Edwin Van Der Sar: 'I Want Every Fan to Have a Second Love for Ajax'

 Edwin van der Sar played 226 games for Ajax before leaving for Juventus in 1999. He later played for Fulham and Manchester United. Photograph: Aflo/REX/Shutterstock
Edwin van der Sar played 226 games for Ajax before leaving for Juventus in 1999. He later played for Fulham and Manchester United. Photograph: Aflo/REX/Shutterstock
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Edwin Van Der Sar: 'I Want Every Fan to Have a Second Love for Ajax'

 Edwin van der Sar played 226 games for Ajax before leaving for Juventus in 1999. He later played for Fulham and Manchester United. Photograph: Aflo/REX/Shutterstock
Edwin van der Sar played 226 games for Ajax before leaving for Juventus in 1999. He later played for Fulham and Manchester United. Photograph: Aflo/REX/Shutterstock

Edwin van der Sar can still picture the bemusement on the faces of Ryan Giggs and Paul Scholes, his Manchester United teammates at the time and resolute one-club men. The Dutch goalkeeper, who arrived at Old Trafford in 2005 via Ajax, Juventus and Fulham, had wanted to know whether either fancied playing abroad. They could learn a new language, Van der Sar suggested, experience different cultures and climates, maybe even earn more money.

The short answer was no. Why would they do that? They were at a big club – their club in their city – with family and friends close by, winning big trophies and being paid big money. They had it all. “OK, the weather in Manchester,” Van der Sar says, with a smile. “But Paul said: ‘I don’t like the sun.’ I think David [Beckham] is one of the few [English players] that left United but he came from London.”

For Van der Sar, the dynamics were altogether different as he made his way in the game at Ajax, where he won the Champions League in 1995 and in his current role as the club’s chief executive he knows that they remain the same.

Players leave Ajax. They do so for sporting and financial reasons and the club is normally behind the decisions on the same grounds. He remembers how the 1995 team broke up, with everybody who featured in the final against Milan gone or retired within four years. He was in the last raft of departures in 1999, going to Juventus, and virtually every one of his teammates went to a bigger club – Milan or Barcelona in the majority of cases.

“If you wanted to further your career, you needed to go abroad,” Van der Sar says. “The wages were higher so for us in Holland, at a certain point, it’s important to take the next step.”

Van der Sar is now a central figure in judging that certain point for the players who emerge from the Ajax academy and, ideally, he will get it to play out each time, as it has just done with Donny van de Beek, the midfielder who joined Manchester United for an initial €39m on 2 September. The 23-year-old made his debut for United as a substitute on Saturday, scoring in the 3-1 home defeat against Crystal Palace.

Van de Beek might have left Ajax the previous summer, when Real Madrid were among the clubs that wanted him, only for Van der Sar to deem the timing wrong. He had overseen the departures of Frenkie de Jong (Barcelona for €86m), Matthijs de Ligt (Juventus, €75m) and Kasper Dolberg (Nice, €20.5m) and felt he could not effect any greater churn to the lineup.

Van de Beek was persuaded to stay for one more year and when the new season kicked off he found that his song from the Ajax support – to the tune of KC & The Sunshine Band’s Give It Up – had changed. “Don-ny nog een jaar!” they chorused. Donny one more year.

The Ajax fans understand the situation to the point where they can celebrate when one of their favorites gives them a little longer and, according to Van der Sar, Van de Beek understood it too. “He was fine. He was with us for 10 years. He loves Ajax. I think he needed maybe an extra year also.”

This summer the timing was right and when Van De Beek returned to Amsterdam to play for the Netherlands against Italy on 7 September a group of Ajax supporters lit flares and serenaded him outside the stadium after the game. Van De Beek got out of his car to applaud them.

“Let’s say we are Stanford University, we are Oxford, we are Harvard and after that you go to Merrill Lynch, to the big companies, where you can earn more money, there is more competition,” Van der Sar says.

“In the youth, Donny was always one of the two or three big talents. He was not a spectacular player, he was not making 12 stepovers or scoring bicycle kicks but his technique was very functional. He was always in the right position.”

Van der Sar’s goal upon stepping up from the role of marketing director to chief executive in November 2016 was to restore Ajax to their mid-1990s European pomp – the ensuing years had not been kind – and to do so on a relative shoestring.

He talks with real emotion about the Ajax shirt, how it is “one of the few that never change, it’s the red down the middle, it’s vertical, it’s not horizontal, it’s not in blocks”, and how his “main thing is to make sure that everybody knew again the shirt”.

He continues: “In the 1970s, we had Cruyff, in the 80s we had Rijkaard and Van Basten and in the mid-90s, it was myself, Rijkaard for the second time, the De Boer twins, Davids, Seedorf, Kluivert, Overmars. And after that period it was a little bit quiet. So for us it was to have a new younger audience to know: ‘Who is Ajax?’

“I want every supporter of every club in the world to have a second love for Ajax, to like our attacking play and how we develop young players – maybe one of our old players is playing for your club. The battle we have is to be a big name but with a much smaller budget and to fight against the giants. And that fight is fantastic to have. Sometimes even us Dutch can be romantic. We don’t have a big, wealthy guy behind us and that makes us almost unique.”

According to Deloitte, Ajax’s revenues for 2018-19 were €199m, which put them 23rd on the list of European clubs, and that figure was inflated by the unexpected run to the Champions League semi-finals, which earned €79m. For an illustration of the uneven playing field, consider their domestic TV money from the period: €10.6m. West Ham, who finished mid-table in the Premier League, made €145m in the same area.

Then came Covid-19, which forced last season’s Eredivisie to be abandoned and the new season to begin with smaller, socially distanced crowds. The attendance at Ajax’s 55,000-capacity Johan Cruyff Arena was capped at 12,000 for Sunday’s 3-0 win over RKC Waalwijk, with 11,948 turning up.

The club rely heavily on matchday income, which brought them €53.2m in 2018-19. “If I have only about 22% filling the stadium over the whole season – 22% of €53m is about €11.5m so I’m losing €41.5m,” Van der Sar says.

It is a significant dent and puts even more pressure on him to get his decisions right, to continue to create pathways from the academy, to strike the balance between youth and experience in the first team, to sell players at the most opportune moments.

“We don’t say it’s a business plan, it’s a football program,” he says. “We want our success with the players we educate. And if in two, three years we win trophies with them and they get a higher level, the interest of other clubs should be there. And those clubs should be bigger. After two to three years, it’s time to move on. It’s also creating space for the next one. The other players need to see the same path.”

Van der Sar has overseen changes to the structure of Ajax’s youth set-up, hiring coaches, giving them more hours with the players, better integrating the school at the training ground. He has pushed a more proactive recruitment model, making signings as early as possible, selling later and budgeting at Champions League level before the team get there to increase the chances of their doing so, mitigating the risk against the bank reserves and the value in the squad.

He believes many clubs have invested on the assumption TV rights and commercial monies will “keep on rising 10% every year” and because of the pandemic “the bubble has burst a little bit”. It accentuates the importance, perhaps, of Ajax’s more lateral revenue-drivers, such as their work to help the academies at clubs in other countries, chiefly Sharjah FC in the UAE and Guangzhou R&F in China. Ajax are effectively selling their expertise in youth development.

But he radiates assurance about Ajax’s position and when he looks at clubs where the wage bill represents 80% of turnover or to the Championship in England where parachute payments are so fundamental, where there is a high level of risk-taking, it is tempting to presume he feels even better.

“It’s important to have a financial back-up, to be robust if we miss one year in the Champions League or we don’t sell players,” Van Der Sar says. “Our back-up is much bigger than the big clubs who are ruling Europe at the moment.”

He suggests those clubs are being opportunistic when they claim coronavirus has depressed the transfer market. “I presume they are still paying the same [big] salaries,” he says.

One thing is clear. Van der Sar and Ajax will not be pushed around. Van de Beek has gone and so has Hakim Ziyech, who joined Chelsea for an initial €40m. Any further business will be on Ajax’s terms. “We are not expecting a fire sale. We don’t need to sell. We can always sell players but not to fill the gaps [in a budget]. I want to sell players by strength, not because I need to make up numbers.”

The Guardian Sport



Jota’s Sons to Join Mascots When Liverpool Face Wolves at Anfield

 Jota died ‌in ⁠a ​car ‌crash alongside his younger brother in July in northwestern Spain. (AFP)
Jota died ‌in ⁠a ​car ‌crash alongside his younger brother in July in northwestern Spain. (AFP)
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Jota’s Sons to Join Mascots When Liverpool Face Wolves at Anfield

 Jota died ‌in ⁠a ​car ‌crash alongside his younger brother in July in northwestern Spain. (AFP)
Jota died ‌in ⁠a ​car ‌crash alongside his younger brother in July in northwestern Spain. (AFP)

Diogo Jota's two sons will join ​the mascots at Anfield when Liverpool face Wolverhampton Wanderers in the Premier League on Saturday, the club confirmed on Friday.

Portuguese forward Jota, who played for both ‌Premier League ‌clubs, died ‌in ⁠a ​car ‌crash alongside his younger brother in July in northwestern Spain. He was 28.

Jota joined Wolves on loan from Atletico Madrid in 2017 and made ⁠a permanent move to the club ‌the following year. ‍He then ‍signed a five-year deal in ‍2020 with Liverpool, where he won the league title earlier this year.

Saturday's match marks the ​first time Liverpool and Wolves have met since Jota's ⁠death.

Jota's wife Rute Cardoso and her two sons, Dinis and Duarte, were present for the Premier League home openers for both Liverpool and Wolves in August.

Liverpool also permanently retired his jersey number 20 following his death.


Too Hot to Handle? Searing Heat Looming Over 2026 World Cup

A view of the field is seen from the stands at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, on December 9, 2025. (AFP)
A view of the field is seen from the stands at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, on December 9, 2025. (AFP)
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Too Hot to Handle? Searing Heat Looming Over 2026 World Cup

A view of the field is seen from the stands at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, on December 9, 2025. (AFP)
A view of the field is seen from the stands at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, on December 9, 2025. (AFP)

With less than six months to go before the 2026 World Cup kicks off, organizers are bracing for what could be their most challenging opponent yet: extreme heat.

Soaring temperatures across the United States, Mexico and Canada pose safety issues for players and fans and a host of logistical issues that remain far from settled.

In the depths of the $5.5 billion SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles, which will host eight World cup matches, around 15 industrial misting fans more than two meters sit in storage, waiting to be deployed. If temperatures climb above 80F (26.7C), the fans will be rolled out around the stadium.

A roof suspended some 45 meters above the SoFi Stadium pitch offers some shade for spectators, while large openings along the sides of the stadium allow for breezes from the nearby Pacific Ocean to provide a form of natural air conditioning.

"Knowing that you can put 70,000 people into a building, the energy, the excitement, the activity that comes with that, and the higher temperature, that's where we want to make sure we respond," Otto Benedict, vice president of operations for the company that manages the stadium, told AFP.

Not all of the World Cup's 16 stadiums are as modern. And Southern California is not considered to be among the highest-risk areas for a competition scheduled from June 11 to July 19, three and a half years after a winter World Cup in Qatar.

- Automatic cooling breaks -

A study published in the International Journal of Biometeorology in January warned of "serious concern" for the health of players and match officials at the 2026 World Cup due to extreme heat.

The study identified six "high-risk" host cities: Monterrey, Miami, Kansas City, Boston, New York and Philadelphia.

The "Pitches in Peril" report by the Football for Future non-profit noted that in 2025 those cities each recorded at least one day above 35C on the wet-bulb globe temperature (WBGT) scale, which factors in humidity and is considered the upper limit of human heat tolerance.

The issue of heat featured prominently at this year's FIFA Club World Cup in the United States, which drew complaints from players and coaches.

Extreme heat also marked the 1994 World Cup, the last men's edition held in the United States.

FIFA has responded by mandating cooling breaks in the 22nd and 67th minutes of all matches at the World Cup, regardless of conditions.

The World Cup match schedule released after December's draw in Washington shows daytime games largely assigned to air-conditioned stadiums in Dallas, Houston and Atlanta, while higher-risk venues are set to host evening kickoffs.

"You can clearly see an effort to align the competition schedule planning and venue selection with the concerns around player health, but also player performance," a spokesperson for the FIFPro players union told AFP. "This is a clear outcome, which we welcome, and a lesson learned from the Club World Cup."

- 'High-risk matches' -

FIFPRO says the biggest takeaway is that heat will play an increasingly central role in organizing competitions on a warming planet.

The union believes though that several World Cup fixtures remain "high-risk" and recommends postponements when WBGT readings exceed 28C.

Among those fixtures causing FIFPro concern: group-stage matches scheduled for mid-afternoon in New York, Boston and Philadelphia, as well as the final, set for a 3:00 p.m. kickoff in New York.

While teams and players work to mitigate effects of the conditions, some officials say the risks to spectators both inside stadiums and in fan zones have been underestimated.

"There is a risk and importantly, we feel like it's an underappreciated risk," said Chris Fuhrmann, deputy director of the Southeast Regional Center of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

"When you're cheering, you're actually generating a lot of metabolic heat and your heart rate's going up. Spectators obviously compared to professional athletes are generally not in as good physical health.

"They have a lot of comorbidities that increase the likelihood that they would have a negative health outcome or succumb to heat stress."

Stadium temperatures are also amplified by the "urban heat island" effect of concrete, asphalt and metal.

Adequate air circulation, plenty of shaded areas and access to hydration are crucial, Fuhrmann said.

FIFA has yet to clarify whether fans will be allowed to bring refillable water bottles into venues or whether water will be sold inside. FIFA did not respond to requests for comment.

- Prevention -

For National Weather Service meteorologist Benjamin Schott, who has advised FIFA and its World Cup task force, the priority is prevention, particularly for foreign visitors unfamiliar with local climates.

Another lesson from the Club World Cup, he said, is the need for multilingual messaging to ensure heat-safety warnings are clearly understood.

"The lesson learned is just trying to maybe better educate fans as they come to the United States to have a better understanding of what the weather could be like during those two months," Schott said.


Palladino’s Atalanta on the up as Serie A Leaders Inter Visit

Atalanta's Italian head coach Raffaele Palladino looks on during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Genoa Cfc and Atalanta BC at Luigi Ferraris stadium in Genoa, Italy, 21 December 2025. (EPA)
Atalanta's Italian head coach Raffaele Palladino looks on during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Genoa Cfc and Atalanta BC at Luigi Ferraris stadium in Genoa, Italy, 21 December 2025. (EPA)
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Palladino’s Atalanta on the up as Serie A Leaders Inter Visit

Atalanta's Italian head coach Raffaele Palladino looks on during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Genoa Cfc and Atalanta BC at Luigi Ferraris stadium in Genoa, Italy, 21 December 2025. (EPA)
Atalanta's Italian head coach Raffaele Palladino looks on during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Genoa Cfc and Atalanta BC at Luigi Ferraris stadium in Genoa, Italy, 21 December 2025. (EPA)

Atalanta are on the comeback trail ahead of Sunday night's visit of Serie A leaders Inter Milan, with coach Raffaele Palladino leading the charge for the revitalized Bergamo club.

Since Palladino replaced Ivan Juric last month Atalanta have rediscovered their groove, as witnessed by the way they dealt with Eintracht Frankfurt and Chelsea in the Champions League.

Atalanta sit fifth in the Champions League, level on points with mega-bucks Paris Saint-Germain and Manchester City, and now they're heading back up the Serie A table.

A last-gasp win at Genoa last weekend put Atalanta back in the top half of Italy's top flight and only three points off the European spots.

"It wasn't one of our better performances but today winning was what counted," said Palladino after the victory over Genoa.

"Those three points were hugely important for us to keep our run going and get us up the right end of the table."

Sunday's clash in Bergamo is the first of three fixtures against direct rivals for Champions League football.

Fourth-placed Roma, who are eight points clear of Atalanta, travel north at the turn of the year before the short journey to Bologna, who sit in the Conference League spot.

Atalanta have won six of their eight matches in all competitions under Palladino, who already looks more like the right replacement for Gian Piero Gasperini than Juric ever did.

However, Palladino will be without key attacker Ademola Lookman and defender Odilon Kossounou who are representing Nigeria and Ivory Coast at the Africa Cup of Nations.

"We keep scaling a mountain that a month ago seemed impossible," said Palladino.

"Let's enjoy the moment because we've got three big matches coming up and we can take them on in the right spirit."

Inter lead local rivals AC Milan -- who host Verona -- by a single point at the top of the table with champions Napoli a further point back in third ahead of their tricky trip to Jamie Vardy's Cremonese.

But Inter have been on a trip to Saudi Arabia for a failed attempt to win the Italian Super Cup, a tournament won by Napoli which has further clogged up their schedule and left them, Milan, Napoli and Bologna with a game in hand on Roma and fifth-placed Juventus.

The first two weeks of January each have midweek rounds of matches in store for the Super Cup clubs, with the following two weeks containing the decisive final fixtures of the Champions League's expanded league phase.

Inter coach Cristian Chivu has lost Ange-Yoan Bonny to a knee injury picked up in training, the Frenchman joining Denzel Dumfries, Franceco Acerbi and Hakan Calhanoglu on the treatment table.

Man to watch: Daniele De Rossi

De Rossi will make an emotional return to the Stadio Olimpico on Monday night when his Genoa team travel to the Italian capital hoping to bounce back after two unfortunate defeats to Inter and Atalanta.

The Roma icon and World Cup-winning midfielder took his boyhood club to the 2024 Europa League semi-final but was fired after a poor start last season.

He was sacked following a draw at Genoa in September last year, sparking furious protests from Roma fans, and he will be given a hero's welcome from home supporters.

Genoa sit two points above the drop zone while Roma are three points behind Inter having played a game more.