Audio By Carbonatix
Ajax Amsterdam boss Erik ten Hag believes the club's fortunes in the Champions League could have been different had the likes of Ghanaian midfielder Mohammed Kudus maintained fitness during the campaign.
The Dutch giants have been dumped out of the elite European inter-club championship after finishing third in Group D behind Liverpool and Italian outfit Atalanta.
A summer signing, Kudus was substituted after just six minutes on his Champions League debut when Ajax hosted Liverpool on matchday one of the competition in October.
"If everything had gone well, we could have qualified for the knockout phase. That was just not our expectations. We've lost core players for seven years in two years," ten Hag said, as reported by AD.
"The reality is that we don't have a Champions League side at the moment. We have to build on that again.
"Players like [David] Neres and Kudus, like [Ryan] Gravenberch, could have made a great move in their development had they been fit. Then it might have been possible [to qualify to the knockout stage]."
Ajax signed Kudus from Danish fold Nordsjaelland in a five-year deal in July. He was just beginning to find his feet in Amsterdam when he suffered the injury setback.
The 20-year-old has, however, resumed training after two months in the treatment room.
"A certain, broad core is needed, especially now that a lot of matches are coming up," ten Hag explained.
"All we can do is make sure we take action and have a wide selection so that we can accommodate it. It is not so important what our competitors are doing.
"What matters is what we do. Conditionally we are good. Hopefully a number of players will reconnect soon. If we have to play with this group in January, it will be tough. If you look back this year, we have had immense problems.
"The injuries of [Hakim] Ziyech, [Daley] Blind, Kudus and Neres. All strongholds who can make a difference. But we were able to absorb it all in terms of football."
Kudus is expected to complete his injury return when Ajax face rivals PSV after the Christmas break in January.
Latest Stories
-
The Bank of Ghana is winning the inflation war, but who will pay the hospital bill?
3 minutes -
BECE candidates stranded as Nyankrom residents block roads over ‘death trap’ network
4 minutes -
Walking on One Leg of the Tripod: The IMF endgame in Ghana
5 minutes -
Jewish culture lights up Accra as Israel marks 78 years in Ghana
21 minutes -
World Relays 2026: Ibrahim Fuseini details how he missed flight to Botswana
33 minutes -
Kobby Kyei heads to Nairobi for Africa Forward Summit 2026
34 minutes -
What to know about hantavirus, suspected virus outbreak on Atlantic cruise ship
36 minutes -
Education Minister directs GES to reserve recruitment quota for persons with disabilities
39 minutes -
International Schools Tennis tournament uncovers young talent in Accra
42 minutes -
Mahama rallies chiefs, security agencies against rising drug abuse among youth
45 minutes -
Lifeline for Afife R/C Primary School as JOBerg supports GETFund with GH¢2.25m for classroom and toilet project
45 minutes -
Josh Blakk drops live EP as he eyes Best Male Vocal honour at TGMA
46 minutes -
Beyond the headlines: Rethinking emergency care in Ghana
49 minutes -
Ghana facing moral decline in leadership across institutions – Prof Karikari
50 minutes -
Play House: DJ Mensah launches state-of-the-art recording studio in Accra
59 minutes