Donny van de Beek presses pause before delivering telling blow for Ajax | Barney Ronay

Ajaxs Dutch academy product Donny van de Beek made all the difference early on when Tottenham hardly knew what was coming at them in the Champions League semi-final first leg

With 15 minutes gone at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium there was a moment where the air seemed to disappear out of the ground, sucked up past the roofline into that gentle powder blue.

Ajax had just produced a startlingly smooth piece of football, midfield and attack functioning like limbs joined to the same shared brain. Hakim Ziyech provided the ignition with a lovely flighted pass out to David Neres on the left. Another slick cross-field pass from Lasse Schne took it back to Ziyech.

From there the ball was laid into the feet of Donny van de Beek, who was irresistible in those opening 20 minutes, a player running undiscovered patterns, finding strange angles, spaces that shouldnt be there.

Van de Beek let the ball run across his body, leaving Danny Rose scrabbling the wrong side, and opening up a route to goal. Spurs had been filleted in five swift strokes of the blade.

Donny van de Beek found a pocket of space behind Danny Rose in the build-up to Ajaxs goal. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

Then came the moment of stillness as Van de Beek did something unexpected: he paused. Then he shimmied, looked up and passed the ball into the corner of the net before veering away in joy towards his teammates.

Scrolling back over that moment, scratching ones head at the vision and movement, it turned out Van de Beek had started the move too, spinning away from two players and giving the ball to Ziyech.

A few minutes later he did something similarly outrageous to the right side of the Spurs defence, gouging out a pocket of space by basically running away from the ball, then turning into the grass behind for the return from Dusan Tadic.

A 2-0 lead then would have been a killer in more ways than one. An early away goal is always a setback. But Spurs were being pulled apart in that early period, bystanders at an exhibition of the most finely wrought, gently merciless attacking football.

Davinson Snchez may have had more awkward, uncomfortable half-hours, but not many that would be safe to broadcast without a parental warning. For a while Victor Wanyama looked lost.

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There was a moment where he tried to turn two different ways at once as the ball was diverted across him, legs running in opposite directions, like a man sawn in half.

And still they kept on coming. The strange thing about this Ajax team only seems strange until theyre in front of you doing it: and then you wonder why everyone else isnt.

Under Erik ten Hags system at least four players are given freedom basically to make the game up, to run their own patterns, find the parts as they fall. Just imagine. Footballers being encouraged to think creatively, to manage themselves on the pitch. Itll never catch on.

At those moments it was fun just watching Frenkie De Jong, the extra man at the back, the extra man in attack and no doubt the extra man in goal if the rules allowed.

De Jong even runs a bit like Johan Cruyff, romping about with the same bandy-legged style. He stood wide on the left for a bit. He came to the right and intercepted, playing a little pass with the outside of his foot. At times like these it is like watching the head of football join in with the Under-12s, running the session in a courteous, understated way, the games designated grown-up.

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