Tomorrow’s cup final between Feyenoord and Roda JC primarily interests supporters of the two clubs. After the match, the play-offs will draw more attention, albeit for the last time.
A year ago, the cup final featured the second and third-ranking teams in the competition: Ajax, which prevailed after penalties, and AZ. With the two teams who had battled champion PSV for the title until the very last minute, the closing match of a tournament that had never developed to its full potential actually took on a certain appeal, even for a broader audience. Viewers who had no attachment to any particular club were still interested in seeing how the losers in the fight for the title would play so short after their disillusionment.
The cup final could teach a lesson about the state of national club football – and that lesson was learned: in the end, Ajax proved to have a stronger mindset than the sadly fallen AZ. But none of these factors is relevant now that numbers 6 and 9 in the premier league, Feyenoord and Roda JC, are the finalists in tomorrow’s match in De Kuip stadium. Supporters from both clubs will be all wound up, but outsiders should not expect anything interesting.
Opponents of the play-offs were mainly bothered by the fact that the second-ranking team in the competition could be bumped out of the preliminary rounds of the Champions League in the extra series. That actually happened to AZ in the first edition, but not to Ajax in the following year. Above all, the opposing movement disregarded possible sporting benefits. An increase in the number of more intense matches could boost the mental resilience of both clubs and players in the longer term. An additional factor could be the tension, which had increased notably already, among all the ranks, and continued to rise until the final day of the tournament.