
Where EAST meets the Northwest

FOUR-PEAT. Australia’s Mile Jedinak (#15) challenges for the ball against
Japan’s goalkeeper Eiji Kawashima (#1) and player Daiki Iwamasa during the AFC
Asian Cup championship soccer match in Doha, Qatar. (AP Photo/Osama Faisal)
From The Asian Reporter, V21, #05 (March 7, 2011), page 10.
Last-minute goals frame Team Japan’s Asian Cup victory
By Mike Street
Special to The Asian Reporter
Team Japan became the first four-time winner of the AFC Asian Cup with an
exciting extra-time victory over Australia last month. Timely, dramatic goals
framed the Samurai Blue’s rise to the top of Asian soccer, which follows the
team’s historic finish in the 2010 World Cup.
The Asian Cup tournament nearly opened with a Japanese letdown against
Jordan. Shortly before the end of a scoreless first half, a Jordanian striker’s
shot deflected off Maya Yoshida ’s foot, flipping the ball past goalkeeper Eiji
Kawashima into Japan’s net. But Yoshida redeemed himself when the team still
trailed in stoppage time. Midfielder Makoto Hasebe sent a beautiful ball across
the goal area and Yoshida leapt high and headed in the game-tying shot.
In the second match, against Syria, Team Japan once again overcame adversity
to score a dramatic victory. Frenetic opening action culminated with a
pinballing series of shots that led to Japan’s first goal. Syria equalized in
the second half on a penalty shot after Kawashima earned a red card for leaping
across the legs of a Syrian forward. Backup keeper Shusaku Nishikawa held the
Syrians scoreless thereafter and Japan struck back with its own penalty kick,
sealing the win for the Samurai Blue.
Japan next went on to humiliate Saudi Arabia, 5-0, despite losing Kawashima
to a one-game suspension and Keisuke Honda and Daisuke Matsui to lower-leg
injuries. Nishikawa again shut out his opponents and reserve forward Shinji
Okazaki scored a hat trick for the Samurai. The lopsided win put Japan first in
its group, creating a quarterfinal matchup against host Qatar, whom Japan had
defeated just once in their past eight meetings.
Qatar scored first when Sebastian Soria streaked down the field and juked a
defender before firing the ball past Kawashima. Japan evened things up soon
after when Okazaki chipped the ball over the keeper and Shinji Kagawa headed it
in. The game remained tied until Yoshida again made a major mistake, committing
his second foul of the match and earning a red card — and giving Qatar a free
kick that was converted into a go-ahead goal.
Despite being a man down, Japan rallied behind Kagawa’s second goal, a
beautiful solo effort in which he spun away from a scrum at the top of the
penalty area and rifled in a close-range shot. Kagawa completed the comeback
when he was tackled roughly at the goal mouth but still managed to poke the ball
to Masahiko Inoha, who drove it home for the game-winner.
Japan’s semifinal match against South Korea opened with a successful Taeguk
Warriors penalty shot, but they didn’t hold the lead long. Yuto Nagamoto
sprinted down the left sideline a few minutes later, drawing the keeper out
before feeding Ryoichi Maeda for the equalizer.
The match remained tied into extra time, when Hajime Hosogai put home the
deflection of Honda’s penalty kick. With seconds remaining before Japan would
advance, South Korea scored on the ricochet of a free kick when Hwang Jae-won
drove the rebound into the net. This sent the match into penalty kicks to break
the tie, but Korea couldn’t score and three of Japan’s first four kickers
converted, lifting the Samurai Blue to the championship game.
The final match against Australia would be the sort of contest true soccer
aficionados love: low-scoring with crisp, exciting, and nearly mistake-free play
— except for the missed opportunities on goal. Japan would be without the
services of Kagawa, who broke a bone in his foot during the previous match, but
the team found help from an unexpected source.
Both teams traded near-misses in the first half. The Socceroos couldn’t
capitalize on a breakaway and Kawashima pushed aside a header attempt on a nice
corner kick. Japan failed at several chances, as Maeda shot high from the top of
the area and a nifty series of moves by Yuto Nagatomo went for naught when he
fed Shinji Okazaki, who shot wide of the goal.
Australia had an excellent opportunity early in the second half when a shot
to the corner from Luke Wilkshire deflected off the crossbar. Kawashima had
misjudged the ball, but redeemed himself minutes later with a brilliant leg save
off a breakaway from Harry Kewell. Regular time ended scoreless, however, and
Australia once again quickened Japan’s pulse with an open shot that flew just
wide of the goal mouth and another header that Kawashima again turned away with
a great save.
Japan had a few chances of its own, but finally capitalized on the biggest
mistake of the match: an unmarked Tadanari Lee just outside of the goal area.
Australia may have neglected him, but Nagatomo didn’t, giving him a perfect
waist-high cross that Lee volleyed into the left side of the net for the
deciding goal.
Team Japan coach Alberto Zaccheroni later explained that he’d pushed Nagatomo,
a defender, forward in the second half to overload the Aussie’s defense. His
strategy worked, and his players executed it flawlessly. Honda was named the
tournament’s Most Valuable Player (MVP) and Kawashima took home MVP of the final
after holding his opponents scoreless.
So much young talent bodes well for Japan’s Samurai Blue as they build toward
the 2014 World Cup. With its recent success in reaching the second round for the
first time on foreign soil, Japan is poised to continue its rise when the team
heads to Brazil.
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