
Where EAST meets the Northwest

HISTORIC TOURNAMENT. Team Japan — including team captain and Golden Boot
winner Homare Sawa (#10) — celebrates after the championship match of the
Women’s World Cup held in Frankfurt, Germany. The Japanese women’s soccer team
won their first World Cup after defeating Team USA in a penalty-kick shootout.
Pictured at left is Japanese goalkeeper Ayumi Kaihori saving a penalty kick
taken by Tobin Heath of the United States. (AP Photos/Michael Probst & Frank
Augstein)
From The Asian Reporter, V21, #15 (August 1, 2011), page 10.
Buoyed by quake-torn homeland, Team Japan defeats U.S. in
World Cup
By Mike Street
Special to The Asian Reporter
Prior to this year’s Women’s World Cup, Team Japan’s main distinction was
being the only Asian team to qualify for all six tournaments. In all those
attempts, the team had emerged from its group just once, in 1995, only to lose
4-0 to the United States in the quarterfinals. But in this year’s championship
game, buoyed by the hopes of their disaster-torn nation, Japan staged two late
comebacks against a resilient U.S. squad to become the first Asian soccer team
to win a World Cup.
Team Japan’s strengths have sometimes been perceived as weaknesses, leading
to diminished expectations. For starters, their team-oriented approach meant the
Nadeshiko lacked a top-notch scoring threat.
When praising Team Japan’s leading scorer and team captain, veteran
midfielder Homare Sawa, her coach lauded Sawa’s ability to steal, hold, and
advance the ball — but not score with it. And Japan’s technical and precise
ball-control strategy sometimes makes their game seem emotionless. But this
year’s devastating earthquake and tsunami provided the passion, while Sawa
became the tournament’s top scorer.
That emotion, and Sawa’s scoring drive, became apparent early on. After
refusing to settle for a draw against a weak New Zealand squad, Team Japan
earned its second victory against Mexico thanks to Sawa, who became the oldest
player to score a hat trick in the Women’s World Cup. The victory also vaulted
Japan into the quarterfinals, making the next match relatively meaningless, and
an English squad that needed a draw to advance handed them their only defeat.
This result matched Japan against Germany, the tournament host and a
dominating force in women’s soccer, in the quarterfinal round. Winners of the
last two World Cups, Germany also held two impressive tournament streaks: They
hadn’t lost since 1999 and hadn’t been scored upon since 2003.
This year, the Nadeshiko equalled the intensity and ball control of the
Germans, battling to a scoreless tie through regulation and the first 15 minutes
of extra time. Then, minutes into the second overtime period, Karina Maruyama
turned a lob pass into a great run through the stalwart German defense before
striking the ball beautifully for the game-winner, the latest Women’s World Cup
goal ever scored.
Hard on the heels of this stunning upset, Japan overcame a fast semifinals
start from Sweden, who hadn’t lost a match at this year’s tournament. In the
10th minute of the match, Sweden’s Josefine Oqvist stole the ball at midfield
and streaked past Japan’s backline to drive home the game’s first goal. Oqvist
scored again minutes later, this time on a deflection into her own net after
contending with Nahomi Kawasumi over a brilliant Aya Miyama cross.
With the score still knotted early in the second half, Sawa rose from a clot
of players to drive a header past Swedish keeper Hedvig Lindahl, who’d come off
her line. Kawasumi also capitalized on aggressive keeper play minutes later.
After Lindahl came out to the edge of the box to clear a long ball, Kawasumi
stole the clearance pass, lobbing the ball over Lindahl’s head to seal the
Nadeshiko victory.
Playing in its first-ever World Cup final, Team Japan faced a Team USA that
had staged one of the most dramatic comebacks in women’s soccer history against
Brazil in the quarterfinals.
After Brazilian superstar Marta scored a late penalty-shot equalizer, and
then looped a half-volley past U.S. keeper Hope Solo early in extra time,
victory seemed hopeless for the shorthanded U.S. squad. But with seconds
remaining in stoppage time, Abby Wambach delivered a game-tying header,
establishing a new mark as the latest Women’s World Cup goal. Solo made the only
save in the penalty-shot tiebreaker to give her team the victory, setting up a
slightly less dramatic semifinal match against France, in which the U.S. scored
the go-ahead goal with 11 minutes remaining.
In the final match, the U.S. squad dominated play early, peppering the
Japanese goal with unsuccessful chances, the best being an Abby Wambach cannon
shot that rang off the crossbar midway through the first half. Then, in the 69th
minute, Alex Morgan took a counterattack breakaway through a persistent Japanese
defense, burying the ball inside the far post for the game’s first goal. In
Japan’s first dramatic comeback of the match, Aya Miyama tied the score on a
weak U.S. clearance in front of the goal mouth with nine minutes left in
regulation.
After the match entered extra time, Wambach and Morgan missed several scoring
opportunities before Morgan fed an unmarked Wambach, who drilled a header home
late in the first overtime period. With less than four minutes standing between
her and defeat, Japan’s captain responded, first with a through ball to Yukari
Kinga that caught Solo off her line. Christie Rampone kept the ball from finding
the net, but Solo took a hard blow to her knee, possibly affecting the corner
kick that followed, when Sawa volleyed a shot past Solo for the latest goal in
Women’s World Cup Finals history.
The comeback equalizer didn’t end the drama, as the match would soon be
determined by taking penalty kicks, where Team Japan keeper Ayumi Kaihori
demonstrated her advantage of studying the U.S players’ tendencies in the Brazil
shootout. She made two saves to Solo’s one, and Saki Kumagai sealed the
championship with an untouchable shot into the upper left corner of the net.
Sawa received Most Valuable Player honors as well as the Golden Boot as the
tournament’s leading scorer. "The team played so much of a part in me winning
these awards that I can’t really take any personal pride in receiving them," she
said later. "This [victory] is something that we gained as a team and we’ve had
a lot of support from the Japanese people back home."
Team Japan’s comeback created a surge of positive emotion that was bigger and
more powerful than any tsunami Mother Nature could create.
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