Ajax youngsters take Europe by storm

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Ajax youngsters take Europe by storm
Ajax midfielder Donny van de Beek (centre) and teammates celebrate after defeating Juventus. (AFP)

London - The Ajax team is underpinned by experience, but once again on Tuesday it was homegrown youngsters who caught the eye

By AFP

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Published: Wed 17 Apr 2019, 10:11 PM

Last updated: Thu 18 Apr 2019, 12:20 AM

Once every generation, Ajax rediscover the eternal formula of youth and cut a Champions League swathe through expensively assembled teams of mature stars.
On Tuesday in Turin, the Dutch side did not just upset Cristiano Ronaldo's Juventus. By the end they were completely outplaying the perennial Serie A champions, winning the match 2-1 and the tie 3-2 on aggregate.
"I think we should have scored five," said 21-year-old Donny van de Beek. The midfielder turned the tide with a first-half equaliser when Juventus were on top.
Teenage centre-back and the team's captain Matthijs de Ligt, just 19 himself, rose above two Juve defenders to smash in the winning header in the 67th minute.
"The ball was high and I thought, I am going for it. I headed it perfectly in the corner," De Ligt said.
Ajax finished runners-up to PSV Eindhoven in the Dutch league last season and had to fight through three qualifying rounds, starting against Dynamo Kiev on July 29 last year.
Tuesday's victory means they have played 16 games in this season's competition, losing only once, at home to defending champions Real Madrid in the last round. They responded with a memorable 4-1 second-leg victory at the Santiago Bernabeu.
The Ajax team is underpinned by experience, but once again on Tuesday it was homegrown youngsters who caught the eye.
In addition to van de Beek and de Ligt, 21-year-old Frenkie de Jong sparkled in midfield and 22-year-old David Neres, a Brazilian who joined Ajax in 2017, glinted in attack.
"We have so much potential in the team and we're still quite young and you see us grow in every game," De Ligt told the UEFA website. Yet Ajax started the season knowing that even though their team was built round youth, they had to win now.
"In terms of budget, we are at the bottom of the list in this phase of the Champions League," said Edwin van der Sar, the club's chief executive. "But Ajax is a big name in football."
In an interview with AFP in February, van der Sar - a former Ajax youth product who left, initially for Juventus, and has now returned to his first club - said: "You want to build your own team for the highest level and that happens more with teams that stay together."
But this Ajax team is already starting to break up.
De Jong has agreed to join Barcelona next season and the highly-coveted De Ligt is also likely to leave. "We want to keep this team together but we know the market power of the big clubs," said van der Saar. "I was a player as well."
Van der Sar was the goalkeeper in the last Ajax team to win the Champions League in 1995 with another largely homegrown team that mixed experience with the precocious talents of Edgar Davids, Clarence Seedorf and Patrick Kluivert.
Ajax reached the final in 1996 and the semifinals in 1997, losing both to Tuesday's conquerors Juventus.
"Weird, this is weird. I wasn't even born then," said de Ligt of the club's first semifinal appearance in 21 years.
Reaching the last four should be worth at least 12 million euros ($13.5 million) to Ajax.
"I don't care about that money," said Van der Sar. "Of course we have to pay players. But this is football, that's what it's all about. We play the way Ajax wants and has to play, the way people know us."
 
 


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