What has Jamie Joseph done for Japan?

By Pundit / Roar Guru

Japan beat South Africa in a pool game at the 2015 Rugby World Cup but fell just short of qualifying for the knockouts. They became the first team to win three games and not qualify.

At the 2019 World Cup Japan not only qualified, but they also topped their own pool, which contained two so-called ‘tier-one’ nations.

What has Jamie Joseph implemented as coach?

Fast-flowing rugby tied with great handling.

This is one thing Joseph managed to have his players master. There’s an offloading game in Japanese rugby which has been simply a brilliant edge to their attack. Their quick recycling can catch defenders unaware at times.

Kotaro Matsushima (Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)

A good example: when Kotaro Matsushima scored a try against Russia in the first match it came through great hands offloaded by the masterful Timothy Lafaele and then the offload by Ryoto Nakamura.

An even better one would be the try against Scotland in the final pool stage game. It starts with a distribution from Yu Tamura and then to a forward runner, Shota Horie. Horie makes contact, offloads the ball to the big man Lappies Labuschagne. He takes contact, offloads to Lafaele, who gave the final offload for Keita Inagaki’s try. Where did this try come from? The first break by Kotaro Matsushima and then the pass out from the ruck.

Kenki Fukuoka’s break against South Africa was the best exhibition of their ball skills. Great hands fired the ball away through a series of runners before the ball came out onto the edge to Kenki Fukuoka. Fukuoka carried the ball, going for an in-out step on Cheslin Kolbe and making a long line break, also stepping through Willie le Roux’s tackle before finally being brought down by Damian De Allende. Japan use the handling to fire the ball out to the wing, where their fastest player, Fukuoka, is.

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Yu Tamura is used as a distributor as he has good skill in spotting space. Some strong passing from him was also the set-up to multiple Japanese tries.

They have one of the world’s best pair of midfielders in Ryoto Nakamura and Timothy Lafaele, who are probably the best pair of offloading midfielders. One excellent example would be against Ireland in their upset win. These men are the flash players. They are not the generals on the pitch, but they inject themselves into the play and make those crucial passes when Japan go for the try play.

One classic example of this would be Kenki Fukuoka’s try against Ireland. The ball comes fast from Fumiaki Tanaka off the ruck into the hands of Nakamura. A brilliant flat pass to Lafaele on the edge before the quick hands form the big Japanese centre puts Kenki Fukuoka through to score.

Japan were also able to produce such moments against South Africa. Off the scrum, Lafaele takes the ball as a strike phase carrier, doing a one-handed flick offload in the tackle back to distributor Tamura positioned with several out-the-back options lined up outside him.

On defence, though they may not be the best in the world, they have some really solid tacklers in the forward pack and others. Joseph has taught his players to be fearless in the tackle and amp up the physicality to drive back the opposition.

The best offense is a good defence. By smothering the inside options, the only way the ball can go is outwards. Kenki Fukuoka’s intercept against Ireland would epitomise this. The Japanese defenders closed down the options for Ireland as the ball flew wide before Fukuoka shot up on the last one, tapped the ball and got control of it before sprinting through to the line.

Although he is eventually chased down, it had got Japan to the five-metre line.

The Crowd Says:

2021-04-22T08:06:45+00:00

nics

Roar Rookie


What have the Romans done for us lately? ;)

2020-09-29T03:52:34+00:00

Mark

Guest


Yeah - a little disappointed that JJ and TB aren't the AB coaches After Dave Rennie these two are arguably the next best Kiwi coaches

2020-09-13T22:57:03+00:00

Buk

Roar Rookie


At times used to be the best in the world at this, certainly around the early 1980's

2020-09-13T11:05:39+00:00

The Neutral View From Sweden

Roar Guru


Yeah right... What has done in the WC - when all the chips are down - is not important. :laughing: :laughing: :laughing:

AUTHOR

2020-09-13T10:41:32+00:00

Pundit

Roar Guru


Fitness would probably go down, depending on how often they train. No more kenki fukuoka is never good for the Blossoms. Well, i think apart from him the squad shld be the same. Leitch may retire. We'll never know

2020-09-13T09:52:02+00:00

Carlin

Roar Rookie


Tony Brown is also a large contributor to the way Japan have played in the last couple of years. He is regarded as one of the best attack coaches in the World. Joseph and Brown are a great coaching combination that complement each other well.

2020-09-13T09:14:41+00:00

Bobby

Roar Rookie


JJ did well at RWC. Japan was amazing. That was then. Let's see how many games Japan win when internationals recommence. That's WHEN he can really be judged !

2020-09-13T02:09:53+00:00

GWSingapore

Roar Rookie


"This is why I was hoping RA would throw the kitchen sink at JJ to bring him to Oz." I was in Japan for the World Cup. In Beppu, during the evening after Australia lost their quarter final to England and Michael Chieka had announced his departure, the names Eddie Jones and Jamie Joseph were mentioned as possible replacements. A comment was made by a former Australian Rugby Board member that Australia could not afford to match either Jones' contract with England or Joseph's contract with Japan.

2020-09-13T00:51:33+00:00


Agree 100% that Aus needs better ball skills. I think that Aus rugby below tests need to continue to work on that and als the speed at which teams swap from defence to attack and go full on. Counter attack seems to be a bit slower and a bit more hesitant than NZ teams...

2020-09-12T08:06:16+00:00

Rob9

Roar Guru


‘Fast-flowing rugby tied with great handling.’ This is why I was hoping RA would throw the kitchen sink at JJ to bring him to Oz. Ball handing is the one basic facet of the game where there’s the most significant gap between the AB’s and Australia (with fitness running a close 2nd). Japan were simply brilliant to watch. Their skill levels are 2nd to none. Unfortunately for them their size is behind many. If the Wallabies could capture some of that ability to shift the ball at pace and in traffic, we’ll be a much better side than we’ve shown ourselves to be.

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