AFC Ajax - The Youth System Everyone Aspires To Have 14 Feb 2013 By Tim Simon Currently 8.0/10 Stars.12345678910 Login to Rate this Article âYou need both quality and results. Results without quality is boring; quality without results is meaningless.â â Johan Cruyff Everyone involved in football has heard of the fine youth academy that AFC Ajax possesses called âDie Toekomstâ or âThe Futureâ. Founded on 18th March 1900, the club plays the so-called âTotal Footballâ approach in a 4-3-3 system invented by the great Dutch manager Rinus Michels. It is this ideology that makes Ajax stand out across Europe; the adoption of a single philosophy which everyone working at the club gets taught at an early age is admirable. They let their footballers express themselves freely on the pitch without any restrictions. The basic goal of the club is that they bring through at least three players into the first team every two years, anything less than this is seen as a massive failure. This process begins right at the bottom of the pyramid with player recruitment. Their preferred zone of recruitment is in the 50km area surrounding Amsterdam but they do stretch further if the right player with the correct style of play comes along. For instance, if a player such as Christian Eriksen comes along they would not hesitate to sign him. They have 50 scouts patrolling the Netherlands, looking for the latest talents and 5 more scouts across Europe. The youngsters they find have to go through a test stage called the âtalentdagenâ where the coaches find out if they are good enough to be signed to a youth contract. Playersâ desired skills would be ball control, positioning, technique and intelligence; there is an emphasis at Ajax on technical ability over pure power. The youth team is trained in the same way as the first team, so players who make it are already accustomed to Ajaxâs style of play, training, behaviour and house rules. They strive to play the attractive, offensive-minded, creative, fast and fair football that Ajax are recognised for. There are around 220 youth players at the club at all times and in the Eredivisie at least 30% of the players have been trained at Ajax at some point in their careers, a remarkable statistic. The club has all age groups at the club with 5-year-old children up to Under 19s and reserve teams. The ideal coach at the club would be an ex-player who has had experience at the highest level of the game. These coaches have substantial influence on talent development and are trusted with keeping with the Ajax philosophy at all times, the only formation the players are allowed to be taught is 4-3-3 as it is in the clubs tradition. The most talented players are all but guaranteed a first team place by the age of 16 or 17 which is extremely rare in the modern game and should be admired. It is also immediately noticeable that everyone at the club refers to Ajax as âweâ, a sign that the club is a family focussed on developing youth at all times. It is extremely rare that any player will spend his whole career at the club, all the transfer fees that they receive for the players they sell go towards improving their youth facilities and training. One of the most prestigious names in UEFA competition, Ajax lifted the European Cup three times on the bounce during the Dutch-defining Total Football era of the early 1970s. And they know a restoration is possible, having reached similar heights under Louis van Gaal in the mid-1990s when they won the Champions League again in 1995. There arenât many clubs in the world who have any sort of comparison in terms of history and they are extremely proud of the fine history they have. However, in the last few years they have become a âtalent factoryâ which produces great young talent but is forced to sell to top clubs once the player reaches their potential due to economic pressures of the modern game. Thereâs no doubt Ajax have suffered from the trend of domestic leagues going global. The modest television revenues drew in by the Eredivisie in recent years leaves them at a disadvantage on the European stage, forcing them to sell most of their rising stars as soon as they reach a particular market value. The most recent examples include Gregory van der Weil and Jan Vertonghen who were sold to PSG and Tottenham Hotspur respectively in the summer of 2012. They are constantly bringing new youth players into the side which allows them to utilise their talents for longer and also get them more exposure to secure larger fees for them when they do go. Ajax stated themselves in a recent match day programme that the modern game hasnât been kind to the club but the Amsterdammers are making a comeback, as Manchester City found out to their cost in Holland earlier in the 2012-13 season. Now letâs take a closer look at some of the great players they have brought through their famous system: Johan Cruyff Probably the most famous player to come through the ranks of Ajax, Cruyff was a true master of âTotal Footballâ and is recognised as one of the greatest players to ever play football. He won the Ballon dâOr three times and was named European Player of the Century in 1999. He also won 9 Eredivisie titles with Ajax and Feyenoord, 3 European Cups with Ajax and a La Liga title with FC Barcelona. He is famous for his âCruyff turnâ, which is copied and mastered by many footballers across the world. After a fine playing career he went on to manage two of his former clubs Ajax and FC Barcelona, where he instilled a similar philosophy to his hometown club. He remains and influential advisor to both clubs and a fine ambassador to football. Marco van Basten If van Bastenâs career hadnât have been cut short in 1995 due to a horrific injury he picked up two years earlier, who knows what he couldâve gone onto achieve. He is recognised as one of the finest strikers of all time, scoring a mighty 277 goals in the 1980s and early 1990s for Ajax and AC Milan. He went on to win World Player of the Year in 1992 after an amazing year. He was a scorer of two of the most memorable goals in football history too, his spectacular volley in the Euro 88 final against the Soviet Union and an unbelievable bicycle kick in 1992 against IFK Goteborg. Dennis Bergkamp What can you say about this man? An amazingly gifted striker who has been described as having âthe best techniqueâ of any Dutch international footballer. Signed by Ajax as an 11 year old, he made his debut in 1986. He signed for Inter in 1993 before joining Arsenal in 1995 where he really made his name. He won three Premier League titles, four FA Cups and reached a Champions League final with the Gunners. Bergkamp scored 37 goals for Holland during a ten year international career. His style of play sums up Ajaxâs academy perfectly, great touch, intelligent and the finest technique you can ask for as a footballer. Patrick Kluivert Kluivert was once one of the most feared strikers in Europe, with remarkably impressive quick feet and first touch for such a tall player. He utilised his height and physical presence to dominate in the air. He is Hollandâs all time record goal scorer and yet another fine player to come out of this great academy. Kluivert was part of Ajaxâs golden generation of the early 1990s and he scored the winner in the 1995 Champions League final after coming off the bench. He also went on to play for A.C. Milan, FC Barcelona, Newcastle United, Valencia CF, PSV Eindhoven, and Lille OSC. Wesley Sneijder One of the more recent Ajax graduates; he deserves his place on this list. He is the current Dutch national team captain and has been an international since 2003. His most recognisable season was in 2009-10 when he guided Inter Milan to Champions League glory and Holland to a World Cup Final where he was voted one of the three best midfielders in the world. After leaving Ajax for $27million to join Real Madrid in 2007 he won a La Liga title in his first season but was eventually sold to Inter. He left Inter in January 2013 and joined Galatasaray where he hopes to resurrect his career. These are all world class players but that is not all the talent that has come through their ranks, Ajax have been producing fine talent for years and there are several more players who deserve a mention. The fact fine players such as Johan Neeskens, Michael Reiziger, Edwin van der Sar, Edgar Davids, Ruud Gullit, Danny Blind, Marc Overmars, Frank de Boer, Ronald de Boer, Nigel de Jong, Rafael van der Vaart and Thomas Vermaelen didnât make the list is testimony to just how great âDie Toekomstâ really is. They have also developed players in their early careers such as Ronald Koeman, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Christian Chivu, Jesper Gronkjaar, Klaas-Jan Huntelaar, Kanu who had their careers resurrected after leaving the club. They donât only produce young talent; they bring players to the club whose careers are faltering and give them a new belief in their abilities and allow them to express themselves. Letâs hope the new generation can live up to what their predecessors did. They always produce top class talent and that has no sign of stopping. Look out for players such as Christian Eriksen, Siem de Jong, Tony Alderweireld, Daley Blind, Ricardo van Rhijn, Davy Klaassen and Viktor Fischer in the future as they are more than likely to be in and around some top European clubs if they continue to develop at the rate they are. No doubt in generations to come there will be more talent surfacing from Ajaxâs fine academy. The philosophy will always stay the same and the way the players are trained will to, the production process shows no sign of stopping working. Without Ajaxâs youth system we would have been starved of some of the greatest players football has ever seen, letâs just hope this great club can one day challenge for Europeâs top honours again.
Nice article and it even missed Clarence Seedorf. A club to aspire too and one which I hope saints take elements from.
Good article. It obvious that homegrown talent is the way to go, not just buying players from abroad which seems to be the preffered method in this country. There is nothing better than seeing a player from your academy make there debut. Even better when they are a die hard fan of the club. Harris and Wevbster were STH at Pompey before they came up the ranks. Both of them combined to score the opener at Crawley and you could see what it meant to them. Your academy is excellent and one of the best in England, right up their with the likes of West Ham, Man U and Arsenal. A special mention to Crewe Alexandra as well. It's well documented that ours isn't the greatest although hats off to Andy Awford and co. they have done a fantastic job with the zero resources they've had. Aside from stabalising the club, the academy will be well up the priority list when the PST take over. It is not just at club level where the benefits stop though. You only have to look at Holland, Germany and Spain to see that nurturing young talent reaps rewards on the international stage. Spain being the most obvious case, but Germany are well on the rise to. I can't think of one English player that could match Marko Reus or Toni Kroos of Germany, let alone Xavi or Iniesta. I look forward to the day when the English football team starts to pick up again, but it's only gonna happen when the focus switches from pinching foreign players to bringing your own through.