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Writer's pictureDag Jenkins

June 17, 1983: Lazio Ajax 3-1

Updated: Sep 24

Giordano Show


A hat-trick by “Bruno-gol” lights up promotion celebration



Ticket owned by Dag Jenkins. Photo by Dag Jenkins

The season so far


Lazio in their third consecutive year in Serie B, after the betting scandal and relegation of 1979-80, had renewed ambitions this year. The previous season had been a depressingly mediocre 11th place but with the return of striker Bruno Giordano and midfielder Lionello Manfredonia (after the world Cup win armistice) they could finally see some light at the end of the tunnel.

 

The main players who had joined Lazio were keeper Fernando Orsi (Parma), defenders Renato Miele (Catania), Gabriele Podavini (Brescia) and Marco Saltarelli (Lodigiani), midfielders Enrico Vella (Catania) and Roberto Tavola (Juventus) plus forward Claudio Ambu (Perugia).

 

Players to leave were the scudetto legends of 1974, keeper Felice Pulici and attacking winger Renzo Garlaschelli plus defenders Giorgio Mastropasqua (Catania), Dario Pighin (Taranto), midfielders Alberto Bigon (Vicenza), Dario Sanguin (Perugia), Fernando Viola (Genoa) and forwards Lorenzo Marronaro (Monza) and Walter Speggiorin (Massese).

 

This reshuffling of the squad plus the return of clearly superior level players such as Giordano and Manfredonia, added to the talent of fan favourite Vincenzo D'Amico, gave the whole Lazio environment renewed enthusiasm and optimism.

 

Roberto Clagluna, who had taken over from Ilario Castagner half way through the previous season, had been confirmed. After a slow start (3 draws) Lazio had started winning games (7 consecutive between 7th and 13th fixture). After the first half of the season, they were top of the table.

 

The second part of the fixture list saw Lazio slow down. From January 30 to May 8th, Lazio only won twice (Cremonese, Bari), with 8 draws and 4 defeats (Campobasso, Monza, Pistoiese, Varese). After the 3-3 home draw against Reggiana on May 8, Clagluna was sacked and in came former player Giancarlo "El Gaucho" Morrone.

 

His first match was a 5-1 away defeat to Milan. To make things worse Roma the same day won the Scudetto and the town was painted red and yellow.

 

Then luckily Lazio picked up and in a crucial game beat Atalanta 2-1 at home. The Biancocelesti then drew at Arezzo, beat Catania in a decisive promotion clash and then drew at Cavese to conquer the big time again. After three difficult years the oldest club in Rome were back in Serie A.

 

To celebrate a friendly against Ajax Amsterdam was organised.

 

Ajax had just won the Dutch league, the Eredivisie, under manager Aad de Mos. Top league scorer was former Pisa, Wim Kieft with 19 goals while top scorer in all competitions was Gerald Vanenburg with 20.

 

Ajax had also won the Dutch Cup, the KNVB beker, beating NEC Nijmengen 6-2 on aggregate.

 

In the European Cup they had lost in the round of 32 to Celtic Glasgow 3-4 on aggregate.

 

The "Godenzonen" had some good players in the squad. Apart from the two above mentioned goal scorers they had keeper Piet Schrijvers, defender Frank Rijkaard, Danish midfielders Søren Lerby, Jesper Olsen and Jan Mølby, forwards John Van't Schip and a young Marco Van Basten.

 

They also had the legendary Johan Cruijff, approaching the end of his glorious career and a young John Bosman had come up from the youth team (not to be confused with Jean-Marc Bosman whose court case in 1995 led to professional football players in the EU to move freely to another club at the end of their term of contract with their present team).

 

The match: Friday, June 17, 1983, Stadio Olimpico, Rome


The Friday evening friendly attracted just under 30,000 fans.

 

Both sides fielded strong line-ups for the first half. This would obviously gradually change as there was no limit to substitutions and it was a friendly after all.

 

Ajax were however without Johan Cruijff, Søren Lerby and Wim Kieft.

 

The visitors started strongly and Lazio were in difficulty against such quality opposition. The Spearmen took the lead in the 4th minute. The goal was scored by Bosman who chipped Massimo Cacciatori with a precise lob. Lazio 0 Ajax 1. This was Cacciatori's first game since his three-year ban for alleged match fixing in 1980.

 

Lazio took some time to get going but once they did Giordano stole the show.

 

Lazio equalised in the 17th minute. Vincenzo D'Amico floated a ball forward which Giordano let go over his head, let it bounce and then blasted a shot into the top hand corner. Lazio 1 Ajax 1.

 

For the second half Lazio made seven changes and the game became slower and more like a training exercise. Ajax made two changes during the break.

 

One player however was on fire and in the 70th minute "Bruno-gol" struck again. From a Gabriele Podavini header he raced forward and beat Storm with a low strike. Lazio 2 Ajax 1.

 

In the 80th minute took off striker Marco Van Basten, a player Italy and the world would soon see blossom and become outstanding.

 

The Giordano show continued in the 89th minute. The Trasteverino dispossessed Ophof in midfield, sprinted forward and put the ball through the keeper's legs with his heel. An outrageous goal and Lazio 3 Ajax 1.

 

A friendly that was supposed to be balanced and entertaining was being dominated by one player's brilliance. Full time Giordano 3 Ajax 1.


A great evening, after three difficult years, with the Lazio fans celebrating their promotion and seeing Giordano's show tonight, hopefully looking forward to exciting times.

 

Who played for Lazio


Cacciatori (46' Moscatelli), Spinozzi (46' Saltarelli), Podavini, Miele (46' Pochesci), Manfredonia (78' De Nadai), Perrone (46' Piscedda), Ambu (46' Chiodi), Vella (46' Marini), Giordano, D'Amico (65' Sciarpa), Badiani (46' Tavola)

Manager: Morrone

 

Who played for Ajax


Galjé (46' Storm), Molenaar, Ophof, Boeve, Rijkaard, Molby, Olsen (46' Godee), Silooy, Van Basten (80' Haatrecht), Bosman (75' Van Veen), Schoenaker

Substitutes: Van't Schip

Manager: de Mos

 

Referee: Longhi


Goals: 4' Bosman, 17' Giordano, 25' Giordano, 44' Giordano

 

What happened next


Many of today's players would be sold: Maurizio Moscatelli, Carlo Perrone, Paolo Pochesci, Marco Saltarelli, Antonio Sciarpa, Roberto Badiani, Roberto Tavola, Enrico Vella, Michele De Nadai, Claudio Ambu and Stefano Chiodi would all go.

 

Lazio managed to stay up in Serie A the following year, just.

 

Ajax only finished 3rd the following season despite signing Ronald Koeman and Van Basten's 28 league goals (31 in total).


Lazio 1982-83

Competition

Played

Won

Drawn

Lost

Goals scored

Serie B

38

14

18

6

44

Coppa Italia

5

2

1

2

8

Total

43

16

19

8

52

Top five appearances (complete player statistics)

Player

Total

Serie B

Coppa Italia

43

38

5

42

38

4

39

34

5

38

34

4

38

36

2

Top five goal scorers (complete player statistics)

Player

Total

Serie B

Coppa Italia

Bruno Giordano

21

18

3

Enrico Vella

5

5

-

Vincenzo D'Amico

5

4

1

Lionello Manfredonia

4

4

-

Claudio Ambu

4

3

1

Let's talk about Marco Van Basten


Source Wikipedia

Marco Van Basten was born in Utrecht on October 31, 1964.

 

His youth career was spent with EDO, UVV, Elinkwijk and then from 1981 at Ajax.

 

He made his debut with Ajax in 1981-82 but that remained his only game under German manager Kurt Linder.

 

The following year he played more, 20 league games with 9 goals and 4 in the Dutch Cup with 4 goals. The manager was Aad de Mos. He played alongside Frank Rijkaard and Johan Cruijff. The "Joden" (Jews) won the domestic double.

 

In 1983-84 he blossomed. He played 26 league games with 28 goals, 4 games in the Dutch Cup with 1 goal and 2 games in the European Cup, still under de Mos. One of his new teammates was Ronald Koeman. Ajax finished 3rd.

 

In 1984-85 Ajax had five different managers, the last being Johan Cruijff but still won the league. Van Basten played 33 league games with 22 goals, 4 games in the domestic cup with 2 goals and 4 games in the UEFA Cup with 5 goals.

 

In 1985-86, still under Cruijff, Ajax finished 2nd but won the Dutch Cup. Van Basten played 26 league games with a record 37 goals, 1 game in the cup and 2 games in the European Cup.

Source Wikipedia

The 1986-87 was his last with Ajax. The "Godenzonen" again finished 2nd under Cruijff but won both the Dutch Cup and the Cup Winners Cup (Lokomotiv Lipsia 1-0 with a Van Basten goal). He played 27 league games with 31 goals, 7 in the cup with 6 goals and 9 in the Cup Winners Cup with 6 goals. His teammates included future Lazio, Aron Winter (1992-96) and the great Dennis Bergkamp. Van Basten finished with Ajax after 172 games and a phenomenal 152 goals.

 

His next destination was A.C Milan. In the late 80's and early 90's Serie A was considered the best league in the world and attracted a lot of the top players: Diego Maradona, Michel Platini, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, Lotar Matthäus, just to name a few.

 

Van Basten joined Milan with fellow Dutchman Ruud Gullit. The manager was Arrigo Sacchi and the Rossoneri won the league. Van Basten however was unlucky and missed six months through injury, from the 5th fixture to the 25th. He played 11 league games and scored 3 goals, 5 games in Coppa Italia with 5 goals and 3 games in the UEFA Cup.

 

The following season he could finally show what he was made of. Milan added Frank Rijkaard to the squad and finished 3rd but won both the European Cup (Steaua Bucharest 4-0) and the Italian Supercoppa (Sampdoria 3-1). He played 33 league games with 19 goals, 4 in Coppa Italia with 3 goals and 9 in the European Cup with 10 goals (2 in final).

 

In 1989-90 the "Diavolo" finished 2nd but won the European Cup again (Benfica 1-0), the European Super Cup (Barcelona 2-1 on aggregate) and the Intercontinental Cup (Atlético Nacional de Medellín 1-0 a.e.t). Van Basten missed the first two months after an operation and then played 26 league games with 19 goals, 4 in Coppa Italia with 1 goal, 7 in the European Cup with 3 goals plus the Intercontinental Cup and European Supercup. His teammates included Lazio connections, Mauro Tassotti (1978-80), Diego Fuser (1992-98), Giovanni Stroppa (1991-93) and Demetrio Albertini (2003-04).

 

In 1990-91 Milan again finished 2nd but won the UEFA Super Cup (Sampdoria 3-1 on aggregate) and the Intercontinental Cup (Olimpia Asunción). Van Basten played 31 league games with 11 goals, 1 game in Coppa Italia, 2 games in the European Cup plus the Intercontinental Cup. It was Sacchi's last season and his relationship with Van Basten is said to have soured.

 

In 1991-92 Milan won the league again, under new manager Fabio Capello. Van Basten played 31 league games with 25 goals and7 games in Coppa Italia with 4 goals.

 

In 1992-93 Van Basten started suffering from injuries and was out for long periods, undergoing an operation in December. Milan had also bought French striker Jean -Pierre Papin and attacking midfielder Dejan "Il Genio" Savićević. The Rossoneri won Serie A and the Italian Supercoppa (Parma 2-1 with one Van Basten goal) but lost the Champions League final (Olympique Marseille 0-1). Van Basten played 15 league games with 13 goals, 1 game in Coppa Italia, 5 games in the Champions League with 6 goals plus the Supercoppa with 1 goal.

 

The following two seasons he stayed at Milan but never played an official game again. On June 3, 1993 he underwent another operation on his ankle but never recovered properly. He tried one last operation on July 11, 1994 but then had to give up. In August 1995 he announced his retirement, at 30.



He won 58 caps for Holland with 24 goals. He won a European Championship in 1988 scoring one of the best goals in history in the final (USSR 2-0). He also played 15 games for the U21's with 13 goals.


Since retiring he has become a coach. He started with Jong Ajax (2nd flight-2003-04). He was then manager of the national team for four years (2004-08) without any standout results for the "Oranje" (despite winning 67.3 % of the games). He then coached Ajax for a season (2008-09, 3rd place), Heerenveen for two (2012-14, 8th and 5th), was assistant at AZ Alkmaar (2014-15, 3rd place) and assistant to Gus Hiddink with Holland (2015-16).

 

Van Basten was a forward and is considered one of the best players of all time. His nickname, for his elegance, was "The Swan of Utrecht". He was 1.88 and 80 kilos but however managed to balance his physicality with grace and class. He could do everything, score goals and set them up. He could play in the area, outside, on the wing, all with equal efficacy. He could use both feet, had an accurate and powerful shot, was good in the air and known for his acrobatic skills. He could also take freekicks and penalties (he only missed 4 out of 55 taken). He was an intelligent player, knowing exactly when, where and how to move on the field.

 

On a personal note, he is definitely one of best players I have ever seen playing live at the Olimpico.

 

The Milan team of the late 80's with Van Basten, Ruud Gullit and Frank Rijkaard but also Franco Baresi, Paolo Maldini and Carlo Ancelotti, just to name a few, is considered among the top club teams in history.

 

Van Basten won plenty both at team level and individually. With clubs, 3 Dutch leagues, 3 Dutch Cups, 4 Serie A titles, 4 Italian Supercoppas, 1 Cup Winners Cup, 2 European/Champions Leagues, 2 UEFA Super Cups, 2 Intercontinental Cups and a European Championship with Holland.

 

He also won 3 Ballon d'ors (1988, 1989 and 1992) and a Golden Boot (1986). He was top league scorer in Holland four times and in Italy twice. He won countless awards in his career.

 

He played a total of 373 club games and scored 277 goals. A phenomenal record but which still does not do Van Basten justice. A player of possibly unrepeatable class and quality.


Sources





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