F365: Portrait Of An Icon | Johan Cruyff

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“Right now, I have the feeling that I am 2-0 up in the first half of a match that has not finished yet. But I am sure I will end up winning” – Johan Cruyff, February 2016.

There is something deeply moving about a former great describing his battle against a life-threatening illness in football terms. Analogising lung cancer with a 90-minute match is Cruyff’s way of normalising something unreasonable and inhumane. This is a reminder that sport is no barrier or comfort blanket against the travails of life. Cruyff’s immortal status within the game counts for little outside football’s bubble.

Cruyff’s words also reveal a mind still obsessed by the game; as if football’s greatest thinker was ever likely to switch off. There is an accusation that the Dutch master has become sour and jaded in his older age, angry at Ajax’s fall into corporate entity and Netherlands’ pragmatic style. Cruyff’s persona occasionally slips from mournful into bitter, but he will forever be worth listening to.

‘Philosophy’ has become a hackneyed word in sport, a handy euphemism for any idea or strategy beyond the short term, but Cruyff is a football *********** in the truest sense of the word. He could talk for hours about a topic as simple as the timing of a run or the weight of a pass. All killer, no filler, just an expert allowing thoughts to tumble out of his brain.

Former Dutch teammate Marco van Basten has his own theory on why Cruyff became such a student of the game: “Johan is so technically perfect that even as a boy he stopped being interested in that aspect of the game. That’s why he’s been very interested in tactics since he was young. He sees football situations so clearly that he was always the one to decide how the game would be played.”

It is a fascinating view, that Cruyff ‘completed’ the game by any normal expectation. He reconsidered the ideals of how the entire sport could and should be played as a means of challenging himself. While the rest work on improving their game, the best work on improving the game.

As much as you can be born into a club, Cruyff and Ajax were forever destined to be as one. Born five minutes from the stadium, the young Cruyff played on streets near the ground. After the death of father, his mother began working as a cleaner at the club, and his eventual stepfather worked as an assistant groundsman. Johan joined the club as a ten-year-old, and made his debut aged 17.

In isolation, Cruyff and Ajax coach Rinus Michels would have achieved greatness; together they achieved miracles. In eight seasons as a mainstay in Ajax’s first team, Cruyff won six Eredivisie titles, four KNVB Cups and three consecutive European Cups. He scored 250 goals before following Michels to Barcelona for a world-record fee. After winning three consecutive Ballon D’Ors, Cruyff promptly helped to end their 14-year wait for a league title.

The only thing that eluded Cruyff was the 1974 World Cup, a loss to West Germany that scarred a nation. The player himself has a typically philosophical take on the defeat: “We showed the world you could enjoy being a footballer; you could laugh and have a fantastic time. I represent the era which proved that attractive football was enjoyable and successful, and good fun to play too.” Nobody remembers the losers? Pah.

Cruyff certainly had the technical ability to give credence to Van Basten’s assessment. He made football look easier than any European before him, the difference-maker in three of the most attractive teams in the game’s history – Ajax 66-73, Barcelona 74-76 and Netherlands 1974. The combination of speed, touch, poise and vision was almost impossible to defend against, and even harder to dislike. If Pele ruled the 1960s and Diego Maradona the 1980s, the decade in between belonged to Cruyff.

Yet technical ability was only ever part of the story with someone who placed far greater importance on a footballer’s brain than his body. Cruyff was obsessed by immeasurables such as timing and vision, rejecting the use of statistics in sport: “My qualities are not detectable by a computer.”

Most importantly, Cruyff believed in simplicity: “Simple play is also the most beautiful. How often do you see a pass of forty meters when twenty meters is enough?” he once said. “To play well, you need good players, but a good player almost always has the problem of a lack of efficiency. He always wants to do things prettier than strictly necessary.”
Cruyff’s simplicity is often misrepresented. He did not mean that players should only choose the easiest option, but that the choice should be made to attain the best expected result.

Take his own Cruyff turn, for example. This feint was neither carried out to embarrass Sweden’s Jan Olsson nor to excite the watching crowd, but because Cruyff estimated that it was the simplest method (in terms of effort and risk vs expected result) to beat his opponent.

It is no surprise that Cruyff welcomes the comparison with his own preferred style of football and choreography. When in 2008 the English National Ballet announced a new work which interpreted 10 great footballing moments through the medium of dance, his turn against Switzerland was the stand-out choice.

If Cruyff’s belief in simplicity became a theme during his playing career, it came to define him as a coach. His vision of football, an evolution of Rinus Michels’ own totaalvoetbal, was based on a simple concept: Keep the ball when you have it, get the ball back as soon as possible when you don’t.

“If you have the ball you must make the field as big as possible, and if you don’t have the ball you must make it as small as possible,” Cruyff said. Every player was expected to be comfortable in the role of playmaker. This was football created in his own image: Cruyff the Redeemer.

Taking Michels’ own style, Cruyff super-charged it. The football world soon realised that Cruyff hadn’t just been playing the game, but absorbing it. His understanding of the game’s minutiae was (and still is) unsurpassed. The scholar was ready to show off exactly what he’d learned.

There is now an ideological battle between aesthetics and pragmatism in football. Does winning matter most, or does entertainment matter more? The holy grail makes the question and argument redundant, by harmonising both ideals.

“With him, as well as with me, results may have come first, but quality of soccer was No 1.” Cruyff said of his mentor Michels upon his death in 2005. “Just winning is not enough.” Both coaches found the perfect blend of football romance and pragmatism. If you can’t win, then entertain. If you can’t entertain, then at least win.
 
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Part of Cruyff’s coaching success came through sheer imagination. Football was a game of endless possibilities, limited only by the restrictions coaches placed on their own teams. Starting at Ajax, he changed their formation to 3-4-3 in order to add support to the attack, and preached the idea of possession as king.

“It’s a basic concept: when you dominate the ball, you move well,” Cruyff said. “You have what the opposition don’t, and therefore they can’t score. The person that moves decides where the ball goes, and if you move well, you can change opponents’ pressure into your advantage. The ball goes where you want it.”

At Barcelona, Cruyff perfected this art. He won four league titles and the European Cup in 1992. He also inspired the tiki-taka style that has become entwined with the club’s most successful era. Whereas Michels’ totaalvoetbal relied on players interchanging positions, Cruyff’s strand made the ball do the work.


“As a player he turned football into an art form,” says former Barcelona president Joan Laporta. “Johan came along and revolutionised everything. The modern-day Barca started with him, he is the expression of our identity, he brought us a style of football we love.”

It is no coincidence that Cruyff’s two natural homes – Ajax and Barcelona – have the most iconic youth academies in world football, and his longest-lasting legacy at the Camp Nou came away from the first team. He was an advocate of football as education. Total Football was not a style of play learned in first-team training sessions, but a way of life.

The logic is clear: If young players are already accustomed to the style and demands of the first team’s tactics, they have a greater chance of making the grade. It may seem foolish now, but Barcelona were filtering out hopefuls according to physical attributes rather than technical ability. Something had to give, and Cruyff’s request for a new academy system was accepted by president Josep Lluis Nunez. La Masia was born.

“Johan Cruyff built the cathedral, our job is to maintain and renovate it,” said Pep Guardiola when taking over at Barcelona. The La Masia graduate became head coach in 2008. By 2010, all three Ballon D’Or finalists (Andres Iniesta, Xavi and Lionel Messi) had come through the system.

La Masia was Cruyff’s masterpiece, his Sistine Chapel. No Cruyff, no Guardiola. No Cruyff, no Xavi. No Cruyff, no Iniesta. No Cruyff, no Messi. No Cruyff, no Busquets. No Cruyff, no dynasty.

The hyperbolic tendency is to state that Cruyff invented modern football, but that is not true. There is no one forefather of any of football’s great movements. Michels took his influences from Hungary and Brazil, Cruyff took his from Michels, Guardiola in turn from Cruyff. Yet the effect Cruyff had, and the legacy he left at Ajax and Barcelona, makes him the game’s most influential individual of the last 40 years. His methods led the European football Renaissance.

“In a way I’m probably immortal,” Johan Cruyff once said, never one for false modesty. As his open-heart surgery and continued fight against cancer indicates, mortality is inescapable. Yet that only makes our legacy more important. In purely football terms, Cruyff will never die. No ‘probably’ required.



Daniel Storey
 
People saying that Barca's dominance is down only/mainly to Messi and thus to luck should read that.
 
One other perspective to consider is that without Cruyff 'the player' would this brilliant philosophy that the Dutch teams of the late 60's/early 70's have had the impact it did. Would it have even worked and been successful without him? It needed a player like him for the team to do well and draw attention to the soundness of the playing philosophy as a whole. Without him, would people still knew who Michels was..

Guys like Maradona/Pele greats as they were.. didn't feature in a radical tactical system and influence the game in the same way tactically.. despite being superior players. Only Beckenbauer could be said to have had a similar impact to Cruyff as he too influenced a shift in tactics due to his brilliance/positions he adopted as a player but as a manager Cruyff changed the game for good and influences the modern game.
 
People saying that Barca's dominance is down only/mainly to Messi and thus to luck should read that.

Cules know

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Will extend the tags to @CLARiiON and @FCBarca as I'm sure they'll enjoy it too.

Cheers!
 
Article should've mentioned his "En un momento dado" quote.

Love this guy, my favourite football figure ever. Took an online course from his sports institute last year and was pleasantly surprised that they extended an invitation to graduate with the regular class students, and not only that, but to receive the certificate from the man himself. Wish him nothing but the best and a speedy recovery.
 
Great piece this.

Some quotes from Cruyff as well I think would be apt for the thread and some of them are quite interesting:

• "If you score one more goal than the other team, you win."
• "Coincidence is logical."
• "Every disadvantage has got it's advantage."
• "Soccer is simple, but it is difficult to play simple."
• "You have got to shoot, otherwise you can't score."
• "Sometimes something's got to happen before something is going to happen."
• "Italians can't win the game against you, but you can lose the game against the Italians."
• "I don't believe in God, in Spain all 22 players cross themselves, if it works the game is always going to be a tie."
• "Actually I never make a mistake, because it takes a huge effort for me to make a mistake."
• "Before Johan Cruijff is going to make a mistake, he isn't making that mistake. making that mistake."
And for the trainers/consultants amongst us:
• "... if I wanted you to understand it all, I would have explained it better"


Thinking in Dutch, speaking in Spanish
When JC just started coaching Barca, he was asked a question during a press conference. He later confessed, that he actually gave the answer in Dutch in his head, before translating it for the Spanish press.
Now, in Dutch we have a little phrase that goes "op een gegeven moment", which translates into English something like: "at a given time, or at a given moment". This is a phrase the Spanish language does not have. JC didn't know, so he started his answer with: "Un momento dado..." Nobody understood this. A moment was given?? By whom? To whom? How??? Everyone was clueless. But JC didn't know, and he went on to use that phrase ad nauseum (he does say it a lot in Dutch too) until 1) people started to get what he meant and 2) (after a while) it became a popular and "normal" phrase in Spanish too. In fact, it is now added to the official Spanish dictionary.

Making up his own sayings
We have numerous sayings in Dutch. One of them is" hij hoorde de klok luiden, maar weet niet waar de klepel hangt". This loosely translates into: "He heard the bell tolling, but doesn't know where the pendulum hangs". Meaning, he heard some things about this subject, but he doesn't really understand the essence. Again, speaking in another language (can't remember which, could be German or English) he actually said: "this player heard the clock tick, but doesn't know what time it is...". This Cruyffian statement got a lot of laughs in Holland, and most people now use this JC-version of the saying, hoping for others to actually correct them. So they in turn can go: hey, this is the way JC says it, so it must be right!! Later, JC confessed that he did know the right way to say it in Dutch, but that while he was saying the words, he realized he didn't know what pendulum (klepel) was in German/English. Then he added: my version of the saying is actually more logical and better.

Examples of Cruyffian logic and -lingo
Every advantage has its disadvantage (or the other way around, depending on the situation). Once, an opponent of Barca had their star player fit, just in time for the match. So, the interviewer said: that's a disadvantage eh, that player Whathisname is fit? And Cruyff said: no it's an advantage. Their medical staff have been working so hard to get him fit, that most players will want to pass the ball to him, to make it worth everybody's while. So, we'll know how they play. We'll mark this guy well and win the game... And they did.

Avoiding to play bad is easier than trying to play good. ... Huh?

I don't make a lot of mistakes, because it's hard for me to be wrong...
Once, during a match analysis, one of the players tried to score a goal from a distance and kicked the ball way up in the stands. The commentator was appalled by the shocking shot and asked Cruyff's opinion. JC: well, you can't score goals if you don't take a shot. At least this guy tried. The others just pass the ball on...

This is a very bad goal... once JC was watching a match and saw a team score a goal. During the analysis he proved that it was a "bad" goal, meaning they could've scored earlier in that situation, with less risk involved. The players took more time and effort to - in the end - score the goal anyway, but JC labelled it a "bad goal".

Before I make a mistake, I see it coming and then don't make it.
These are Utopia's who never happen. Something like, wishful thinking, I suppose. Take note of the "who". That in itself is very Cruyffian. He would always say: "the ball, who..." or "the situation, who...." When asked about it, he'd say: yeah I know it's wrong officially, but it sounds better....

They can never beat you, buy you can lose against them.... JC answered a reporter in 1995, days before Ajax won the Champions League against AC Milan. What were Ajax chances against the Italians, was the question. The answer is so true. Everybody got what he meant. Except for the reporter...

Cruyff almost never uses the words I, we or us, but always you. Even if he talks about himself, he uses you. So, the first time you hear him do this, you think...hang on....who is this about, anyway. When his son Jordi was injured and needed medical help, the interviewer asked what Jordi and Johan were planning to do. The answer: "well, the both of you aren't doctors, so you talk to different doctors and you listen and then you make the decision." This sounds very strange, and in a way distant, as if JC can only open up if he pretends to be talking about someone else. Bizar fact is, that most players who worked with Cruyff (van Basten, Van ‘t Schip, Wouters, Koeman, Vanenburg, Rijkaard) all seem to be doing this, now...


In 1995, JC was in Holland preparing for a new season with Barca, there were rumours that Real Madrid could go bankrupt. The Dutch interviewer asked the question: JC, do you think Real Madrid could go bankrupt? JC: "O yeah, I read that in the papers. Made nice headlines. Well, I've got a question for you... Can you imagine a Liga in Spain without Real Madrid?" The interviewer said: No. JC again: "well, there you go. There's your answer. More questions?"

You can understand it, once you get it (or the other way around). Talking about tactics, JC said literally that it (the sacred knowledge of soccer) is only open for people who actually "see" it...

Technique is not being able to hold the ball in the air 1000 times. Anyone can do that by practicing. Then you can work in the circus. Technique is passing the ball with one touch, with the right speed, at the right foot of your partner...

Football is a simple game. It's just very hard to play it simple.

Football is a game of time and space.

I can manage pretty well in all aspects of the game. Kicking the ball is the least important one.

People always said i was so quick. But they missed the point. I wasn't that quick, I just started my run a fraction of second earlier than my opponent. So I looked quick. It's all in the eyes.

Football is a mind game. You play with your brain.

Football is about making mistakes. Who makes the most, loses the game.

Coincidence is logical. Some people like to bring "coincidence" into the equation to clarify certain events. JC would always say: but coincidence is logical. If I kick the ball on goal from 30 meters, I will probably not score. If I do that 20 times in the match, the chances are high that one of the 20 balls will go in.

When you play a match, it is statistically proven that players actually have the ball 3 minutes on average. The best players - the Zidanes, Ronaldinhos, Gerrards - will have the ball maybe 4 minutes. Lesser players - defenders - probably 2 minutes. So, the most important thing is: what do you do those 87 minutes when you do not have the ball.... That is what determines whether you're a good player or not.

I am not religious. In Spain, all 22 players pray for the match and make a cross before they enter the pitch. If that would work, we would only have draws. And we don't. So, I have proven that there is no such thing as a God you can ask for things.

Principally, I am against everything. Until I decide differently, that I'm pro.

You can't play dominant football with a 4-2-2 system. The numbers (triangles) on the field don't match up.

Their defense looked like goat's cheese. (JC wanted to say Swiss cheese, the Emmenthaler with the huge holes in it.
 
and 2nd part:

The hardest thing for players and humans is to understand that there is nothing to understand...

Spanish players are good to work with. Dutch players already start to say "Yes, but..." when you open your mouth to speak.

When I come home after analyzing a match on tv, my wife asks me: what did you say about the match? I say: I haven't got a clue.

Ok, to start of...there is only one ball. And you need to have that ball. But the big question is: what do you do with it?

It's better to go down with your own vision, that with someone else's.
Take Vialli, he is a great player. I can put a defender on him, but he will be to good and he will beat that defender. That's logic. So I just make sure the midfielder can't reach Vialli. If I can stop 50% of the passes going to Vialli, I have diminished his threat by 50%. Simple.

When you lead with 5-0, it's much more fun for the public to shoot and hit the post instead of scoring a 6th goal. That's just for the statistics. A ball on the post is more exciting. Especially if you can hear the ball hitting the woodwork.

Playing against 10 is harder than playing against 11 players. You know why? The team with 11 will think "ok, we can take it easy now", while the team with 10 will think "we really have to work hard now"... I have seriously considered playing with nine players instead of eleven in some cases. Just to keep them all awake. I'm certain we would have had the same or even better results.

I can't work at AS Roma. Ever. They have an athletics track around the pitch. I hate that.

I always take my own decisions. When Ajax said I was too old (in 1992), I say: no no, that is something I determine. Not you. (JC made Feyenoord champions of the league in 1993).

It's simple. It doesn't matter how many goals they score. As long as you score one more. Than you win.

People who are not of my level, cannot touch my integrity.

I am convinced that you have to do it like I do. Otherwise, I wouldn't be doing it this way...

Michael Laudrup did not have that primitive anger, the ultimate drive to win. He was an artist. So I needed to make him angry.

Europeans are sore losers. Americans can lose. That's why we invented the draw. (JC in a discussion with business tycoon Roel Pieper, who replies: Americans compare getting a draw with kissing your sister...).

When you want a good team, you need at least two midfielders who will never score lower than a 7 (on a scale from 1 to 10). You don't need the best players, 8s and 9s are not necessary. Because these players can also score a 4. That's why I choose to sell Vanenburg (to PSV) and sign Jan Wouters (from FC Utrecht).

Milanello, that spectacular trainings complex of AC Milan... I hate it. It means the team will come to the stadium on Sunday and the dressing rooms, the showers, the massage room, it will all be a bit alien to them. I want my players to smell the dressing room of the stadium where they play every day. That stuff is important to me, when I choose where I want to work.

Interviewer asks JC what was wrong with the two penalties Frank de Boer missed against Italy in 2000: "He didn't score".

JC to interviewer while watching the opponent warm up: "Do you see that player? His kicking technique is lousy." Why is that, the interviewer asks. How did you see that? JC: "I didn't see it, I heard it. The sound of the shoe against the ball was not the right sound."

The Technical Director's job at Ajax was my invention. I needed a diploma for the coach job, which I didn't have. So I invented that role.
The KNVB (Dutch Football Federation) subpoenaed JC because he did act as coach. JC's formal defense: "I didn't coach the players. I explained my trainers what I wanted, and to save some time, I asked the players to sit in, so the trainers didn't have to repeat my words. It's called efficiency".

I don't think the referee allowed too much. I think he didn't see it at all. That was the problem.

I always wanted to work with a group of 18 players. No more. Why? Because the majority would like me and the ones who didn't would be a minority. It's easier that way.

Interviewer: "You are 3 points behind Real Madrid....". JC, interrupting: "No no, only 2 points.

JC to an interviewer who didn't really understood what JC said: "Listen, if I wanted you to understand it all, I would have explained it better..."
 
Wait.. I thought LVG laid the foundations for this Barcelona.

Seriously though, good read - at least his philosophy has some credence to it, unlike the charlatan sitting on our bench.
 
cheers, mate.

Cruyff has his fair share of controversy in his career decisions, both as a manager and as a player.

Even at young age he was having tension with his team mates always telling them where to stand, how to move, and where to distribute the ball. At the end he was usually always right.

One worth noting is the switch he made in his last season as a player from his beloved Ajax to the rivals Feyenord.

Ajax, helped by Cruyff, won the title the year before and he expected to be given one year extension to his contract. That didn't came tho as Ajax seemed that he won't be up to par with his usual standard given he'll be 36 at that time during the next season.

So in controversial fashion he signed for Feyenord and after he switched clubs Feyenord didn't kick it off in the best possible manner and in their game against Ajax, Feyenord lost 8-2.

After that game Cruyff was quoted saying to his team mates "We are only three points behind. If we win the rest of the games we’ll be champions."

Fittingly they went on and became champions with Cruyff voted Feyenord best player for that year and finishing with 11 goals.

Here's a few highlights of that last year:

 
and some people have the audacity to say that LVG was responsible for Barca and Spain's rise :lol:
 
The 'en un momento dado' thing is a bit of a myth/misconception though, a writer called Carolina Trujillo did a funny piece on it a couple of months ago. In Holland every other article on Cruijff mentions it like he literally invented those words, to show that he is such a genius he even enriched the Spanish language with something new. Turns out that phrase existed in Spanish long before he ever used it, it just became a catchphrase because he used it al lot at unusual moments and it cracked up the supporters or something.

Of course Cruijff is a legend. One thing that I find interesting and that doesn't always get much attention, is why Cruijff never became Holland National Team manager. Over the years it has pretty much become common knowledge in Holland that Rinus Michels actually prevented Cruijff from becoming the Holland National team coach before the 1990 World Cup, assumably out of jealousy and Michels's fear that his achievements in 1988 would be surpassed.

The senior players even had a vote before the 1990 World Cup, which ruled in favour of Cruijff taking over from Thijs Libregts. But Michels, technical director at the KNVB at that time, appointed Beenhakker anyway and the tournament became a complete fiasco. Cruijff stayed at Barcelona, was approached again for the job in 1992 and 1994, even reached verbal agreements, but in the end it was mysteriously never finalised. In his own words he "would've loved the job, but it simply wasn't allowed". Of course he can still look back on a wonderful coaching career, winning many trophies.
 
The 'en un momento dado' thing is a bit of a myth/misconception though, a writer called Carolina Trujillo did a funny piece on it a couple of months ago. In Holland every other article on Cruijff mentions it like he literally invented those words, to show that he is such a genius he even enriched the Spanish language with something new. Turns out that phrase existed in Spanish long before he ever used it, it just became a catchphrase because he used it al lot at unusual moments and it cracked up the supporters or something.

Of course Cruijff is a legend. One thing that I find interesting and that doesn't always get much attention, is why Cruijff never became Holland National Team manager. Over the years it has pretty much become common knowledge in Holland that Rinus Michels actually prevented Cruijff from becoming the Holland National team coach before the 1990 World Cup, assumably out of jealousy and Michels's fear that his achievements in 1988 would be surpassed.

The senior players even had a vote before the 1990 World Cup, which ruled in favour of Cruijff taking over from Thijs Libregts. But Michels, technical director at the KNVB at that time, appointed Beenhakker anyway and the tournament became a complete fiasco. Cruijff stayed at Barcelona, was approached again for the job in 1992 and 1994, even reached verbal agreements, but in the end it was mysteriously never finalised. In his own words he "would've loved the job, but it simply wasn't allowed". Of course he can still look back on a wonderful coaching career, winning many trophies.
Aye, although Cruyff wasn't blameless in failing to secure the national gig - hi massive ego also undermined those negotiations around 1990-1994.
 
Aye, although Cruyff wasn't blameless in failing to secure the national gig - hi massive ego also undermined those negotiations around 1990-1994.
Maybe his biggest foil is after that 94 CL final when they got battered by Milan and mostly is down to his ego. Barca and him in particular underestimated that game and IMO leaving Laudrup was a huge mistake. There was conflicts in the dressing room and he dismantled the whole team after that night.

He had a massive ego in the dressing room alright as a manager that prevented him to build another dream team or at least to bring more success with that one from the early 90's. He clashed with Laudrup, Romario, Zubizarreta, etc...

Nice timing :lol:

aye great timing :)
 
Aye, although Cruyff wasn't blameless in failing to secure the national gig - hi massive ego also undermined those negotiations around 1990-1994.

I have no doubt that's true, it's been a pattern throughout his career and it is even visible up until this day with his involvement at Ajax. It always has to exactly go his way or it's the high way, and while that has led to many great achievements, it's also been the cause of many impossible situations.
 
Feck. I knew about the cancer but somehow I just assumed that he will make it through. So out of the blue :( RIP