Soccer: The entire Ajax board of directors is to resign over a disagreement with Johan Cruyff on how the club should be run. The directors made the announcement on Wednesday evening at a meeting of the club's council members.
They are set to remain in their positions until successors are appointed.
“It is about the importance of Ajax. We have taken this decision in the interests of the club,” chairman Uri Coronel told a news conference. “Johan Cruyff is not just anyone. He’s a demi-god here, or maybe a whole god.”
Cruyff, who won three European Cups with Ajax from 1971 to 1973, returned to the club in February to advise on technical, financial and association issues.
He met with the club’s board last week and advised them organisational and personnel changes were needed if the Amsterdammers were to return to their former glories. The capital club have not won the Eredivisie title since 2004, while their last European success came in the Champions League in 1995.
Coronel claimed at the news conference Cruyff had wanted to get rid of eight Ajax employees.
“Firing of personnel with an ongoing contract has serious financial consequences,” he said. “Five of the eight staff members have ongoing contracts, which are already equivalent to over €1 million.”
According to reports, Cruyff also called for head coach Frank de Boer to be given a greater responsibility in the running of the club and wanted former players like Dennis Bergkamp and Wim Jonk to be given roles. Club chief executive Rik van den Boog , though, was not willing to implement all of his suggestions.
The directors said the ongoing unrest was damaging the club.
The statement on www.ajax.nl said: “The directors of Ajax find that the process, and particularly the resulting and ongoing turmoil surrounding the club, is extremely harmful to Ajax.”
Cruyff was quoted as telling television station AT5: “It’s never good for a club when the board resign.”
Ajax currently lie in third place in the Eredivisie table and were knocked out in the last 16 of the Europa League by Spartak Moscow.