The film opens in Amsterdam to the singing of crowds, the backdrops of the Amsterdam Arena, of the Nou Camp, and the famous This Is Anfield sign. Dutch sports journalist David Endt speaks about how Litmanen is heart, watching him is like jazz. Photos of Jari in action for MYPA, Ajax and Barcelona merge into one another.
The first real action clip is from a match between Reipas (who became FC Lahti after merging with FC Kuusysi) versus OTP in April 1988. It's been snowing, the players are in tracksuit bottoms. If you can look past the stonewashed denim and blond mullet, a very slight, nimble Reipas forward wearing number 17 has his back to goal, throws himself in the air, and strikes the ball cleanly into the goal.
Fast forward 22 years to September 2010, to the 87th minute of AC Oulu v FC Lahti, and the score is 1-1. A ball is tossed into the penalty area, where a slight, nimble Lahti forward wearing number 10 has his back to goal (12 yards out), chests the ball expertly, and scores an acrobatic bicycle kick. Jari Litmanen's goal won the match for Lahti, but unfortunately didn't save them from relegation.
Jari's overhead goal for Lahti in 2010
We meet Miska, who had a rather elaborate tattoo of Jari on his left
thigh, in his words "the undisputed king of Finnish football", in
celebration of one of the coolest goals in history. Former Ajax teammate
Edwin van der Sar talks about how he saw the goal on the internet and
couldn't quite believe it, how he's still exceptional.
We return to Lahti in 2010, at the unveiling of a statue in honour of Jari, and we meet a fan who has travelled all the way from China to meet his hero. Current Finnish president (then head of the FA) Sauli Niinistö calls Jari an ambassador of football, Finnish football and Finland. Jari himself hopes that the statue is more durable than himself...
We return to Lahti in 2010, at the unveiling of a statue in honour of Jari, and we meet a fan who has travelled all the way from China to meet his hero. Current Finnish president (then head of the FA) Sauli Niinistö calls Jari an ambassador of football, Finnish football and Finland. Jari himself hopes that the statue is more durable than himself...
The statue of Jari in Lahti
Jari's father Olavi talks of the time when Jari was
only a couple of months old, how the stadium noise would wake him. His
father was a Reipas player himself, spending his entire career with the
club. Jari's mother Liisa played for Reipa's women's team in the 1970s,
and spoke about how her and Jari would play football in the garden, as
well as Jari practising on his own in the garden, knocking flowers all
over the place.
It's in this section where we first meet Jari, dressed in a purple roll-neck jumper eating sushi. He talks about the day when he was younger, wanting his mother to get his football from the shed, despite the weather being -20c. When mother refused, he broke the glass. Even his dad said that he'd have been punished but it was for football so he relented...
It's in this section where we first meet Jari, dressed in a purple roll-neck jumper eating sushi. He talks about the day when he was younger, wanting his mother to get his football from the shed, despite the weather being -20c. When mother refused, he broke the glass. Even his dad said that he'd have been punished but it was for football so he relented...
Suave Jari
Lahti coach (and Jari's friend) Tommi Kautonen talks
about how focused Jari was from a young age, that it was obvious he'd
leave Finland after his army days. When a junior, he'd often play in
teams one or two years older than himself.
Jari talks about playing in the 1980 Helsinki Cup, where he scored the winning goal against Tuusula Palloseura. His scrapbooks are getting plenty of airing in this film. The next clip is a news report from when a 16-year-old Jari scored in the Lahti cup final, after just 60 seconds. Jari reveals his embarrassment at receiving an electric razor as a prize, when he wasn't quite ready to shave for a while yet...
Jari talks about playing in the 1980 Helsinki Cup, where he scored the winning goal against Tuusula Palloseura. His scrapbooks are getting plenty of airing in this film. The next clip is a news report from when a 16-year-old Jari scored in the Lahti cup final, after just 60 seconds. Jari reveals his embarrassment at receiving an electric razor as a prize, when he wasn't quite ready to shave for a while yet...
Jari and his trophy (and razor)
Jari takes us for a walk around the Lahti suurhalli, where he'd play
football before, during and after school. Legendary Finnish football
'custodian' Gunnar Yliharju saw him and enquired if he was a truant "Why
doesn't he go to school"?
Scoring his eighth goal of the season for Reipas
Jari made it into the first team at Reipas, and an interview after a
match in which he said football was his priority over school. Before
long, he received his first international call-up, for Finland against
Trinidad and Tobago in October 1989. National coach Jukka Vakkila spoke
of how he had heard that Jari was too slow at international level, but
he promoted him from the under-21s and it was a fine moment as they won
1-0.
Jari on early international duty
Vakkila goes on to praise Jari's natural first touch, and his amazing
ability to read the game. His ability to make mediocre players better,
and to improve the ryhthm of a game is the sign of a good player.
One of Litmanen's later national coaches Roy Hodgson spoke about how he wanted to sign him while he was in charge of Swiss club Neuchâtel
Xamax in 1991, but he was on his way to coach the Swiss national team
and Jari apparently saw it as too much of a risk.
Jari talks of his
training camp in Barcelona with Johan Cruyff in 1991, describing it as
quite an experience for a Finnish boy to train with Koeman, Stoichkov
and Laudrup (as well as referencing a young Pep Guardiola). That was the
famous 'dream team', who won the European Cup at Wembley the following
year.
A young Jari with Johan Cruyff (far left) in 1991
The film quickly
moves around his spells with HJK and MYPA, interspersed with talk of his
army career. There was also cursory mentions of enquiries made by Leeds
United and PSV Eindhoven. Jari spoke about how good an education HJK
was.
It was during this
spell that sees perhaps the biggest insight to Jari's personal life. His
cousin died in a motorcycle accident while Jari was in the army, and it
affected him hugely. Jari is fighting back the tears as he describes
his cousin as a big brother. His cousin had played football as well, and
it helped drive Jari onwards, as it's what his cousin would have
wanted.
MYPA 1992, also featuring a young Sami Hyypiä
Jari signed for MYPA in 1992 in a surprising move, as MYPA themselves
admitted he was probably too good to remain in Finland. He didn't stay
long, but he won the Suomen Cup with them in July 1992, his first senior
trophy. Hyypiä speaks knowingly about Jari, that his abilities would
take him far.
Litmanen's goal in the 1992 Finnish Cup final (from ESPN)
Ajax scout Ton Pronk was at the Suomen Cup final in 1992, and saw Jari.
He describes the final as a "bad, bad, bad game" but he felt in his
heart that Litmanen had the qualities that Ajax looks for, that he was
the man. It was his preparations for the game that made him stand out
initially, and he went off to Amsterdam... Where he was met by Ton, who
took him straight to pre-season training, and this is where Louis van
Gaal takes over.
Jari's first Ajax coach Louis van Gaal
Initially van Gaal wasn't impressed - Pronk had said he was at the right
level, and had to convince van Gaal that Jari deserved to stay for the
rest of the week, and Danny Blind describes how it was only a spate of
injuries that meant Litmanen would get a fair go. It was only in small
exercises that Jari first shone, the coach spoke glowingly about
Litmanen's first touch, his ability to find space. He knew he'd make a
perfect number 10, and fielded him in that position against an amateur
side. Jari scored four goals.
Pronk smiles when van Gaal told him he was right after all...
Pronk smiles when van Gaal told him he was right after all...
Jari vs Portsmouth, Lahti 1993
Jari was happy to play as a number 10, but his expectations were
managed, he was told he wouldn't play much because of Dennis Bergkamp.
In a Finnish news clip, he was asked why he left MYPA, where he said it
was for footballing reasons.
Litmanen arrives at Ajax's very modern looking training ground in
February 2012, and meets some old friends. Coach Frank de Boer and
director of football Marc Overmars both receive warm embraces, before David Endt talks about Jari being seen as a rather
unspectacular signing.
Captain Danny Blind remembers a young Jari
Danny Blind joins us, reminding that he and Frank Rijkaard were the
elder statesmen of the team being in their early 30s, while the rest of
the squad were in their late teens and early 20s. But he saw it their
responsibility to help the younger foreign players settle in. Jari
agrees, saying that he didn't feel like an outsider, and that as they
all had one goal, it made life a lot easier.
Van Gaal eulogised that Litmanen's skill helped him settle, and that he
was so open to learn from the coaches and players that it was only a
matter of time. He had already started learning from Dennis Bergkamp,
who was due to move to Spain in 1993.
Dennis himself speaks about the special position of 'shadow striker'
that he had made his own. He knew Ajax were looking for other players to
replace him, and initially Dan Petersen was the more likely candidate.
Jari's predecessor Dennis Bergkamp
Blind talks of van Gaal's early preference for Petersen, until the
moment Jari got a run in the team. The coach himself had assumed that
Litmanen was more of an attacking midfielder than a second forward, but
his vision and awareness of space set him apart, plus he would defend
more than Bergkamp...
Dennis left for Inter Milan in 1993, not Spain, and the captain
described it as the beginning of a fantastic period for the club and for
Jari. We see some clips of Jari lifting some trophies in his early
days, the Dutch Super Cup in 1993 and 94, and the Eredivisie in 1994 as
well.
At the old Ajax stadium
We return to Jari walking around Ajax's then home, the Olympisch
Stadion. He talks of his finest games being played in this ground, and
his first great goal, a solo effort against PSV Eindhoven (below). Jari
ended that season as top scorer with 26 goals, and was voted Footballer
of the Year, an honour he prized.
Jari's first great goal for Ajax
He was happy with the style of football that Ajax played, just like
Barcelona but not quite at the same level. It was a team of individuals,
which emphasised his own skills of moving between the lines. Van Gaal
was pleased that he had developed Jari more, that he was always open for
the next pass. Litmanen reckons that Ajax (and the coach) improved him
by 10-15%, as he feels like Finland had taught him the basics.
Goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar remembered how keen Litmanen was to stay behind after training, with Marc Overmars and Edgar Davids, crossing and shooting at the keeper. His other former team-mates join in, Ronald de Boer was surprised by his determination, and Blind impressed with his focus and shooting techniques.
Not a bad couple of players
Overmars however gently mocked Litmanen's stretching techniques, using
tubes to stretch with. Frank de Boer joins in, laughing at how Jari
would even stretch in the bathroom for ages, but how he learnt the Dutch
sense of humour. Van der Sar smiled when thinking of how he took it to
the extreme.
An old interview with Rijkaard is shown from 1994, where he talks of
Jari being their strongest player, and the main attraction. Van Gaal
talks of the marvellous season, all the goals. Sami Hyypiä returns, and
remembers when he played for Willem II, and how Litmanen destroyed them
on the day they clinched the title - go too near him and he drops
further back, or give him space and he'll play the killer pass.
Jari and Jari and Jari and Jari and Jari...
A chat with a rather eccentric Dutch man reveals how his pregnant
girlfriend may call their child Jari, and then we find an interesting
fact - since the mid-1990s, there had been 1587 boys born in Holland
called Jari... The photo above shows the original with some of his
namesakes. Even van der Sar's sister had a cat called Jari.
So to his greatest triumph, the 1994-95 European Cup. The first footage
we see is from the group stage clash against the holders AC Milan. Jari
and Rijkaard dominated, and we see Jari score from an Overmars cross,
while van der Sar talked happily about wanting to swap shirts with their
opponents.
Highlights of Ajax 2-0 Milan
Jari remembers winning both group games against Milan, both 2-0, and
that he scored in both games. He scored a goal which was deemed strange
by David Endt, by the way he narrowed the angle... But Jari used his
early days as an ice hockey player, by committing the goalkeeper and
putting it into the opposite corner.
The next real footage concentrates on Ajax's semi-final victory over Bayern Munich. The first leg in Bavaria finished 0-0, but the second leg was what Endt describes as one of Litmanen's finest. Ronald de Boer reckons that this Ajax team were the best in the world of that period, and this game would help that claim. After scoring the first goal, Jari was under a huge pile of players, and could only recognise himself from the boots.
But the real classy goal was to come, and it wasn't even scored by Jari (although he was involved). Overmars cut in from the right, rolled the ball along the edge of the box towards Litmanen. But he stepped over the ball, fooling the defender, while Finidi George strode forward and struck a beauty into the top right corner. Ajax went onto win the match, and the tie, 5-2, and reach the final where they'd face Milan again, in Vienna.
The next real footage concentrates on Ajax's semi-final victory over Bayern Munich. The first leg in Bavaria finished 0-0, but the second leg was what Endt describes as one of Litmanen's finest. Ronald de Boer reckons that this Ajax team were the best in the world of that period, and this game would help that claim. After scoring the first goal, Jari was under a huge pile of players, and could only recognise himself from the boots.
But the real classy goal was to come, and it wasn't even scored by Jari (although he was involved). Overmars cut in from the right, rolled the ball along the edge of the box towards Litmanen. But he stepped over the ball, fooling the defender, while Finidi George strode forward and struck a beauty into the top right corner. Ajax went onto win the match, and the tie, 5-2, and reach the final where they'd face Milan again, in Vienna.
Highlights of Ajax 5-2 Bayern Munich
David Endt tells us that while Jari was ultimately happy to win the cup
(come on, you all know how it ends), his biggest regret was that he
couldn't put his stamp on the final. A temperature and some allergy
problems meant he played below his usual standards, and was replaced by
the match-winner Patrick Kluivert after seventy minutes, while Van Gaal
said he knew it was a close game.
Highlights of the 1995 European Cup final
After the match, Jari sat proudly with the trophy while he was
interviewed, and said it was the highlight of his football career. The
three years had been a fantastic time, but that he believed that it
wasn't the end.
With the Big Cup
We re-join Jari in 2012 as he looks at the jersey he wore in the final,
along with the associated trinkets. It felt wonderful then, and looking
back it was a highlight. If he had to choose one moment from his career,
that would be it.
Jari's shirt from the 1995 final
The next scene is on the canals of Amsterdam, with seemingly the entire
city celebrating the triumph. He admits it's nothing like anything in
Finland, and the triumph crowned an unbelievable year. We see Jari
presented with that year's Intercontinental Cup, won against Gremio in
Japan in front of 47,000.
We see a clip of Litmanen receiving his silver medal in 1996. Despite scoring in the final, and in the penalty shootout, Juventus won the cup with big ears. Not a lot was said about this game... Although the general vibe was that it was a huge disappointment.
We see a clip of Litmanen receiving his silver medal in 1996. Despite scoring in the final, and in the penalty shootout, Juventus won the cup with big ears. Not a lot was said about this game... Although the general vibe was that it was a huge disappointment.
Runner-up in 1996
We meet some die-hard Ajax fans, with huge Litmanen jersey collections,
including their efforts to get to Lahti in 2010 to get his latest
Jersey. Even more people show off some tattoos of their hero... A Finn
living in Amsterdam used him as her inspiration to recover from a
serious illness, and she lived to tell the tale.
So the Ajax spell ends, and fast-forwards to 2011 and his return to
Helsinki. Here's a clip of Jari Litmanen's top 10 Ajax goals.
Jari's top 10 Ajax goals
Back at Helsinki
After
leaving Ajax, we see Jari being unveiled at HJK in Helsinki in 2011 -
and news footage about his statue in Lahti being vandalised. The head
had been damaged, while the base had been burned and cracked. Litmanen
said it was getting harder, and that Lahti had been another chapter in
the road.
The first of several clips of Jari in hospital follow, with a doctor discussing the results of an MRI scan on his left knee...
We return to his later Ajax days, the failure in the 1996 Champions League final (despite Jari scoring in the match, and converting in the shootout), and his only red card for Ajax, at Volendam in 1997.
The first of several clips of Jari in hospital follow, with a doctor discussing the results of an MRI scan on his left knee...
We return to his later Ajax days, the failure in the 1996 Champions League final (despite Jari scoring in the match, and converting in the shootout), and his only red card for Ajax, at Volendam in 1997.
Sent off (around 2:30)
The
red card was so out of character that Danny Blind went round to Jari's
house after the game to ask if anything was wrong at home... Jari said
he'd run into space, and straight into a fist. The defender had been
harassing him, and decided to knee him in the stomach. Team manager
David Endt talked of how often Jari was kicked, that this was the only
time he reacted - was the solitary red card a sign of his sportsmanship?
Jari talks of his final days at Ajax being littered with injury. He may stay fit for a month, then be out for a month. Ronald de Boer called him the glass man, and recalls a time when Jari played a rare ninety minutes, then hurt his back getting into his Corvette. Louis van Gaal was of the opinion that Jari wasn't mentally strong during injury. Jari himself mentioned how constantly playing 2 games a week was crazy, and needed pain relief to focus more on games.
Jari talks of his final days at Ajax being littered with injury. He may stay fit for a month, then be out for a month. Ronald de Boer called him the glass man, and recalls a time when Jari played a rare ninety minutes, then hurt his back getting into his Corvette. Louis van Gaal was of the opinion that Jari wasn't mentally strong during injury. Jari himself mentioned how constantly playing 2 games a week was crazy, and needed pain relief to focus more on games.
Jari receives treatment
Physio Jari-Pekka
Keurulainen
reckons Jari's right ankle should have been operated on in the 1990s,
but it wasn't done until 2006. Jari's first operation was in 1984, yet
he still carried on playing football with a cast on his right leg. Tommi
Kautonen was told that it was fine, and laughs at Jari's insistance on
playing on with it.
Ronald de Boer and Edwin van der Sar joked about how often Jari spent in the physio room, so much that he had his own bed - even the Ajax physio Pim van Dord joined in, saying there was one bed he wouldn't allow anyone else to use.
So Jari's final home game (also the final match of Danny Blind and van der Sar) was at home to RKC Waalwijk on May 16th 1999. A 2-0 victory, sealed with Litmanen tapping the ball into an empty net. At the final whistle, the three departing players were in tears, and Jari gave the crowd an emotional speech, thanking the fans for their wonderful support. David Endt had to withdraw himself to the dressing room in tears.
Ronald de Boer and Edwin van der Sar joked about how often Jari spent in the physio room, so much that he had his own bed - even the Ajax physio Pim van Dord joined in, saying there was one bed he wouldn't allow anyone else to use.
So Jari's final home game (also the final match of Danny Blind and van der Sar) was at home to RKC Waalwijk on May 16th 1999. A 2-0 victory, sealed with Litmanen tapping the ball into an empty net. At the final whistle, the three departing players were in tears, and Jari gave the crowd an emotional speech, thanking the fans for their wonderful support. David Endt had to withdraw himself to the dressing room in tears.
Saying farewell
Jari
described the changing of Ajax, that most of his former colleagues had
left, and was left with a decision - sign a new deal and never leave, or
see something else.
And so we see Jari in the Nou Camp, Barcelona...
And so we see Jari in the Nou Camp, Barcelona...
Surveying his former stomping ground
At
the Barcelona training ground, Jari is reunited with former team-mates
(and current Barcelona starts) Carles Puyol and Xavi. Jari said he'd
seen the Spanish league, and Barcelona as one of the biggest clubs in
the world (remember Jari had trained with the club in 1992, see part 1).
The coach Louis van Gaal wanted him, and he knew several of the players
from Holland, as van Gaal had brought with him several Dutch players
(Reiziger, both de Boer brothers, Cocu, Kluivert, Bogarde, Zenden).
Inside the Nou Camp, Litmanen uses his hometown of Lahti as a point of reference - Lahti's population was around 100,000, only slightly larger than the capacity of the stadium. He walks along the turf, commenting on the perfect pitch.
Carles Puyol said they knew of him previously, such a skilled player at Ajax. He even said he blew fire into the team. Xavi talks of being an 18-19 year old beginner, finding life under van Gaal difficult. Jari became a friend, always helping and becoming encouraging. Van Gaal suggested to Xavi to watch Jari play and practise, to learn his control and making space.
Inside the Nou Camp, Litmanen uses his hometown of Lahti as a point of reference - Lahti's population was around 100,000, only slightly larger than the capacity of the stadium. He walks along the turf, commenting on the perfect pitch.
Carles Puyol said they knew of him previously, such a skilled player at Ajax. He even said he blew fire into the team. Xavi talks of being an 18-19 year old beginner, finding life under van Gaal difficult. Jari became a friend, always helping and becoming encouraging. Van Gaal suggested to Xavi to watch Jari play and practise, to learn his control and making space.
Carles Puyol Xavi
Puyol
recalls Jari staying after training to practise his shooting, Xavi
remembered how he'd line up 7-8 balls and shoot them all into the net.
Then the talk of saunas... Xavi remembered Jari having a sauna every
day, walking in naked but for his football boots, advising how they
mould to the foot better... Even Jari's cobbler back in Lahti remembers
getting a bag of boots from Barcelona. Jari had a particular requirement
for stud placement at the rear of the boot for more support, and he
trusted Tuomo Rokka.
Back
to Jari on the pitch, he admits not scoring many goals, but a special
one from a Kluivert pass. He said there were 3 to 4 internationals in
each position, and when fit he'd need to compete with them, but the
first season was difficult with injuries.
A
candid van Gaal admits that Jari found it hard, the system was set for
him with two number 10s, but the pace of Spain compared to Holland
didn't help. Van Gaal was replaced by Llorenç Serra Ferrer,
and Jari was told he'd need a new club. Then teammate Marc Overmars
said it was due to the club having no structure on or off the pitch. In
January 2001 Jari moved to the club he supported as a boy...
"We always touch the sign"
Litmanen was signed by Gerard Houllier in the season Liverpool won three trophies (FA Cup, League Cup, UEFA Cup). Jari admitted that as boy he had supported Liverpool, and that this was the third time they had tried to sign him. We also hear Jari speak English for the first time, at the first press conference, talking of his favourite players being Kevin Keegan and Kenny Dalglish as they'd played in his position.
He chose to wear the number 37 shirt (3+7 = 10), as Smicer had the famous 7 shirt, and Michael Owen had the number 10 jersey. His new boss enthused about Jari's different qualities, and how they'd compliment his current strikers (Owen, Robbie Fowler, Emile Heskey).
Current Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard was in the squad when Jari arrived, and like Xavi was full of praise for Litmanen's way with younger players, being supportive. But it was his skill in training that amazed Gerrard, his movement and skill a class apart.
The heavy Scouse accent required subtitles
We see some footage of Jari scoring his first Liverpool goal, a penalty at Sunderland, while Edwin van der Sar recalls how he misjudged a bounce while playing for Fulham at Craven Cottage, and Litmanen beat him and rolled the ball into an open goal, although he was hoping that the producers of the DVD wouldn't find footage of the goal.
Jari spoke about the difficulties he found at Liverpool with the management. Houllier became ill, and was replaced for a number of months by assistant Phil Thompson. Jari was playing well at the time, and used the English saying "Never change a winning team". But Thompson did, and tolf Jari he wouldn't be playing much again. Even when Houillier returned, Jari found appearances hard to come by.
Highlights of Liverpool v Roma, 2001/02
There's footage of a match between England and Finland at Anfield in 2001, where Jari broke his arm after a challenge with Rio Ferdinand (we'll cover this match in part 4), but it was here where his inury problems started at Liverpool.
Gerrard wishes Jari had stayed longer, to offer more to the club, and he was frustrated that Jari would sit unused on the bench, as he could create things from nothing. Sami Hyypiä was also surprised his compatriot didn't feature, as Jari was the best player in training and 5-a-side matches. Finland goalkeeper Antti Niemi recalls reading FourFourTwo magazine,
where the president of a Liverpool supporter club said he wished Jari
would leave the club, if only so that other people would get to enjoy watching him play.
So Jari came to the end of his Liverpool days in 2002 - so he decided to return to Ajax. But it wasn't straight-forward - he said he was offered a laughable contract, but thought it wasn't about the money. But the negotiations hurt his pride, and he eventually decided to go anyway.
In his second spell at Ajax
But quite simply, the move didn't go very well. Ajax weren't the club they were in the mid 90s, and some of the younger players didn't take Jari seriously, despite him being the first for training, and the last to leave. David Endt randomly names two players in particular "let's call them Wesley and Rafael"
as laughing at him behind his back. Conveniently it was as Wesley
Sneijder and Rafael van der Vaart were celebrating a goal which Litmanen
assisted.
The only then-player to give good feedback on camera was Zlatan Ibrahimovic, then a raw 18 year old who had signed from Malmo. Zlatan (in English) said "He played behind me, he helped a lot and helped me improve. He was a quality player, easy to play with him and the combination was fantastic."
Endt described Zlatan as hungry to win and improve himself, he was big and wanted to show the world how good he was, but he had a small heart. Jari explains that the end of his second spell was very one-sided, he had no input and in 2004 he was released.
Antti Niemi remembers an international for Finland in Amsterdam, where their coach was halted by 500 Ajax fans trying to say farewell to their hero. They had flares, signs and it was a fantastic, emotional moment.
The rest of his club career is somewhat glossed over. He signed for FC Lahti in 2004, and quickly moved to German side Hansa Rostock in January 2005, who had fifteen games to avoid relegation from the Bundesliga. Despite his arrival, Rostock were relegated, but teammate Marcus Allbäck remembers Jari's enthusiasm, "he played with the football like a small child plays with a favourite toy".
It was in his next spell in Sweden (at Malmö) that Jari received one of the strangest injuries - in the dressing room after a game, he asked someone to open a bottle of drink for him. An unnamed teammate attempted it with a snuff box, and the cap of the bottle went straight into Jari's eye. Even now he has problems seeing in bright sunlight.
The rest of his club career gets glossed over. No mention of his short spell with Fulham (0 matches), and nothing additional about his return to Lahti or HJK.
The only then-player to give good feedback on camera was Zlatan Ibrahimovic, then a raw 18 year old who had signed from Malmo. Zlatan (in English) said "He played behind me, he helped a lot and helped me improve. He was a quality player, easy to play with him and the combination was fantastic."
Zlatan played with Jari for Ajax
Endt described Zlatan as hungry to win and improve himself, he was big and wanted to show the world how good he was, but he had a small heart. Jari explains that the end of his second spell was very one-sided, he had no input and in 2004 he was released.
Antti Niemi remembers an international for Finland in Amsterdam, where their coach was halted by 500 Ajax fans trying to say farewell to their hero. They had flares, signs and it was a fantastic, emotional moment.
The rest of his club career is somewhat glossed over. He signed for FC Lahti in 2004, and quickly moved to German side Hansa Rostock in January 2005, who had fifteen games to avoid relegation from the Bundesliga. Despite his arrival, Rostock were relegated, but teammate Marcus Allbäck remembers Jari's enthusiasm, "he played with the football like a small child plays with a favourite toy".
Rostock against Bayern Munich
It was in his next spell in Sweden (at Malmö) that Jari received one of the strangest injuries - in the dressing room after a game, he asked someone to open a bottle of drink for him. An unnamed teammate attempted it with a snuff box, and the cap of the bottle went straight into Jari's eye. Even now he has problems seeing in bright sunlight.
The rest of his club career gets glossed over. No mention of his short spell with Fulham (0 matches), and nothing additional about his return to Lahti or HJK.
The first real coverage of Jari in the national team jersey is the final fixture of World Cup 98 qualification at home to Hungary in 1997. (To clarify the timeline, this section came after Jari was sent off for Ajax v Volendam). In group 3, Norway had run away with the group, but the final fixture was betwee the Finns and the former mighty Magyars on October 11th 1997.
Finland had already gone 1-0 up through Antti Sumiala, when Mixu Paatelainen had a shot on goal right at the end of the game, which was deflected over. The referee awarded a goal kick, and Jari's protestations earned him a yellow card. Jari says "I protested the situation as it was so obvious, we'd have played the corner slowly so they wouldn't attack. It's football, a small decision for the ref but it changed the direction of the game".
Getting booked for dissent against Hungary
Hungary go up the other end of the pitch from the goal kick, and earn a free kick on the edge of the box, which goes out for a corner. As a result of the corner, an unlikely chain of events caused the ball to go in the Finland goal.
Jari recalls "It doesn't change that we defended in an amateur way, and when the ball went in I could hear the raindrops on my head. It was one of the biggest disappointments of my international career, we were so close. Even if we'd practised 1000 times, that wouldn't have happened again."
On his return to Ajax, he said the room went quiet, Edwin van der Sar came and hugged him.
Highlights v Hungary
The next match to get covered in detail is the Euro 2000 qualifier against Turkey in Istanbul. In October 1998, the Ali Sami Yen Stadium (then home to Galatasaray) was an intimidating place to visit, and made harder by Turkey's win against Germany four days earlier. Finland had started their campaign with a win against Moldova, and defeat to Northern Ireland. Jonatan Johansson talked about the atmosphere, the massive noise, the Police escort required, and he'd been hit on the head by a coin (you could see the bandage when he celebrated a goal later).
The match itself was brutal, several of the Finnish players were on the receiving end of harsh fouls, including Jari himself (see photo below). He was off the pitch receiving treatment at the same time as Johansson, while Mixu Paatelainen also received a knock. Keeper Antti Niemi was also hurt after a great save...
Johansson says he could sense a change in the atmosphere after he scored the second goal to put Finland 2-0 up, that some of the home fans were cheering them. Finland eventually won, Litmanen scoring the 3rd goal in injury time, and the game ended 3-1. Timo Walden, the national team's PR man, describe Jari's standing ovation, and how Jari got himself a Turkish flag to leave the pitch in.
Back at the team's hotel, Niemi broke a glass door near the swimming pool, but when the security guard came to investigate and saw Jari Litmanen, he seemed happy to meet the team. Johansson didn't remember that bit though because he'd had a bit too much to drink...
Fouled in Istanbul
Highlights v Turkey
Within the next section of the film, in Jari's spell at Liverpool, there
is coverage of an injury sustained for Finland against England, which
took place funnily enough at Anfield. As Jari was showing us around the
pitch, at the Anfield Road end, there was the place where he fell after a
challenge with Rio Ferdinand. "I fell a lot in my career, and this was
the unluckiest one".
Sami
Hyypiä tells the story "Unfortunately we lost 2-1 after a good game.
Jari could have made it 2-2, but it was unbelievable to hear what
happened to his arm. I heard the bone was in several parts." Finland
physio Jari-Pekka
Keurulainen said "It was only when we got to the dressing room
that he started passing out from the pain. It was the adrenaline which
kept him going." That injury caused Litmanen to miss Liverpool's final wins in the FA, League and UEFA cups in 2001.
Tussling with Rio Ferdinand, prior to breaking his wrist in 2001
Throughout the last part of the film, there are a few brief clips of Jari sat in a doctor's office, dressed in a gown, with crosses on his knees indicating where to operate. In May 2011, he's told he has a tear in his right knee. In January 2012, it's the left knee. "It's balanced". At the end of the film, we see Jari getting ready for surgery again, and probably not for the last time.
Prepped for surgery
As his second spell at Ajax was coming to an end, Finland faced the Netherlands in Amsterdam. Antti Niemi was amazed at his following - after the pre-match training session at the ground, 500 Ajax fans surrounded their bus, letting off flares and waving flags, all to say farewell to their hero. "Everyone on the bus realised what he means to the fans, you get emotional even for someone else's moment".
With family
The first time we see Litmanen with his family is at the 2007 Independence Day President's reception, only a fleeting sight. Talking about his children, Jari says "A friend told me it will turn your life upside down. But it does change your life, your values change." He talked about having lived with half a suitcase packed since 1992, ready for the next destination.
Hanging out with Dad (and grandad)
Jari's two children only feature twice, in the photos above, and aren't introduced. His partner again features twice, and doesn't say a word to the camera.
There is footage of the funeral of Jari's agent Heikki Marttinen in November 2010. Jari was a pallbearer at the funeral, while the camera films proceedings from a distance. Jari speaks (away from the funeral), and again he struggles to hold back the tears. He describes Heikki again as a father figure, who took care of his business, and supported him as a friend. "It was thanks to him that I transferred to Ajax, he was priceless help and support for me".
Returning to football, Hungary again had a part to play. After a defeat in Helsinki to Hungary in 2010, then-coach Stuart Baxter joins in. "There was a desire to change the team, that we should take away some of the more experienced players, so I wasn't sure which role Jari should have." Baxter recalls talking to Germany manager Jogi Low after a World Cup qualifier in 2009, where Low said Litmanen was his man of the match, as Germany needed a last minute equaliser to end 1-1.
Baxter was replaced, for one match only, by Olli Huttunen, for the home match against San Marino in Helsinki (the match was in November 2010, not October as the DVD caption states). Jari said "When Baxter left, the general atmosphere was that we needed to make the team younger, a new era". He seemed slightly irritated, ending with "there's no place for me".
The final international
Finland beat San Marino 8-0, Jari scored the sixth goal from the penalty spot. Antti Niemi says he's sure that Jari will play football for as long as he's alive, he loves the game so much. After the match, Jari is interviewed about the banners, big pictures of your face - "What sort of moment was that?". Litmanen was visibly moved, nearly in tears again, "You can probably see".
The music starts in the background, and David Endt, for one last time speaks, "Not even I know him completely, there's always something mysterious".
We end with a list of honours won by Litmanen throughout his career, over footage of numerous goals we've seen throughout the film. This montage is also available in the extras section. There's not a lot in there we haven't already seen, just some extra footage of clips, statue unveilings and tours.
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