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SELF-TAUGHT SENSATION. Hawai‘i place-kicker Kansei Matsuzawa of Japan
poses for a portrait at Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex in
Honolulu. Matsuzawa became an instant star this past football season,
with game-tying and game-winning field goals. (AP Photo/Mengshin Lin)

Hawai‘i place-kicker Kansei Matsuzawa of Japan kicks a field goal
during an NCAA college football practice in Honolulu. (AP Photo/Mengshin
Lin)
From The Asian Reporter, V36, #1 (January 5, 2026), page 7.
Hawai‘i’s YouTube kicker dubbed the "Tokyo Toe"
used grit to become an AP All-American with NFL hopes
By Audrey McAvoy
The Associated Press
HONOLULU — Kansei Matsuzawa became an instant star last year, with
game-tying and game-winning field goals in a 23-20 victory win over
Stanford and a singular backstory about teaching himself to kick on
YouTube.
The Japan-born Matsuzawa’s near-perfect performance during the rest
of Hawai‘i’s 8-4 season was even more impressive.
He made 25 consecutive field goals, tying a 43-year-old Football Bowl
Subdivision (FBS) record and earning first-team status as an Associated
Press All-American as one the best players in the country. He was a
finalist for the Lou Groza award given to the nation’s top place-kicker.
"In every moment, I always choose win. Even if I want to go home,
just choose when to stay on campus and do something extra," Matsuzawa
said before his final game last season. "And that was the mindset I [had
this season], and because of that now I get recognition from [the]
entire country and also back home in Japan."
Dubbed the "Tokyo Toe" by teammates, he graduated last month and took
the field for the Rainbow Warriors for the last time in the Hawai‘i Bowl
against California.
He has a chance of playing in the National Football League just six
years after attending his first football game. Back then, he didn’t
understand the rules and knew just one player’s name: Tom Brady.
Finding kickers on YouTube
Matsuzawa’s unlikely path to college football dates to 2019. The high
school soccer player failed annual college entrance exams in Japan two
years in a row and didn’t know what he wanted to do with his life. He
was 20 years old and depressed.
"I had nothing. I lost my purpose of my life," Matsuzawa said in an
interview.
His father gave him a ticket to travel to the U.S. and see a world
outside Japan. He flew to California with no agenda other than to watch
an NFL game, a sport he had some affinity for because his father was a
fan and they had watched Super Bowls together.
He didn’t fully understand what he saw on the field at Oakland
Coliseum. But the energy and fan enthusiasm at the stadium was different
from what he had experienced in Japanese sports. Once back home, he
decided he would return to the U.S., become a kicker, and play in the
NFL.
American football is an obscure sport in Japan, ranking below
baseball, soccer, sumo, golf, skating, and other pastimes in popularity.
Matsuzawa wanted to learn from the best, an NFL player, but there
weren’t any in Japan. So he imitated kickers on YouTube, particularly
Jason Myers of the Seattle Seahawks. He liked Myers’ style, tempo, and
rhythm. He told his family and a few friends but otherwise kept his
plans a secret to avoid skeptics.
There are only a few football fields with goal posts in Japan, but
one was an hour’s commute from his house. He begged its owners, the
Fujitsu Frontiers of a Japanese industrial league, to let him practice
there in exchange for running team errands.
Grit to overcome adversity
After two years of practicing and saving money from a steakhouse job,
he sent video clips of himself kicking to U.S. junior college teams.
Hocking College in tiny Nelsonville, Ohio, gave him a chance. He says he
knew so little English he barely spoke the first three months. He’s not
sure anyone there had ever seen a Japanese person before.
The culture shock didn’t deter him.
"Nothing beats me," he said with a smile.
He eventually made it on a list of top kicking prospects. Hawai‘i’s
coordinator for special teams noticed Matsuzawa’s leg strength and
power, form, and technique. It was Matsuzawa’s resilience and overcoming
of adversity that prompted Thomas Sheffield to recruit him.
"That’s what it’s going to take to be successful," Sheffield said.
Matsuzawa was a walk-on, but got a scholarship a year ago and sobbed
as his coach told him the good news. He was thinking of his parents, he
says, who downsized their home to save money and help cover his costs,
and of his grandparents, who paid his Hawai‘i tuition.
Adjusting to the intensity of FBS play took time. Sheffield left him
off the travel roster for a Vanderbilt game his first year but Matsuzawa
picked himself up. He focused on doing small things right every day and
said he gradually earned the respect of his teammates and coaches.
"It goes back to the grit and him finding a way to put him in a
situation to fulfill his dreams," Sheffield said.
The right mindset
Matsuzawa worked with a sports psychologist twice a week this season,
which he said helped. Last season, when he was 12 for 16 on field goal
attempts, he set his mind on results like kicking farther and boosting
his statistics. This year, he’s focused on process, on kicking
footballs, and staying positive.
"Luckily my job is simple, making field goals, and that’s what I want
to do," Matsuzawa said. "Just one at a time. Go out there, kick."
Matsuzawa credits his special teams unit for his achievements and
said he will treasure their connection for the rest of his life. His
holder, Caleb Freeman, said he would do anything for Matsuzawa’s
success.
"It’s real easy for the position he’s in to kind of take the
spotlight and run with it," Freeman said. "But ever since the Stanford
game, (when) he made the game-winning field goal, he has always just
shined the light on everyone else."
The NFL has players of Japanese ancestry, like Commanders quarterback
Jayden Daniels whose great-grandmother is Japanese. Historically a dozen
players have listed a birthplace in Japan, according to Elias Sports
Bureau, but their backgrounds indicate they were mostly born to parents
serving overseas in the U.S. military.
Hawai‘i coach Timmy Chang is confident Hawai‘i and Japan will be
rooting for him.
"I think he’s going to do well," Chang said, "if he continues his
mindset and the track in which he’s at and all the things that made him
who he is."
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