '81 was the climax of a brief period
of amazing glory for AZ '67, as the club was still named
at the time. In 1972 the small club was adopted by the
Molenaar brothers, Klaas and Cees. They were
AZ supporters, self-made millionaires and owners of
Wastora, a major company in household equipment. Their
financial injections turned the modest club from Alkmaar
into a Dutch football giant for a while: AZ '67 won the
Dutch KNVB Cup in 1978, the Dutch 'double' in 1981 and another
KNVB Cup in 1982. They even came close to lifting a
European trophy, but Ipswich Town were 'a bridge too
far' in the UEFA Cup final of 1981.
The AZ Class of '81 is still renowned in
Holland. It included Oranje stars such as Ronald
Spelbos, Hugo Hovenkamp, John Metgod, Willem van Hanegem and
Kees Kist. They were coached by a living legend from the Dutch
coaching guild: 'Sir' Georg Kessler. The town of Alkmaar saw
heroic European battles against Barcelona (1977), Liverpool
(1981) and Inter Milan (1982). AZ got eliminated by each of
those opponents, but lost only two out of the six games
and never at home. In fact: AZ never lost a European
home game at their tiny but atmospheric Alkmaarderhout stadium
until they moved to brand-new DSB Stadium in 2006. AZ
fans who were there from 1978 to 1982 still think it was a
dream.

Official match programme of the
return leg of the 1981 UEFA Cup
final: AZ '67 vs Ipswich Town, played at Amsterdam's
Olympic
Stadium as AZ's ground was deemed to small for a European
final.
When the 'Super Molenaar Bros' knocked on the door in
1972, AZ '67 were a rather insignificant provincial
club. A merger of Alkmaar '54 and FC Zaanstreek, the newly
founded Alkmaar Zaanstreek (AZ) '67 had a rough start. The
club bought on tick during their first five years of
existence and the Molenaars arrived just in time to save
their pet from bankruptcy. Klaas was the only brother
to witness the glory of 1981: his brother Cees died in
1979. When Klaas retired in 1985 it became clear
how heavily the club depended on the money of the Molenaar
brothers: only three years later AZ (the affix '67 was dropped
in 1986) were broke and got relegated to the First Division.
Was professional football in Alkmaar doomed without the
Molenaars...? It seemed so.

One of the greats from the golden
era: AZ '67 and Oranje
striker Kees Kist, in action at the good old
Alkmaarderhout.
AZ played a minor part in Dutch football before as well
as after the 'Molenaar era', until another rich
business man showed up in the 1990s: Dirk Scheringa, a
maecenas, museum director and owner of Frisia, a large
insurance company. His money brought AZ back to the Eredivisie.
The 1996 promotion was immediately followed by relegation, but
AZ returned again in 1998 - and slowly worked towards the
second 'golden era' in the club's history. We're right in the
middle of it, actually, although AZ would really,
really like to actually win something. Will they keep
it up? Time will tell. With Dirk Scheringa as a chairman and
Louis van Gaal at the helm we surely haven't seen the last of
them. (MP)
AZ FACTS
Founded: 10 May 1967 as AZ '67 (merger of
Alkmaar '54 and FC Zaanstreek). Name changed into AZ in July
1986.
City: Alkmaar
Stadium: DSB Stadium
Capacity: 17,000
Official website: www.az-alkmaar.nl
Honors:
- Dutch champions: 1981.
- Dutch Cup winners: 1978, 1981, 1982.
- Runners-up UEFA Cup: 1981.
Recent History: Ajax vs AZ
- 2006-2007
- 2005-2006
- 2004-2005
- 2003-2004
- 2002-2003
- 2001-2002
- 2000-2001: