Name : Johannes Hendrikus Cruyff
Date of Birth: 25 April
1947
Birthplace: Amsterdam, Netherlands
 [AFP] |
The greatest Dutch master
Very few players have earned the right to be mentioned in the same breath as
Pele, Beckenbauer and Diego Maradona. Although he never won an international
title at country level and played in only one FIFA World Cup, Johan Cruyff is
one of them. Such was his natural talent, the Dutch Master enjoys an undisputed
reputation as one of the game's all-time greats.
An Ajax legend
Cruyff was brought up in the shadow of Ajax
Amsterdam's stadium and training ground, where his mother worked. His father
died from a heart attack when Johan was 12. From a very early age, the young
Cruyff set his sights on one thing alone: becoming a professional footballer. He
began formal training when he was seven years old, and to his mother's horror,
left school at 13 to concentrate exclusively on sport.
Coaching legend Rinus Michels spotted the slightly-built youth's talent, and
designed an exercise programme aimed at developing his frail physique to
withstand the rigours of a professional career. Cruyff quickly won a place in
Ajax's first team, and in 1966, at the age of 19, picked up the first of nine
Dutch league titles destined to come his way.
He soon rose to international prominence as a fleet-footed, elegant and
technically gifted footballer, who never bottled a tackle. Cruyff was a
playmaker, ammunitions provider and marksman rolled into one, with an ability to
time a pass that has hardly been equalled before or since.
A celebrated figure
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He was a
leading figure off the field as well, confident and opinionated, and never one
to mince his words in order to avoid making enemies. This has not always worked
in his favour, as when he was removed from the captaincy at Ajax by a 13-3 vote
of his team mates in 1972. Accusations of arrogance have also been fanned by
interview quotes such as ¡°I don't think there will come a day when you can say
Cruyff and people won¡¯t know what you're talking about¡±, or ¡°Before I make a
mistake, I don't make that mistake¡±.
As well as skirting the boundary between honesty and arrogance, Cruyff's
quotes are also widely known for walking the fine line linguistically. In
addition to his inimitably mangled grammar, which has been the subject of
articles in language journals, he is also famous for the meandering logic of his
longer monologues, which invariably lead him to the conclusion that he was right
about something, while leaving his adversary baffled. ¡°Essays in their purest
form¡±, a noted literary critic called them. In the Netherlands his quotes have
been published in book form, and are used in management seminars.
For one of the greatest players of all time, Cruyff's international career
was relatively short. He made his debut for the Dutch national side against
Hungary in September 1966, and would go on to make 48 appearances for the
¡°Oranjes¡± before calling time in October 1977. His last feat as an international
was to help Holland qualify for the 1978 World Cup in Argentina, though even
then he was only called up for the important games.
The peak of Cruyff and Clockwork Oranie
His greatest achievement as an international came in the 1974 FIFA World
Cup finals in Germany. Holland went into the tournament with few expectations,
having only barely qualified and with the team giving little indication that
they were comfortable with coach Rinus Michels¡¯ tactics. The pieces of the
puzzle fell into place just in time however, and, after the first round, Holland
were unanimously appointed the leading favourites for the title by the world
press.
It was the unveiling of total football, a style of play epitomised by Cruyff
himself. Although he was fielded as centre forward he wandered all over the
pitch, popping up wherever he could do most damage to the opponent. The other
players adapted themselves flexibly around his movements regularly switching
positions, so that the tactical roles in the team were always filled but not
always by the same person. This was a revolutionary concept, and it took the
world by storm.
So did Oranje and Cruyff. In the second round the Master himself got involved
in the scoring, and netted his first two goals in Holland's 4-0 thrashing of
Argentina, arguably their best game in the tournament. The match against East
Germany was a more subdued affair, won 2-0, and in the last of the second round
group games Holland met Brazil in what was for all practical purposes a
semi-final. After a rough-and-tumble contest Holland walked off 2-0 winners.
Cruyff scored Oranje's second goal, and it is remembered as one of his best ever
in international play. It came in the 65th minute, when he met a centre from
Krol with a flying volley which wrongfooted Leao and crashed into the left side
of the goal.
Cruyff's brilliance was again on display in the final, which started
spectacularly. Cruyff kicked off, and Holland passed the ball around. After
having gone through 14 players, all of them Oranje, it came back to Cruyff who
started a rush, slipped past Vogts, and was mowed down by Hoeness inside the
box. Neeskens scored from the resulting penalty kick before a single German
player had had occasion to touch the ball. The Dutch failed to press their
advantage however, and allowed the Germans back into the game. The home team
equalised through a penalty kick, and were ahead two minutes before half-time
through Gerd Mueller. In the second half the Dutch failed to overcome the
barrier that was Josef ¡°Sepp¡± Maier, and so they lost the title. Cruyff's player
of the tournament award was scant consolation.
During the World Cup in Germany, Cruyff had already announced that he would
not play in the next World Cup in Argentina, mainly because he didn't want to be
away from his family for so long. That and a series of disagreements with the
national federation brought a premature end to his international career.
A natural success
 [Popperfoto] |
However, at club level Cruyff excelled. Between 1971 and 1973, he won the
European Cup three times in a row with Ajax Amsterdam. In 1973 he moved to Spain
with Barcelona, collecting the league title in his first season. He announced
his retirement in 1978, only to resurface in May 1979 in the US Professional
League. He played for two seasons in the US and then less than a dozen matches
for Spanish second division side Levante before returning to Ajax Amsterdam in
the summer of 1981. In 1983 he moved to arch-rivals Feyenoord Rotterdam,
enjoying one final taste of glory as a player as his new team did the domestic
double. In his mid-30s, Cruyff was amazingly playing some of the best football
of his life and was voted Dutch Footballer of the Year in 1983 and 1984. The
best Dutch player of all time hung up his boots once and for all in 1984.
Although Cruyff had no formal coaching qualifications, he took over as
technical director at Ajax Amsterdam at the beginning of the 1985-86 season.
Indeed he had given an indication of his aptitude in 1980 when, in Holland
training with Ajax during the US off-season, he came down from the stands during
a Dutch league game and started handing out unsolicited advice to Ajax coach Leo
Beenhakker. Ajax were down 3-1 to FC Twente at that moment, but ended up winning
the game 5-3. Although he left after three years because of opposition within
the club, he helped Ajax win the 1987 European Cup Winners¡¯ Cup and developed
talented youngsters such as Dennis Bergkamp, Aaron Winter, Brian Roy and the
Witschge brothers Rob and Richard, all of whom went on to become accomplished
performers themselves.
Returning to Barcelona
In a repeat of the journey he had made as a
player, Cruyff left Ajax for Barcelona, where he was installed as coach and
technical director. He set about reconstructing the team, releasing a dozen
players including German Bernd Schuster, and spending million on new stars.
Soon, he had fashioned another top European side which won the European Cup
Winners¡¯ Cup, Champions League, the Spanish Cup and four domestic championships
in a row between 1991 and 1994 with a side known in Spain as the ¡°Dream Team¡±.
This glittering track record established Cruyff as the undisputed master of
the club¡¯s on-field activities, and he held onto his job for longer than any of
his predecessors. He also came close to making his return to the World Cup as a
coach, but at the last moment negotiations with the Dutch Football Association
broke off and in the end Cruyff did not become part of Oranje's 1994 World Cup
campaign.
After an eight-year relationship, Johan Cruyff and Barcelona parted company
for a second time in 1996. Cruyff, who had had to give up smoking after a bypass
operation in 1991 and had recurring heart trouble in 1997, swore he would never
coach again and, as could be expected, he has kept his word ¨C though his name
still seems to come up every single time Oranje need another coach, while he
continues to be revered at the Nou Camp.
Playing Career
International honours
48 International appearances (33 as captain), 33 goals 1974 FIFA World Cup
Germany? runner-up 1974 FIFA World Cup Germany? Player of the Tournament
Clubs
1964 - 1973 Ajax Amsterdam (Netherlands) 1973 - 1978 Barcelona (Spain) 1979
Los Angeles Aztecs (USA) 1980 - 1981 Washington Diplomats (USA) 1981 UD Levante
(Spain) 1981 - 1983 Ajax Amsterdam (Netherlands) 1983 - 1984 Feyenoord Rotterdam
(Netherlands)
Club honours
1966, 1967, 1968, 1970. 1972, 1973, 1982, 1983, 1984 Dutch Champion 1967,
1970, 1971, 1972, 1983, 1984 Dutch Cup Champion 1971, 1972, 1973 European Cup
Champion 1978 Spanish Cup Champion
Managerial career
Clubs
1985-1988 Ajax Amsterdam 1988-1996 Barcelona
Coaching honours
1986, 1987 Dutch Cup Champion 1987, 1989 European Cup Winners Cup Champion
1990 Spanish Cup Champion 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 Spanish Championship Champion
1992 European Cup Champion