Category Archives: Reports

Reports

Shimizu S-Pulse 1-0 FC Tokyo – April 28th

S-Pulse came out of this with the win that I had predicted, even though they made it hard for themselves. The winning goal came after the home team found themselves down to nine men, when the two substitutes – Takahara and Takagi – combined, with Takagi blasting the ball from 15 yards or so with the keeper unable to move. Up to that point referee Nishimura had stuck to the letter of the law – not always a good thing, but a professional referee with a living to make can not be criticized for adhering to the rulebook – and a succession of orange shirts went into the book for varying offences, from kicking the ball away after the whistle that Franca picked up very early on (unnecessary, deserves to be fined) to the “take one for the team” cynical foul on the half way line from Shinji Ono. Brosque’s 2nd yellow card was another moment of madness when he intentionally delayed a quick free kick right under the referee’s nose and too his early bath.

Franca’s 2nd yellow card was a little more debatable, one of those that could go ewither way, depending on the referee, the opponents reaction, the crowd, and the view of the officials. Franca went up for the ball with arm swinging, caught his opponent in the face, who went down as if he’d been shot. The officials discussed it and a card was dispatched. Those go either way, today it went against S-Pulse. Until the goal (and his red card) FRanca had surely had the best chance as he found himself though on gaol with no defender in sight, but he delayed so much that by the time he was ready to shoot, he had defenders around him, and his shot was weak.
Tokyo sensed blood when S-Pulse went down to nine men but the home defence held out and then Takahara launched the counter attack that had Afshin Ghotbi and his bench dancing a jig, and gave S-Pulse maximum points!

Cerezo Osaka 3-2 Jubilo Iwata – April 28th

When Kim Bo Kyung blasted the 3rd Cerezo goal home in the 83rd minute, Cerezo must have thought they had this game in the bag! Kiyotake had opened the scoring, and Ogihara scored the second goal just after the break and Cerezo were cruising…. so was the Titanic! Well, it wasn’t a complete disaster in the end, but Jubilo pulled a couple of goals back in the remaining minutes, through Hiroki Yamada with a splendid effort in the 87th before Cho added another in added time, but the comeback proved too late and the wildly inconsistent Cerezo showed both sides today, but came out of it with the three points! It’s never a dull moment being a Cerezo fan.

Kashiwa Reysol 1-1 Sagan Tosu – April 28th

The home team welcomed back Leandro Domingues and Hiroki Sakai after suspension last week and took the lead seconds before half time as Kitajima guided home a corner via a defender’s shoulder to give Reysol the lead at the break. Kobayashi got the point-saving goal after the defence had made a mess of an inswinging free kick. Reysol’s season continues to be very average, while Sagan Tosu continue to confound the critics.

Nagoya Grampus 1-2 Urawa Reds – April 28th

Grampus lined up in a 3-2-2-2-1 to counter Urawa’s 3-2-3-2 line-up, which was an interesting tactic from home coach Stoijkovic, but it didn’t pay off as Marcio Richardes opened the scoring in the 23rd minute from 18 yards after a run across the top of the area was not closed down in some slack defending. Four minutes later Tulio headed down a cross and Kanazaki was there to flick it over the keeper to make it 1-1 at the break.
Reds won the game in the 68th minute on a Marcio Richardes PK after Hayuma Tanaka handled the ball – and got his second yellow card in the process – replays clearly showed the hand to ball and a deserved PK. Tulio almost pulled a point back with minutes to go but the keeper made a desperate one-handed save at his left post and Reds rebounded from their Saitama Derby defeat last week.

Albirex Niigata 0-1 Vegalta Sendai – April 28th

For unbeaten Sendai, Akamine was out with a muscle strain so in came veteran Yanagisawa to partner Wilson upfront. The talking point came in the 6th minute when a cleared free kick fell to Naoki Ishikawa who deftly half-volleyed the ball home only to see the goal disallowed for an offside flag. The problem was that Daisuke Suzuki was blocking the keeper’s view – good to see the officials get the difficult and unusual decision correct.
It was Suzuki involved in the key decision of the game, and another talking point as, with minutes to go, the defender shoved Wilson in the back and a PK was awarded which the Brazilian duly converted to keep Vegalta well clear at the top of J1.
Albirex coach Kurosaki said the ref was “subarashii”, fantastic! Sarcasm in Japan, whatever next?!

Kawasaki Frontale 1-4 Sanfrecce Hiroshima – April 28th

We start the reports this weekend at Kawasaki Frontale, who have a newly-esconsed coach in Yahiro Kazama, who replaced Soma last week. His first order of business was to bring Nishibe in as goalkeeper, and Morishita at centre back, alongside Inamoto, normally a central/defensive midfielder – did it work? Read on …

In the 15th minute, Sato spread the ball to Yamagishi in the left channel, and he advsnced and slid the ball past the keeper for the opening goal. Frontale were level just after the half hour mark when Nakamura fed the ball inch perfectly through a forest of legs for defender Ito to latch onto a sidefoot the ball past the keeper.

Less than seven minutes later Ishikawa out-muscled Inamoto – there’s a phrase I haven’t type often – and slipped the ball past Nishibe as he was falling to retake the lead for Sanfrecce into the break. And just after the break, Chiba found Mikic on the right with a long ball, he bulleted a low ball into the six yard area and Sato couldn’t miss, 3-1 to the away team. In the 78th minute it was Mikic again, this time with an inviting cross that Sato headed hom, 4-1, cruising. Three points, not a good start for Kazama Kawasaki.

Omiya Ardija 2-1 Consadole Sapporo – April 28th

Omiya took an early lead through a Carlinhos header, before Junpei Takaki leveled the scores in added time before the break. Then Jade North thought he had scored from a corner to give Consadole the lead – goalline technology not yet installed in Japan and definitely no slow motion close-up replays of that one, just in case a mistake was highlighted!! As it was, it was Takuya Aoki who got the winner for Omiya, as Tsubouchi slipped him the feed and his right foot shot curled away from the keeper and in at the far post. Another win for Omiya, finally living up to their potential?

Yokohama F. Marinos 3-1 Vissel Kobe – April 28th

Marinos finally got their first win of the season, after going behind to Tsubasa Oya’s first ever J.League goal 12 mknutes after half time. Vissel. though, already playing without Okubo, lost Tashiro to injury before the break. The home team came back with three goals in under seven minutes, all coming through some slack marking by the Vissel defence. Yuji Ono scored the first with a diving header, just when right back Okui thought he was clearing the ball. Taniguchi headed home the second, unchallenged and Nakazawa added the insurance goal when an incoming free kick was seemingly left to go out by the Vissel keeper and Nakazawa’s knee probably knew little of the goal, but was not complaining!

Both teams were considering a coaching change and this probably put the nail in the coffin of Wada, for Vissel, with Akira Nishino hovering in the background. Meanwhile, Marinos fans were probably wondering if this win had just postponed the inevitable and kept their coaching team intact for another game or two?!

Kashima Antlers 5-0 Gamba Osaka – April 28th

Gamba capitulated big time to a team that is struggling beside them near the bottom. Both teams have finally seen a mini-revival after dire starts to the season, but it was the home team that continued that revival with an easy win against the team from Osaka. Goals from Endo (just before half time with a super left-foot blast from 18 yards out), Koroki, Osako (making the most of a deflection, and a terrible miss from Gamba keeper Fujigaya) and Motoyama saw Kashima boost their goal difference and their confidence, while Gamba returned home deflated. Perhaps they should be signing up out-of-work coach Akira Nishino, before Vissel Kobe do!!

Vegalta Sendai 4-0 FC Tokyo – April 21st

The top team extended their lead with a 4-0 demolition of FC Tokyo, Vegalta getting three points on goals from Akamine, Sekiguchi – back in the goals this season so far – Ota – also racking up the goals – and Kamata, getting on the end of a goalkeeper clearance after Wilson had made the attempt. With Nagoya being haled on a late goal by Sanfrecce, Sendai moved FIVE points clear and racked their goal difference up to +12. Does anyone believe they can keep this up for the whole season? Only time will tell!