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Beautiful Bridesmaids Dressed in Oranje: The Unfulfilled Glory of
Dutch Football is the story of a dazzling football dream. Built on
the club successes of Ajax and Feyenoord, it's a utopian ideal that
blazed with a bright but ephemeral Oranje flame, scorching the
football pitches of the world in the 1970s. Although Dutch clubs
dominated the European Cup from 1969 to 1973, until 1974 the Oranje
had failed to qualify for a World Cup for 36 years. Two finals then
followed in successive tournaments, as 'totaalvoetbal' burst from
its chrysalis, proudly revealing to the world its wings adorned
with vivid shades of Oranje. The winners were the brides. It was
their day, but the Dutch sides were more beautiful, yet so fragile,
and football loved them for it. This isn't merely a tale of
bridesmaids who came so close yet failed gloriously. It is the
celebration of a footballing counter-culture, a revolution, a flame
that burned so brightly, but so briefly. It's the story of those
Beautiful Bridesmaids Dressed in Oranje.
Across the history of football, a select group of teams have
achieved iconic status. Sometimes it's through sheer success. For
others, their stature is built by star performers. On occasions,
it's because a team has gifted a new way of playing to the world.
Most rarely it's because of all three. The Ajax teams that
conquered Europe with their enthralling 'totaalvoetbal' are one of
those rare cases. Those Dutch artists used the pitch as their
canvas, the skills of the players provided a palette of gloriously
bright colours and their totaalvoetbal inspired the brushstrokes
that delivered masterpieces of football creativity. The Dutch
Masters is the entrancing tale of how that iconic white shirt with
a broad red band down its centre not only became synonymous with
the beautiful game of totaalvoetbal, but also symbolised the
success of the club that created a new paradigm of play. It's the
story of how Ajax came to dominate the European game as the epitome
of footballing perfection.
By the early months of 2012, it was clear that the appointment of
Andre Villas-Boas as head coach at Chelsea wasn't delivering the
required success. Instead, the club was spiralling towards its
worst season of the Roman Abramovich era. On 4 March, Villas-Boas
was dismissed, with his former assistant Roberto Di Matteo made
interim head coach until the end of the season. Struggling in the
league and with their place in the Champions League in peril, it
was an appointment designed to make the best of things until a
permanent replacement could be sought in the summer. Instead, under
Di Matteo's guidance, Chelsea embarked on a run of performances
that not only led to an FA Cup triumph, but resurrected their
European hopes with improbable victories over Napoli, Benfica and
Guardiola's all-conquering Barcelona before, against all odds,
winning the Champions League by defeating Bayern Munich in their
own stadium. This is the story of a triumph that came out of the
blue.
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