How Jordan Henderson fared on Ajax debut in front of Gareth Southgate

  • Henderson made his debut for Ajax in a 1-1 draw with PSV on Saturday night
  • England manager Gareth Southgate was at the Johan Cruyff ArenA
  • The former Liverpool midfielder was heavily criticised in the Dutch press

Jordan Henderson made his first appearance for Ajax in De Topper with the England manager looking on
Jordan Henderson made his first appearance for Ajax in De Topper with the England manager looking on / ANP/GettyImages
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Jordan Henderson's last appearance for Al Ettifaq was a 1-1 draw with Al Hazem played in front of barely 5,000 people and more than 20,000 empty seats. A month later, Henderson's debut for Ajax ended in the same result but was conducted in a remarkably different atmosphere.

Clashes between Ajax and PSV Eindhoven, a rivalry known as De Topper in the Netherlands, are always noteworthy occasions. Yet, there was an extra ripple of excitement coursing through the 50,000 fans stuffed into the Johan Cruyff ArenA on Saturday evening.

Henderson's controversial move to Saudi Arabia followed by an expensive exit just six months later has inspired widespread derision. But not in Amsterdam. Unverified reports claimed that Henderson's number six shirt had broken records for its popularity, while everyone associated with the club has stumbled over themselves to praise their new signing.

With England manager Gareth Southgate watching on, here's how Henderson fared on his return to European club football.


Jordan Henderson vs PSV

In every walk of life, a successful figure who hangs around long enough starts to become a parody of themselves. They stop searching for the most appropriate solution and simply fall back upon the most characteristic option. Henderson, on a night when he admitted to pre-match nerves, fell into this trap.

Throughout a particularly cautious first half, Henderson scarcely ventured over the halfway line, completing 23 of his 24 passes which were almost exclusively sideways or backwards. As the stadium announcer lingered over his name when reading out the team sheet, a roar rang around the ground. By the interval, the running joke was whether Henderson would eventually make his debut in the second half.

Henderson tentatively eased into the next 45 minutes, peppering the contest with his trademark bellowing and pointing, although when his index finger wasn't outstretched his hand was constantly hovering over the handbrake.

PSV effectively chiselled their name into the Eredivisie trophy with a staggering sequence of 17 consecutive league wins to begin the campaign. However, a spate of injuries to start the new year has suddenly hampered Peter Bosz's runaway leaders and Ajax held the Eindhoven outfit to their second draw in as many away games.

To borrow a Dutch expression, Henderson could generously be credited for acting as the cement between the bricks in Ajax's midfield. Aside from a shaky final ten minutes to the first half after shipping Hirving Lozano's equaliser, the hosts were solid. With Henderson at the base of midfield, Ajax limited PSV to just five shots on target - the lowest tally the leaders have been able to muster against any top-flight team this season.

Incoming manager John van 't Schip has provided Ajax with an extra layer of stability which predates Henderson's arrival. Saturday's draw, which leaves the Dutch giants in fifth place, extended his tenure to 12 unbeaten outings since taking over in October.

Van 't Schip hailed Henderson's fitness after the match and insisted that the Englishman is "important for this team". The Dutch press was not quite so optimistic. "In one fell swoop, Henderson burst the balloon of expectations and put an end to the Henderson hype himself," Valentijn Driessen wrote in De Telegraaf, scorn dripping from the page of his scathing review.

Southgate is not only familiar with Henderson's signature cocktail of caution and cajoling but loves it. The England boss continued to select Henderson when he moved to Saudi Arabia - a decision openly questioned by a dissenting Wembley Stadium last October - and saw nothing on Saturday that would have changed his staunch approval of the 33-year-old.


How much did Jordan Henderson cost Ajax?

Barely six months after pledging to "grow the league into one of the best in the world", Henderson was desperate to leave the Saudi Pro League. Despite initial reports suggesting that Al Ettifaq had no intention of losing their new captain, the club agreed to terminate Henderson's contract in January, allowing him to join Ajax without a transfer fee.

Henderson quashed claims that he earned £700,000-per-week in the Kingdom but admitted that it was "good money", with most estimates revolving around a weekly salary of £350,000.

Ajax tied Henderson to a two-and-a-half year contract on roughly £74,000-per-week alongside a £1.3m signing-on bonus (per De Telegraaf).


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