J.League weekly wrap: round three

By Matsu / Roar Rookie

The topsy-turvy J1 season may be only three weeks old, but already it is clear that the pecking order has changed. Traditional powers are still seeking their first wins and teams with a history of mid-table anonymity are sitting on top of the heap.

On Saturday, two of the three teams that still boast perfect records met head-to-head, both nurturing ambitions to move up the league standings this season.

FC Tokyo can rest assured that they will finish higher than last year, since they were in the J2 last season. But Vissel Kobe also attracted great interest from neutrals, to see if they can match the preseason hype created by ambitious off-season acquisitions.

The Crimson Tide of Kobe picked up several midfield maestros this winter. The silky passing skills of players like Takuya Nozawa, Hideo Hashimoto, Masahiko Inoha and Takahito Soma have merged into a precise, effective passing game that earned them two early wins.

But FC Tokyo looks even more impressive; under the guidance of new coach Ranko Popovic they are playing a fast-paced style that is a joy just to watch. Midway through the first half the Capital City Coon-dogs opened the scoring on a typically energetic play – a flowing wave of Blue-and-Red attack swept over the Crimson Tide like a breaker on Bondi Beach.

Five players were involved as the ball swept through the right channel, across to the opposite sideline, then back into the left channel to Lucas Severino at the top of the penalty area. Lucas faked a shot and fed the ball across the face of goal, leaving the keeper stranded, and Naohiro Ishikawa met it at the right post, stabbing the ball through the wide-open back door.

The second-half was closely contested as Vissel pursued the equaliser and Tokyo adopted a defensive stance, seeking an insurance tally on the counterattack.

With five minutes remaining, Ariajasuru Hasegawa dashed after a ball in space and appeared to get to it just before defender Masahiko Inoha. The ball certainly ran in the direction that Hasegawa would have intended, but as the two players’ legs made contact and both went down.

Referee Yamamoto walked over and brandished a second yellow card at Hasegawa, reducing Tokyo to ten men. A proper referee probably would not even have blown his whistle, but Hasegawa took an early trip to the showers anyway.

Vissel poured forward seeking to exploit the advantage, but the Tokyo defence held. On the last play of the game, keeper Shuichi Gonda dashed off his line to snatch a high ball, and booted it downfield for Kazuma Watanabe, who raced off for a one-on one with keeper Kenta Tokushige.

As Tokushige lunged off his line, Watanabe fired the ball straight through Tokushige’s legs and as he raced behind goal to celebrate, Mr. Yamamoto blew the final whistle.

The other undefeated team, Vegalta Sendai, typically relies on hard physical play and a tight, uncompromising defence to keep the opposing half of the scoresheet empty, and a few opportunistic set plays to produce the lone goal of the match.

This week, though, The Golden Eagles showed that they have another, more attractive side. Omiya Ardija snatched an early goal on a corner kick that took several touches before Cho Young-chol drove it home.

Ardija then adopted just the sort of defensive strategy for which Vegalta is famous, and preserved the lead until half time. But coach Makoto Teguramori clearly issued new instructions in the locker room because Vegalta came out after the break with a far more aggressive style.

After one or two close calls, Vegalta claimed the equaliser in the 54 minute. Following a set play near midfield, Vegalta nodded the ball on from head to gold-shirted-head until it finally dropped in front of Yoshiaki Ota, dashing into the penalty area. Ota sent his first touch between the splayed legs of the Ardija keeper, restoring parity.

This goal shattered Omiya’s defensive concentration, and suddenly the home team was speeding like a gold-and-blue Ferrari on the freeway, in top gear. By the time Omiya’s Mighty Squirrels could gather their wits, they were nothing but roadkill.

Five minutes after the equaliser Shingo Akamine made a surging run around the right flank and fired a cross for Atsushi Yanagisawa, at the near post. Yanagisawa blasted it with his right boot and hit keeper Takuto Hayashi square in the face. The ball bounded off the keeper, off the knee of defender Kosuke Kikuchi, and into the back of the net.

The killing blow was struck in more typical Vegalta fashion, on a corner kick headed on net by Makoto Kakuda. Takashi Kitano managed to keep the ball out of his net, but Naoki Sugai was on hand to poke the rebound into the nylon strings.

Keisuke Ota, who started the deluge, finished off the rout with a thundering low-angle shot from the left side of the box. The victory carried the Golden Eagles into first place in the table, ahead of FC Tokyo on goal difference

Elsewhere, the nightmare continued for Gamba Osaka (1-2 losers at home to Jubilo) and Kashima Antlers (losing 2-0 away to Sanfrecce Hiroshima), but Kashiwa Reysol got their season back on track with a 2-1 comeback victory over Shimizu S-Pulse.

Urawa Reds conceded an early goal, but overcame newcomers Consadole Sapporo, and Nagoya Grampus survived a sluggish first half to overcome Albirex Niigata, 2-1.

Newly promoted Sagan Tosu won their first-ever J1 match 1-0 over Yokohama, the “loan” goal scored by Marinos loanee Kota Mizunuma.

Last and least, Cerezo Osaka beat Kawasaki Frontale 0-1 in a sloppy and largely uneventful match in Kawasaki.

The Crowd Says:

2012-03-30T02:36:55+00:00

Nathan of Perth

Guest


Even though those leagues were "generic", they still had real teams by slightly obscured names but more crucially, they still had the real players. For the J-League to be included it sounds like you could get licensing for the real teams but you would have to make wholly generic players so as not to publish real salary information, and that rather strongly goes against the grain for the rest of the system.

2012-03-30T02:33:10+00:00

Nathan of Perth

Guest


That makes sense - wage negotiations and salary bill balancing are a pretty integral part of those games. It makes sense why they become such a difficult problem for overseas game developers who might want to sell in Japan, though I can certainly appreciate the purpose of such a law. Thank you for the explanation, Matsu. It is a shame though, since, as I said, a lot of enthusiasts learn about other leagues by immersing themselves in the games (it is where a sizeable chunk of what I know about CSL and K-League comes from) around the sport. The problem seems quite intractable though, between law and licensing.

2012-03-30T02:20:40+00:00

Matsu

Guest


In Japan it is a serious offense to publish a person's salary information. This was one of the reasons why the story published in the Australian press back in 2006-7, claiming that Endo made A$2 million, was such a joke. Not only was it untrue, but the person who made the claim would have been sued and permanently ruined as a journalist (fired/blacklisted) if they had published the same information in a Japanese publication. Nevertheless Koei has a management game called "Socca chiimu wo tsukuru" (lets build a soccer team) that is very similar to FIFA manager, and I think the same situation applies (ie. the J.League gives Koei exclusivity). In "Sakatsuku" (the name that the game goes by in common discussion) they have prices for players that decide how much it costs you to acquire them, but salary information isnt part of the management algorithm.

2012-03-29T19:02:01+00:00

nordster

Guest


its so frustrating not being able to trawl the J-League for my FIFA 12 squad, wouldn't mind playing a few seasons with Nagoya or someone also. Take Urawa back to glory? They should add ACL ideally. but with the licensing, i'm sure Serie A for quite a few years wasn't licensed officially on FIFA but still appeared. They got around it with reasonable generic names, the players are licensed via FIFPro. Could do the same for 'Japan League' though i guess logistically it would be a headache for them without enough payoff. Labor laws especially...

2012-03-29T14:43:35+00:00

Nathan of Perth

Guest


I've heard of Winning Eleven and, insofar as I'm aware, it is apparently Pro Evolution Soccer with additional J-League licenses. The series certainly has its adherents and I've seen people argue along those lines, though I haven't played it myself. Even then, I'm pretty sure that even PES doesn't include the Japanese leagues outside of Japan which is a bit frustrating. As for not being in Football Manager though, I'm surprised they can't get the rights, considering they have K-League, A-League and Chinese Super-League fully licensed and I'm not aware of any management game rivals they have that do include the rights. (Just checked and FIFA Manager doesn't include them). A number of these games will have generic versions of many leagues that they don't have rights to but none of them include playable J-Leagues. I did see once that one stumbling block was that all of these games show contract and wage information and this is a problem given (and this is second hand and may be wrong) that labour laws in Japan forbid this sort of information being released about individuals?

2012-03-29T12:00:53+00:00

Midfielder

Guest


Matsu Thanks for posting I enjoy reading your articles...

2012-03-29T11:28:57+00:00

Matsu

Guest


I think it is because Konami bought the exclusive rights for their "Winning Eleven" series, so their rivals are not allowed to include the J.League in their versions. Im not a gamer myself so Im not speaking from experience, but Ive heard some people claim that Winning Eleven is a better game, and its only the fact that EA has exclusive contracts with some Euro-based teams that prevents it from being bigger outside Japan.

2012-03-29T06:18:10+00:00

Nathan of Perth

Guest


I wonder how much appreciation of the J-League would grow with even small touches like working with mobs like Sports Interactive or EA with the Football Manager and FIFA games to add Japanese leagues into them? A lot of people learn a lot about the leagues out there through games like that and the J-Leagues are almost completely excluded, except for, to the best of my knowledge, special editions of PES that are only sold in Japan anyway.

2012-03-29T05:48:05+00:00

Hospital

Guest


Thanks Ken (Matsu?). It's a little audience of J-League affectionados here but we might grow with your regular analysis ;) I'm in it for the Aussies though, gotta admit!

2012-03-29T00:43:13+00:00

Nathan of Perth

Guest


FC Tokyo definitely looks like a team fired up from a period in the second division and determined to make a mark. And what a mark it's been so far! Wonder how well Cezero Osaka will be able to exploit their new position as top dogs in Osaka in an off-field sense? The mascots all kill me, they really do, haha. Although I do like Nagoya's for some reason I can't figure out yet.

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