Japanese Soccer News - September 2008
Michael Tuckerman reports
J.League | J.League
Betting Tips | Japanese
Goods
Report cards are in as the J. League approaches its final term
With the international break yielding a positive result for Japan
and the autumn leaves starting to make their first appearances on
the tree-lined avenues surrounding the National Stadium, attention
now turns to the business end of the J. League season.
Five teams are still in with a genuine chance of lifting the trophy,
but northern outfit Consadole Sapporo are certainly not one of them.
News that the J. League is considering switching to a European-aligned,
winter-based calendar will have gone down like a lead balloon in
Sapporo, where Consadole habitually spend their summers in the open-air
surrounds of Atsubetsu Stadium. The Hokkaido side have been luckless
at their traditional summer home this season, and they currently
sit bottom of the table, with last season's J2 champions set to
make a swift return to the Second Division.
Fellow northern outfit Albirex Niigata have also struggled in
2008. They may be the second-best supported team in the league -
only Urawa Reds draw larger crowds - but Niigata have played some
awful football under their eternally dour coach Jun Suzuki. Niigata
surprised many by finishing sixth last season, but they could become
embroiled in a relegation dogfight this time around, and the constant
play-acting of striker Kisho Yano has won them few fans this season.
On the other side of the country Ibaraki giants Kashima Antlers
are involved in an almighty scrap as they look to retain their title.
Oswaldo de Oliveira's men are a point behind league leaders Nagoya
Grampus, with eternal rivals Urawa Reds also breathing down their
necks. Like the Reds, Kashima also have an upcoming AFC Champions
League quarter-final to contend with, and they will hope that Nagoya
don't skip away while de Oliveira and his men are battling for continental
glory.
Urawa have played some good football this season without ever managing
to shake off either Nagoya or Kashima. Coach Gert
Engels has some serious concerns up front, where ex-Eintract
Frankfurt striker Naohiro Takahara has proved a spectacular flop.
Former Albirex Niigata man Edmilson has also failed to impress,
and with last season's J. League MVP Robson Ponte having missed
most of the campaign so far through a serious knee injury, Urawa
have been forced to rely heavily on the injury-prone Tatsuya Tanaka
for goals.
Saitama city rivals Omiya Ardija have been one of the most inconsistent
teams this season. They've pulled off some shock wins against the
likes of Gamba Osaka and Kawasaki Frontale, but Omiya fans are the
first to admit that the Saitama side have benefited from a kind
fixture list. The redeveloped Omiya Park has failed to become the
fortress that club officials were anticipating, and while the Squirrels
currently sit in the top half of the table, the orange-clad outfit
may ultimately succumb to their perennial relegation battle unless
Slovenian giant Klemen Lavric starts scoring freely.
Capital club FC Tokyo got off to a blazing start under the auspices
of Hiroshi Jofuku, but the team from the blue half of the city have
since fallen away - much to the annoyance of Tokyo's passionate
fans. Former Gyeongnam FC striker Cabore was the top scorer in the
Korean League last season, but the Brazilian has failed to replicate
that success in Japan. He has scored just six goals in 23 league
appearances for a disappointingly goal-shy outfit that looks destined
to finish in mid-table.
Masashi Oguro will hope to start scoring freely soon. The former
Gamba Osaka striker was brought back from a painfully disappointing
spell in Italian football with Torino, to line up for fellow capital
side Tokyo Verdy. He replaced the departed Hulk - who is now at
FC Porto - with Verdy having swapped a dreadful start to the campaign
for the relative safety of mid-table. Packed with ageing former
internationals, Verdy appear to have the experience to maintain
their top flight status, not that anyone in the city appears to
care; Verdy have attracted some of the lowest attendances in the
J. League this season.
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JEF United can only dream of the security of mid-table. The Chiba
outfit have been anchored to the relegation zone for the entirety
of the campaign, with the arrival of coach Alex Miller in place
of the sacked Josip Kuze failing to propel United up the standings.
The Chiba Dogs were always going to struggle when they sold their
five best players at the start of the campaign, but it nevertheless
looks like being a sorry demise for one of just six J. League clubs
to have played every season in the Japanese top flight, as United
fans look set to welcome J2 football to Fukuda Denshi Arena next
season.
Prefectural rivals Kashiwa Reysol have carried on from where they
left off last season, scrapping and scraping away with a mixture
of strength and the occasional sublime. The return from injury of
former Bayer Leverkusen front man Franca has helped, and with Japan
Olympic striker Tadanari Lee up front Reysol always look a chance
of getting on the score sheet - particularly in front of their vociferous
home fans - as Nobuhiro Ishizaki's team settles in for a comfortable
mid-table finish.
Kawasaki Frontale were tipped by many for a top-two finish this
season, but things haven't gone particularly smoothly for the Kanagawa
side. Striker Hulk was released after playing just three games for
Frontale - who recalled him from a two-year loan spell in J2 - before
coach Takashi Sekizuka stepped down due to health problems. Another
striker in Kazuki Ganaha took the J. League to the Court of Arbitration
for Sport in Geneva to have a wrongful doping suspension overturned,
but despite the turmoil former assistant coach Tsutomu Takahata
has managed to turn things around. Kawasaki are now poised to strike;
they are lying in fifth place, just two points behind league leaders
Nagoya.
2008 has proved nothing short of a disaster for Yokohama F. Marinos.
The three-times champions were expected to challenge for the title
this year, but instead they have spent most of the campaign hovering
around the relegation zone. Coach Takashi Kuwahara was sacked and
replaced by former technical director Kokichi Kimura, but he has
failed to win over disgruntled fans with the Nissan-backed club
still struggling near the bottom three. Calls of "they're too
good to do down" will ring out for as long as the Tricolore
are struggling, but it's been heard all before, as fans of current
J2 leaders Sanfrecce Hiroshima will no doubt attest.
Further south Shimizu S-Pulse have also endured a wretched season.
The departure of former star striker Cho Jae-Jin has proved a bitter
blow in Shizuoka; his replacement Marcos Aurélio has failed
to score a single goal, despite being the highest-paid player at
the club. S-Pulse have struggled to score goals in the absence of
the talismanic Jae-Jin, and a season-ending injury to playmaker
Jungo Fujimoto hasn't helped. The only bright spark for S-Pulse
fans has been a run to the final of the League Cup, where more than
20,000 Shimizu fans are likely to descend upon the National Stadium
to see whether Kenta Hasegawa's team can salvage something from
what has been a bitter campaign.
Hasegawa may count himself lucky to still be in employment. Last
season it was two defeats in the Shizuoka derby that cost former
Jubilo Iwata coach Adilson his job, but this time around officials
at the Yamaha-backed club didn't even wait that long, as the axe
finally fell on Atsushi Uchiyama with Jubilo Iwata dropping into
the relegation/promotion playoff place. Highly experienced Dutch
coach Hans Ooft has been called in for yet another spell in Japanese
football - he knows the J. League well, and will be expected to
lift the Shizuoka giants out of the bottom three come the end of
the season.
By contrast Tokai rivals Nagoya Grampus are enjoying a dream run.
Long regarded as the archetypal "sleeping giant" of the
J. League, fiery Serb coach Dragan Stojkovic - who is regarded as
a legend in the city after his playing days at the club - has finally
awakened the Toyota-backed outfit from their slumber. Nagoya are
currently sitting atop the J. League, having duked it out in a slugfest
with Kashima and Urawa so far. When Grampus are not being referred
to as a "sleeping giant," they are often being labelled
"eternal chokers," and while Grampus are looking good
at the moment, doubts persist about their ability to maintain composure
until the final day of the campaign.
Gamba Osaka have endured a disappointing campaign that looks set
to end with a mid-table finish. Injuries to key players haven't
helped - Ryuji Bando has only just returned after missing most of
the campaign - while the mid-season sale of star striker Baré
to Emirates side Al-Ahli cost Gamba any hopes they had of winning
the title. Baré has been replaced by former Yokohama F. Marinos
striker Roni, but with talismanic midfielder Yasuhito Endo forced
to endure a constant battle against Hepatitis-related fatigue, Gamba
will need to conjure a dramatic late surge to have any chance of
breaking into the top five.
Kansai rivals Vissel Kobe have cemented their position as the
draw specialists of the league. They've drawn nine times so far
- more than any other team - and Hiroshi Matsuda's scrappy outfit
continue to infuriate Kobe fans with their inconsistent form. In
Yoshito Okubo and Leandro, Vissel Kobe possess one of the most explosive
strike forces in the country. Unfortunately for Kobe's dwindling
supporter base - most of whom lament the involvement of controversial
Chairman Hiroshi Mikitani - Kobe's strikers are too often having
an off-day, and with little creativity sprinkled throughout the
rest of the ranks, Vissel look set to battle it out for another
mid-table finish.
Kyoto Sanga FC will be satisfied with a mid-table finish, having
returned to the top flight after winning the promotion/relegation
playoff against Sanfrecce Hiroshima last season. Some astute pre-season
signings in the form of former Gamba Osaka man Sidiclei and ex-JEF
United captain Yuto Sato have proved crucial, while the mid-season
acquisitions of Hiroki Mizumoto and Fernandinho from Gamba Osaka
and Shimizu S-Pulse respectively means that Hisashi Kato's side
should have just about enough individual talent to retain their
place in the top flight.
Last, but certainly not least, is southern outfit Oita Trinita.
Every season the J. League throws up a surprise package from left
field, but few would have expected Kyushu outfit Oita Trinita to
be in the midst of their best ever top flight campaign. Not only
is coach Pericles' side currently sitting in fourth place in the
league table, but they also booked a place in the League Cup final,
where they will be aiming to win a first-ever trophy. Oita's astonishing
turnaround from relegation candidates to potential title winners
vindicates the patience of the club's back-room, who stood by Pericles
last season when the Brazilian became embroiled in a tense relegation
battle. Almost twelve months later the Brazilian tactician is short
odds to win the "Coach Of The Season" award, and even
if Oita do fall short in both the J. League and League Cup, they
will rightly be remembered as the revelation of the season.
In 2005, five clubs were still in the running to lift the J. League
title on the final day of the season. That's a scenario that could
be repeated in 2008, and while Consadole Sapporo and JEF United
look dead-and-buried in the bottom two, there could be more relegation/promotion
playoff thrills-and-spills as several of the J. League's biggest
names look to escape the potential trapdoor that is sixteenth place.
Japan open with a win
Japan
got off to a winning start in their opening World
Cup qualifying Group 1 game against Bahrain in Manama. Goals
from Shunsuke Nakamura, from a trademark free-kick, Yasuhito Endo
and Kengo Nakamura put Japan in control, before the hosts came back
with a goal from Salman Isa and an own goal by Marcus Tulio Tanaka.
The result was a relief for under fire coach Takeshi
Okada, who attributed the win to an all-round team effort.
"We were in control right through. We want to carry this
good work forward," Okada told the press afterwards. Besides
Japan and Bahrain, Australia, Qatar and Uzbekistan round out the
group, with the top two teams progressing to the World Cup finals
in South Africa in 2010.
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