[go: nahoru, domu]

2002–03 AFC Ajax season

During the 2002–03 Dutch Football season, AFC Ajax competed in the Eredivisie.

AFC Ajax
2002–03 season
ChairmanMichael van Praag
ManagerRonald Koeman
StadiumAmsterdam Arena
Eredivisie2nd
KNVB CupSemi-finals
Champions LeagueQuarter-finals
Johan Cruyff ShieldWinners
Top goalscorerRafael van der Vaart (18)

Season summary

edit

Despite being the top scorers in the Eredivisie, Ajax were unable to defend their title and finished second. They also failed to retain the cup, but compensated by reaching the Champions League quarter-finals before being knocked out by eventual winners A.C. Milan.

First-team squad

edit
Squad at end of season[1]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Romania  ROU Bogdan Lobonț
2 DF Tunisia  TUN Hatem Trabelsi
3 DF Norway  NOR André Bergdølmo
4 DF Czech Republic  CZE Tomáš Galásek
5 DF Romania  ROU Cristian Chivu
7 MF Netherlands  NED Andy van der Meyde
8 MF Netherlands  NED Richard Witschge
9 FW Sweden  SWE Zlatan Ibrahimović
10 MF South Africa  RSA Steven Pienaar
12 DF Netherlands  NED John Heitinga
13 DF Brazil  BRA Maxwell
15 MF Netherlands  NED Wesley Sneijder
16 DF Finland  FIN Petri Pasanen
17 FW Brazil  BRA Wamberto
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 DF United States  USA John O'Brien
20 MF Finland  FIN Jari Litmanen
21 GK Australia  AUS Joey Didulica[2]
22 MF Ghana  GHA Abubakari Yakubu
23 MF Netherlands  NED Rafael van der Vaart
24 DF Belgium  BEL Jelle van Damme
25 MF Cape Verde  CPV David Mendes da Silva (on loan from Sparta Rotterdam)
26 MF Netherlands  NED Nigel de Jong
27 FW Netherlands  NED Victor Sikora
28 MF Morocco  MAR Nourdin Boukhari
29 MF Netherlands  NED Jamal Akachar
30 MF Netherlands  NED Stefano Seedorf
31 GK Netherlands  NED Maarten Stekelenburg
32 GK Netherlands  NED Henk Timmer (on loan from AZ)

Left club during season

edit

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
6 MF Netherlands  NED Aron Winter (retired)
11 FW Egypt  EGY Mido (on loan to Celta Vigo)
14 MF Netherlands  NED Jan van Halst
19 FW Greece  GRE Nikos Machlas (on loan to Sevilla)
No. Pos. Nation Player
15 DF Netherlands  NED Tim de Cler (to AZ)
25 MF Colombia  COL Daniel Cruz (on loan to Germinal Beerschot)
20 FW Netherlands  NED Cedric van der Gun (on loan to Willem II)

Reserve squad

edit

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
DF Netherlands  NED Mitchell Piqué
No. Pos. Nation Player

Transfers

edit

Results

edit

UEFA Champions League

edit

Second group stage

edit
27 November 2002 Valencia Spain  1–1 Netherlands  Ajax Valencia, Spain
20:45 Angulo   90' Report Ibrahimović   89' Stadium: Estadio Mestalla
Attendance: 48,000
Referee: Gilles Veissière (France)
10 December 2002 Ajax Netherlands  2–1 Italy  Roma Amsterdam, Netherlands
20:45
Report Batistuta   89' Stadium: Amsterdam Arena
Attendance: 50,148
Referee: Markus Merk (Germany)
18 February 2003 Arsenal England  1–1 Netherlands  Ajax London, England
20:45 Wiltord   5' Report De Jong   17' Stadium: Highbury
Attendance: 35,427
Referee: Lucílio Batista (Portugal)
26 February 2003 Ajax Netherlands  0–0 England  Arsenal Amsterdam, Netherlands
20:45 Report Stadium: Amsterdam Arena
Attendance: 51,500
Referee: Valentin Ivanov (Russia)
11 March 2003 Ajax Netherlands  1–1 Spain  Valencia Amsterdam, Netherlands
20:45 Pasanen   56' Report González   28' (pen.) Stadium: Amsterdam Arena
Referee: Ľuboš Micheľ (Slovakia)
19 March 2003 Roma Italy  1–1 Netherlands  Ajax Rome, Italy
20:45 Cassano   23' Report Van der Meyde   1' Stadium: Stadio Olimpico
Attendance: 62,000
Referee: Herbert Fandel (Germany)

References

edit
  1. ^ "FootballSquads - Ajax - 2002/03".
  2. ^ Didulica was born in Geelong, Australia, but also qualified to represent Croatia internationally.