European football: Ajax’s season hits new low after 6-0 Feyenoord thrashing

European football: Ajax’s season hits new low after 6-0 Feyenoord thrashing

Ajax’s disastrous season hit a new low on Sunday when they suffered a humiliating 6-0 defeat to bitter rivals Feyenoord in Rotterdam, their largest ever loss in De Klassieker and the joint-fifth biggest defeat in the club’s history.

Ajax have been hit by issues on and off the pitch this campaign but while they were depleted by injury, few would have foreseen their capitulation as they managed one shot at goal compared to 30 for their hosts at De Kuip.

Igor Paixao and Yankuba Minteh grabbed a brace each for the home side to go with goals for David Hancko and Quinten Timber, who made his Netherlands debut last month.

“It was tough, bad,” the Ajax coach, John van ‘t Schip, told ESPN. “We were inferior on all fronts – physically, on the ball. Feyenoord were much stronger in terms of intensity from minute one. We didn’t get into the game. This is a blow that we all have to accept.”

The win consolidates second place for Feyenoord, who have 69 points from 29 games, nine points behind leaders PSV Eindhoven. Ajax are in sixth with 45 points from 29 matches. They have not finished lower than third since the 2005-06 season.

Ajax’s previous biggest losses to Feyenoord were a 9-4 defeat in 1964 and a 6-1 in 1960. The biggest defeat in the club’s history is a 9-1 loss to Dordrecht in 1913.

Ajax’s Silvano Vos heads down the tunnel after the defeatView image in fullscreen

It was more bad news for the Netherlands’ most successful club after they suspended new CEO Alex Kroes with immediate effect on Tuesday on suspicion that he had been involved in insider trading in the club’s shares.

They also fired their technical director Sven Mislintat and head coach Maurice Steijn only a few months after appointing them this season and briefly found themselves at the bottom of the Eredivisie table for the first time ever.

Napoli scored three goals within six second-half minutes as they clinched a 4-2 victory at Monza on Sunday to keep alive their slim hopes of a top-four finish in Serie A.

Napoli are seventh in the table with 48 points, 10 points behind fourth-placed Bologna, who played out a goalless draw at Frosinone earlier on Sunday. Monza are 11th with 42 points.

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Milan Duric nodded in a goal for Monza nine minutes into the match, outmanoeuvring Napoli’s Juan Jesus to connect with a cross.

Napoli’s response kicked off 10 minutes into the second half with Victor Osimhen’s equaliser, closely followed by Matteo Politano’s remarkable volley two minutes later. In the 61st minute, Piotr Zielinski’s long-range strike secured the visitors’ third goal.

Andrea Colpani swiftly added to Monza’s tally with a stunning curled shot into the corner a minute later, while Giacomo Raspadori capitalised on a rebound to score Napoli’s fourth goal, 68 minutes into the game.

This story will be updated

Source: theguardian.com