Category Archives: In the Mix

Here will be JFL (non-league) and CUP tournaments

J.League Yamazaki Nabisco Cup Quarter FInal results …

1st Leg: Wednesday Sept.3

Cerezo Osaka 1-3 Kawasaki Frontale
Vissel Kobe 1-1 Gamba Osaka
Sanfrecce Hiroshima 0-0 Urawa Reds
Yokohama F•Marinos 1-2 Kashiwa Reysol

2nd Leg: Sunday Sept.7

18.00 Urawa Reds v Sanfrecce Hiroshima at Saitama
18.00 Gamba Osaka v Kobe at Banpaku
19.00 Kashiwa Reysol v Yokohama F•Marinos at Kashiwa
19.00 Kawasaki Frontale v Cerezo Osaka at Todoroki

2014 Nabisco League Cup Final Tournament Quarter-Finals

2014 J.League Yamazaki Nabisco Cup Quarter-Finals

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1st Leg: Wednesday Sept.3

19.00 Cerezo Osaka v Kawasaki Frontale at Yanmar Nagai
19.00 Vissel Kobe v Gamba Osaka at Universiade
19.00 Sanfrecce Hiroshima v Urawa Reds at Edion
19.30 Yokohama F•Marinos v Kashiwa Reysol at Mitsuzawa

2nd Leg: Sunday Sept.7

18.00 Urawa Reds v Sanfrecce Hiroshima at Saitama
18.00 Gamba Osaka v Kobe at Banpaku
19.00 Kashiwa Reysol v Yokohama F•Marinos at Kashiwa
19.00 Kawasaki Frontale v Cerezo Osaka at Todoroki

and some of the ads…

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Emperor's Cup Quarter Finals, Dec. 23rd 2012

Quarter Finals December 23rd:

13:00 Cerezo Osaka v. Gamba Osaka at Nagai Stadium, Osaka

15:00 JEF Utd Ichihara Chiba v. Kashima Antlers at Ajinomoto Stadium, Tokyo

13:00 Nagoya Grampus v. Yokohama F.Marinos at Mizuho Stadium, Nagoya

13:00 Omiya Ardija v. Kashiwa Reysol at Kumagaya Stadium, Saitama

Semi Finals to be played on December 29th as follows:

13:00 Gamba or Cerezo v JEF or Antlers at Ecopa Stadium, Shizuoka

15:00 Grampus or Marinos v Ardija or Reysol at Kokuritsu Stadium, Tokyo

The Final of the 92nd Emperor’s Cup will be held on January 1st at Kokuritsu Stadium, kick off 14.00

Sumo Celebrating Sanfrecce 3-2 Ulsan Hyundai

Sanfrecce Hiroshima 3-6-1
GK Nishikawa
DF Shiotani Mizumoto Hwang
MF Aoyama Takahagi Yamagishi Ishikawa Morisaki Morisaki
FW Sato

Newly-crowned first-time J.League Champions came from an early goal down to beat AFC Champions league winners Ulsan Hyundai 3-2 in the FIFA Club World Cup 2012 5th place play-off yesterday, in Toyota Stadium.

Hiroki Mizumoto put through his own goal in the 17th minute when goalkeeper Shusaku Nishikawa came off his line, but didn’t communicate well enough with his centre back and Mizumoto’s back pass trickled over the line to give the Korean team the lead.

Ulsan, featuring the ex-Gamba triumvirate of Lee Keun Ho, Rafinha and Kim Seung Yong, pushed hard for another goal but Sanfrecce held them at bay and the equaliser came in the 35th minute as Hisato Sato glanced a header on from a Koji Morisaki free kick. The keeper got to the ball but it fell kindly for the in-rushing Satoru Yamaguishi to blast over the line from inches out as the despairing Kim Young Kwang tried to keep the ball out.

It was Yamagishi again who made the difference in the 56th minute as Sato got on the end of a left wing inswinger from the influential Sanfrecce midfielder. Sato hardly touched the ball as it swung in and his miskick (or, debatably, not even a touch?!) fooled the keeper and the ball sneaked in at the far post to give Sanfrecce the lead.

By the time the 3rd goal came, Sanfrecce had been running the match and the goal had been only a matter of time, although there was an element of luck about it in the end, as the pass found Takahagi, who regained control of the ball after the defender’s challenge, and slipped it sideways to Sato, who made no mistake.

Ulsan made pulled the deficit back to a single goal with the last kick of the game, a Yong Lee free kick from the left finding its way through everyone and in at the far post.

Sato said after the game, “We didn’t make the semi-final, but I’m happy we managed to win this game in front of Japanese fans and showed the Sanfrecce style of football to the world. This will give us confidence and experience for our ACL campaign next season.”

Coach Hajima Moriyasu was satisfied with the finish to his team’s season, “Credit to the players. We were on a tight schedule after ending the J.league season and the players pulled on their energy reserves and gave their all to the end. I’m happy we ended with a win.”

Ulsan Hyundai starting XI:
YK Kim, Y.Lee, Kwak, YS Kim, CG Kim, H.Lee, SY Kim, SK Ko, SW Kim, KH Lee, Rafinha

Emperor's Cup – next up for the last 16.

As featured in the forthcoming JSoccer Magazine Issue 6 (out Dec.14th), here’s a look at the 92nd Emperor’s Cup . . .

J.League (and JFL) teams are in action again this Saturday, December 15th, with the 4th Round of the Emperor’s Cup – staggered kick offs and all available live, or recorded on Japanese TV.

The number before the kick off time is the match number – then you can work out who the winners of each tie play in the quarter final, and follow the possible permutations through to the final on New Year’s Day.

73 – 13.00 Gamba Osaka v Machida Zelvia (Recorded broadcast 20.00 NHK BS-1)
74 – 17.00 Cerezo Osaka v Shimizu S-Pulse (Live SkyPerfect 581 / 801)
75 – 13.00 JEF United Chiba v Fukushima Utd (Recorded broadcast 18.00 NHK BS-1)
76 – 13.00 Kashima Antlers v Jubilo Iwata (Recorded broadcast 22.00 SkyPerfect 580 / 800)
77 – 16.00 Urawa Reds v Yokohama F. Marinos (Recorded broadcast 16.50 SkyPerfect 580 / 800)
78 – 15.00 Nagoya Grampus v Roasso Kumamoto (Live NHK BS1)
79 – 13.00 Omiya Ardija v Kawasaki Frontale (Recorded broadcast 23.00 SkyPerfect 581 / 801)
80 – 13.00 Kashiwa Reysol v Yokogawa Musashino (Live NHK BS1)

Winner of 73 to play winner of 74 in quarter finals (Osaka Derby coming there? More likely S-Pulse will pull though, though? What do you think). Winners of 75 and 76 meet, 77 and 78, 79 and 80…. those quarter finals will be held on December 23rd.

The semi-finals take place December 29th, with the final, as always, on New Year’s Day, 14.00 kick off.

In the opinion of JSoccer Magazine, it is great to have some kind of drawing to decide the teams, like we did at the 4th Round stage – adds excitement and unpredictability — the magic of the cup! Now just make it a draw right from the start :-)

Going . . . Going . . . Gon! Masahi Nakayama Retires.

Going . . . Going . . . Gon! Masahi Nakayama Retires.

Masashi Nakayama, Jubilo Iwata and Japan legend – with a few appearances for Consadole Sapporo thrown in for good measure – announced his retirement this week, at the age of 45, his body, in his own words – in a nutshell – not responding any longer! The player managed a couple of minutes as a substitute in Consadole’s final match as his swansong, but held back the announcement until Tuesday. I find that interesting, since the J.League Awards on Monday night feted ex-Jubilo players Makoto Tanaka and Toshiya Fujita on their retirement. Did Nakayama not want to take their moment, or did he want his own later in the week!?

Nakayama – affectionately known as “Gon” is the J.League’s all-time leading scorer, with 157 goals, and also holds a few other records in the Japanese – and world – game. He was Japan’s first-ever scorer in World Cup Finals, with
his 74th minute strike in the 2-1 defeat to Jamaica at France 1998. Incidentally, he then broke a bone in his leg later in the match, but the full extent of his injury was not known until he completed the game!

“Gon” notched 21 goals in 53 internationals for Japan between 1990 and 2003, and 235 goals for Jubilo Iwata (also including four seasons pre-Jubilo Iwata as Yamaha Motors) in almost 500 appearances. In 1998 he was J1’s top scorer with 40 goals, which included a streak of hat tricks (in fact four and five goal hauls) in four successive games, and he holds the record for the fastest ever international hat trick – scoring three goals in 183 seconds against Brunei in 2000!

He was a popular character with fans and fellow players alike and was always good for a quote after a game, win or lose, and often talked to the fans via megaphone after a win. There should be more like him – bringing fun to the game, while enjoying life.

For me, the biggest memory of “Gon” that I will ever hold is watching live TV in Kobe, Japan, in the dark hours of the night of October 28th, 1993, and the enduring image of the player collapsing to the ground as he realised that Japan were not going to the World Cup, USA 1994. The game I was watching – Japan against Iraq, in Doha, went into injury time with Japan leading 2-1 and heading to USA. The rest is history. It became known as the Doha Tragedy (ドーハの悲劇 Dōha no higeki), as Japan gave away the ball in the middle of the pitch, Iraq advanced, gained a corner and scored from it! The draw sent both teams out and South Korea went to USA 1994. Incidentally, Korea also has a name for this event – the Miracle of Doha (도하의 기적/도하의 奇跡 or Doha ui Gijeok to give it its Korean name) . . . Going . . . Going . . . Gon!