Club Brugge manager Alfred Schreuder was yesterday appointed head coach of Dutch giants Ajax, replacing the massively successful Erik ten Hag, who is leaving for Manchester United.

“Ajax, Club Brugge and Alfred Schreuder have reached an agreement about a transfer to Ajax,” the club said in a statement.

Schreuder, 49, will take the helm at the Netherlands’ most successful club next month, with his contract running until June 30, 2024.

“Becoming head coach at Ajax is an honour and a great opportunity for me, which I’ll grab with both hands,” said Schreuder, who worked as Ten Hag’s assistant in 2018.

“It’s great to be back because I had a great time at Ajax for the year-and-half I worked at the club,” he added.

A former midfielder in the Dutch Eredivisie, Schreuder started his professional career at Feyenoord in 1991, before retiring in 2009, playing for Vitesse.

 

He became an assistant coach with the Arnhem-based club the same year, before switching to Twente in 2015.

After a stint as an assistant at the German TSG 1899 Hoffenheim, he went to Ajax, before going back to the German club.

In 2020 he joined Ronald Koeman as an assistant at Barcelona before getting the head coach job at Club Brugge.

“We know Alfred as a tactically strong coach with a good and versatile practice regime,” Ajax chief executive Edwin van der Sar said. “We are very confident that he will be able to continue the path we took with Ajax a few years ago, both in the Eredivisie and in the UEFA Champions League.”

Meanwhile, Ten Hag on Wednesday celebrated Ajax’s 36th  national title and the third in four completed seasons under his mentorship.

He is due to take over at Old Trafford in a few weeks’ time.

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