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Buy tickets for AFC Ajax vs Olympiakos Piraeus - Football – UEFA Champions League – Season 2025/2026 Buy tickets for AFC Ajax vs Olympiakos Piraeus - Football – UEFA Champions League – Season 2025/2026

Football – UEFA Champions League – Season 2025/2026 (8. round)
28. January 2026. 21:00h
AFC Ajax vs Olympiakos Piraeus
Johan Cruyff Arena, Amsterdam, NL
2026
28
January
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tickets for AFC Ajax vs Olympiakos Piraeus | UEFA Champions League 2025/26, Matchday 8 | Johan Cruijff ArenA, Amsterdam

Looking for tickets to AFC Ajax vs Olympiakos Piraeus at Johan Cruijff ArenA? Here you can check availability and complete your ticket purchase for UEFA Champions League 2025/26 Matchday 8, with practical tips on entrances, seating areas, getting to ArenA Boulevard 1 via Amsterdam Zuidoost and the full European-night atmosphere

A great European night in Amsterdam

When the floodlights come on at the Johan Cruijff ArenA and the stands fill up, Amsterdam gets that special European energy that makes tickets and seats sought after days in advance, while the city around the stadium lives to the rhythm of the match. In Matchday 8 of Football – UEFA Champions League, season 2025/2026, AFC Ajax host Olympiakos Piraeus in a slot that traditionally brings the greatest tension, because all matches of the final league-phase round are played at the same time. The game is played at Johan Cruijff Arena, ArenA Boulevard 1, Amsterdam, NL, and the expectation is that fan interest will grow as matchday approaches and as the standings scenario becomes clearer. On nights like these, tickets are not just paper or a QR code, but an entry into an atmosphere that stays with you—into the roar of the stands, the choreographies, and the feeling that you are part of a story bigger than ninety minutes. Tickets for this match disappear quickly, so buy your tickets in time via the button below and click the

label when ticket sales become available.

What Matchday 8 means in the Champions League league phase

The league phase in the 2025/2026 season has 36 clubs in one shared table, and each team plays eight matches, after which it is decided who advances directly, who must go through the playoffs, and who ends their European story. The top eight clubs advance directly to the round of 16, while teams from 9th to 24th place fight through the playoffs, so every late-season win is worth its weight in gold, and every point can be decisive on goal difference or head-to-head criteria. Ahead of the January denouement, Olympiakos are 29th after six matches with five points, while Ajax are 34th with three points, which clearly shows the pressure on both clubs before the final two rounds. That is exactly why tickets for this match are in demand, because fans sense this is one of those nights when a season can be turned in your favor—especially if results at other stadiums also fall into place. If you want to be part of that simultaneous European mini-finale, buying tickets becomes both a practical move and an emotional decision, because matches like these bring unique tension from the first to the last referee’s whistle.

Ajax’s European story this season

Ajax waited a long time for points in this league phase and only opened their account in Matchday 6, which brought the team relief, but also the awareness that every next step must be almost perfect. The key moment came away at Qarabag FK, where Ajax won 4–2 after a dramatic finish and three goals in the last fifteen minutes or so, and that turnaround showed the team has character and depth in its attacking arsenal. Oscar Gloukh stood out in that match with two goals, and the scorers also included Kasper Dolberg and Anton Gaaei, which is additionally important because it shows the danger does not come from just one area. Before that duel, Ajax had strung together defeats that pushed them to the bottom of the table, so the win in Baku was more than three points—it was also a psychological reset and a return of belief that a European winter can still be secured. Because of that, tickets for the home match with Olympiakos will carry extra weight, because fans want to see whether the team can bring that energy to the Johan Cruijff ArenA too, where the pressure—but also the support—grows minute by minute.

Players and ideas shaping Ajax’s game

In the current European season, Ajax rely on a combination of experience and youth, and that mixed structure often decides how the team reacts when a match becomes chaotic or when it needs to build attacks patiently. Oscar Gloukh has asserted himself as one of the creative solutions in midfield and a player who can produce a key action at the crucial moment, while Kasper Dolberg and Wout Weghorst are striker profiles that bring different types of finishing and different kinds of pressure on center-backs. In midfield, Davy Klaassen provides stability and experience in setting the match tempo, and in defense names like Josip Sutalo and Ko Itakura stand out—players who must hold the line and bring calm, secure distribution under pressure. On the flanks and in transition, Anton Gaaei can play a big role; he has already shown he can be a scorer too, which is especially important against an opponent that can defend deep and wait for the moment to counter. When those names are paired with the atmosphere of a full Arena, tickets become a path to an experience where every duel is clearly heard and every change of tempo is felt, and it is from the stands that you can best see how a team breathes on a European night.

Olympiakos and the fight for the playoff line

Olympiakos collected points through the first six rounds in matches that were often hard and tactically closed, and at the same time they had nights when they were punished for small mistakes or brief drops in concentration. They opened the competition with a 0–0 draw against Pafos, in a match where the opponent played with a man down for a long time, but Olympiakos could not break the block and missed out on a win that would have given them early momentum. After that came a defeat in London to Arsenal, and then a heavy defeat to Barcelona, which damaged the goal difference and further increased the pressure on the remaining fixtures. One of the key moments was the 1–1 draw against PSV, where Olympiakos led but conceded in stoppage time and dropped points that would matter greatly today in the battle for the top 24. Still, the 1–0 win against Kairat in Matchday 6 showed the team knows how to play maturely away from home and get a result, so it is clear why tickets for the trip to Amsterdam are followed with great interest, because the biggest turnarounds often happen in the final rounds.

Key threats from Piraeus and what the numbers say

Olympiakos have attackers at the top of the line who can score from a single chance, and in European matches that is often the difference between a point and empty hands—especially away from home. Ayoub El Kaabi is among the more prominent in terms of output in this league phase, and alongside him the threats include Gelson Martins and Chiquinho, players who like to attack space and take on one-on-one on the wing. Daniel Podence adds an extra dose of creativity between the lines, while Mehdi Taremi brings experience playing with his back to goal and the ability to win a foul or a penalty when the match is in the balance. In midfield, Dani Garcia and Santiago Hezze are types who must withstand the tempo and set pieces against a team that likes a high press, and in the back line names like Panagiotis Retsos and Lorenzo Pirola must endure surges and crosses. For fans hunting tickets, these duels are especially tempting because in one place you watch a clash of different styles, and in that collision details often decide—like a set piece, a duel at the far post, or one mistake in playing out from the back.

The tactical picture of the match and where it can turn

Ajax will naturally aim to control the ball and the rhythm at home, and that approach in Amsterdam often gains extra force because of the noise from the stands and the feeling that the team can push toward goal wave after wave. Olympiakos, on the other hand, have shown in a series of matches that they know how to wait for the moment and be dangerous in transition, especially when they win the ball in midfield and quickly switch play to the wings. One key duel could be the space between Ajax’s back line and midfield, where it will be decided whether the hosts can shut down counters or whether the visitors will find a through pass for fast players. The second big factor is set pieces, because in tense matches like this with lots of duels, corners and free kicks often decide it, and then it matters who jumps better and who stays calm in the crowd. For the crowd, it is a perfect recipe for a match where every contact is felt, so it is no surprise that ticket sales get an extra boost as the date approaches, because fans want to be where such battles can truly be seen and heard.

Johan Cruijff ArenA as a stage

The Johan Cruijff ArenA is a symbol of modern Amsterdam and Ajax’s home since it opened in 1996, and it is especially recognizable for its retractable roof, which changes the feel of a match depending on the weather and the atmosphere. The stadium’s capacity for football matches is about 55,865, and that number gives a sense of compactness and loudness because the stands sit close to the pitch and the sound stays within the structure. The stadium has gone through several phases of renovation and modernization, and besides football it regularly hosts major events, which contributes to the arrival experience, security protocols, and entry organization. Historically, the Arena has become the place where Ajax want to play their most important European matches, because it creates the feeling that the team gets an extra step—especially when the crowd senses the match can tip. That is exactly why tickets for European nights like this have added value, because besides the match you also get the experience of a stadium designed to be a spectacle in itself.

Amsterdam Zuidoost and getting to the match

The stadium is located in the southeastern part of the city, in a zone that has grown into a major entertainment and transport hub, so arriving is more straightforward than many expect when they first plan a trip to Amsterdam. The closest public-transport points that are often mentioned are Amsterdam Bijlmer ArenA and the Strandvliet metro station, and that layout allows fans to spread out and makes the approach to the stadium more fluid in the hours before kickoff. From the city center it is possible to get quickly by train to Bijlmer ArenA, and a typical trip from Amsterdam Centraal takes about twenty minutes, which is convenient for visitors who want to combine a city walk with a football night. Nearby there are other large arenas and event spaces, so the whole district on matchdays takes on a festival rhythm, with lots of fan colors and spontaneous gatherings. If you decide to buy tickets, it is smart to plan to arrive earlier, because the crowds at the entrances grow as kickoff approaches, and part of the experience is exactly that transition from the city bustle into a stadium that fills up and gets louder minute by minute.

Tickets, entrances, and practical details for visitors

For Champions League matches in Amsterdam, the most important thing is to count on heightened checks at the entrances and on the fact that the flow of people moves faster if you arrive early enough, which avoids stress and leaves time to find your sector. Tickets and passes are usually checked multiple times from the approach to your seat, and in addition you should pay attention to bag-entry rules and expected security procedures, which is standard at big European matches. Given that this is the final round of the league phase, the atmosphere can heat up further because other matches are played at the same time, so the stands often also follow the development of results in the background, which increases tension and crowd reactions. If you want to get to your seats without rushing and catch the opening energy, secure your tickets now and buy tickets via the button below as soon as ticket sales become available, because interest usually increases as matchday itself approaches. The most important thing is to click the button labeled

when you see it, because that is the fastest way to reach the ticket-purchase option and avoid ending up without seats for the night when European fate is decided.Sources:
- Sports Illustrated, Champions League league-phase table after Matchday 6 (Ajax 3 points, Olympiakos 5 points)
- Reuters, report from Qarabag FK - Ajax 4-2 and description of the comeback
- Reuters, report Olympiakos - Pafos 0-0 (league phase opener) and match context
- Reuters, report Olympiakos - PSV 1-1 and the stoppage-time goal
- UEFA.com, list of players and coaches for Ajax and Olympiakos in the 2025/26 season
- Johan Cruijff ArenA, events calendar listing the match Ajax - Olympiakos
- Wikipedia, basic stadium data (address, capacity, opening year, transport)
- Rome2rio, example train journey from the center (Amsterdam Centraal to Amsterdam Bijlmer ArenA)

Everything you need to know about tickets for AFC Ajax vs Olympiakos Piraeus

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07 January, 2026, Author: Sports desk

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