
Where EAST meets the Northwest
From The Asian Reporter, V33, #1 (January 2, 2023), page 20.

What’s next for Japan after exit on penalty kicks at the World
Cup?
By Stephen Wade
The Associated Press
DOHA, Qatar — In Japan’s fourth appearance in the Round of 16 at the World
Cup, the team was knocked out for the fourth time. The Japanese lost to Croatia
in a penalty kick shootout after a 1-1 draw. The Croats won the shootout 3-1.
Japan also reached the Round of 16 in 2002, 2010, and four years ago in
Russia.
Expectation vs. performance
Japan coach Hajime Moriyasu said for months that the goal was to reach the
quarterfinals for the first time. So by that standard, Japan under-performed.
However, 2-1 victories over former World Cup champions Spain and Germany in
the group stage showed Japan has improved enough to compete with top soccer
nations.
"Even though we could not break the wall of the Round of 16 again, players
demonstrated a new era of our soccer," Moriyasu said. Moriyasu talked of still
needing to improve, but the coach said his players "can look eye-to-eye with
anyone now."
Moriyasu’s contract expired at the end of the World Cup. Japan soccer
association president Tashima Kohzo said in Doha that Moriyasu was likely to be
a candidate to continue. He gave no more details.
Who’s out?
Fullback Yuto Nagatomo, 36, and goalkeeper Eiji Kawashima, 39, have each been
on four World Cup squads and certainly will not return. Nagatomo played in all
four games in Qatar, but Kawashima never left the bench. Instead, he served as a
veteran mentor to the young team.
Captain and defender Maya Yoshida was in his third World Cup and, at 34, most
likely his last.
"I’m having trouble finding words to describe how I feel," Nagatomo said
after the loss to Croatia. "We did everything we could until the very end. I
trust that younger players, driven by this sense of regret, will make a better
future for Japanese soccer."
Who’s next?
Three names come immediately to mind.
Midfielder Ritsu Doan, who plays at German club Freiburg, scored two goals
and will certainly be a backbone of future teams. Another is midfielder Kaoru
Mitoma, who is having at stellar season at English club Brighton in the Premier
League.
Mitoma was one of three Japanese players who missed their penalty kick in the
shootout loss to Croatia.
The third is another midfielder, 21-year-old Takefusa Kubo, who plays at
Spanish club Real Sociedad.
What’s next?
Japan has qualified for the January 2024 Asian Cup , a tourney it has won
four times.
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