Category Archives: J.League

Gamba Osaka – Nabisco Cup Winners 2014

Sanfrecce Hiroshima 2-3 Gamba Osaka

http://www.gamba-osaka.net/en/news/no/2399/

Goalscorers – Sanfrecce – Sato: 20 (PK), 35 / Gamba – Patric: 39, 54, Omori: 71

On Saturday 8th November, Saitama Stadium – the home of Urawa Reds – was the venue for the J.League Yamazaki Nabisco Cup Final between Sanfrecce Hiroshima and Gamba Osaka. It was a pulsating contest, with classy football played by both teams – rare was it to see a long pass, and never an aimless one! After going two goals down, Gamba stormed back to take the trophy with a 3-2 scoreline.

An interesting selection by team boss Kenta Hasegawa saw Tomokazu Myojin selected as the key defensive midfielder, with Yasuyuki Konno on the left of a midfield diamond, Yasuhito Endo at the top, and Hiroyuki Abe completing the central four.

Sanfrecce went ahead in the 20th minute on a dubious penalty decision when referee Mr. Nishimura judged Keisuke Iwashita to have handled in the area. Hisato Sato barely converted the penalty kick – Masaaki Higashiguchi in the Gamba goal getting a firm hand to the ball before it made its way in at the post.

In the 35th minute, Sato made it two goals for him – extending his record number of goals in this competition to 28, one more than Masashi Nakayama and Juninho who had held the record before this match – and two goals for Sanfrecce, after a little pinball in the area, the predatory forward doing what he does best – stabbing home from close range.

Minutes later the Gamba comeback commenced, with Patric heading home a Yasuhito Endo cross to make it 2-1 to the boys in purple at half time.

With Gamba looking to be on top Hasegawa juggled the formation at half time, with Kotaro Omori replacing Myojin for the second half. Konno moved into the central defensive position and Omori played as an attacking force, and how well that turned out!

With the changes in position, Gamba came out with all guns blazing in the second period and were level in the 54th minute. Patric again, this time from a Takashi Usami cross. By this time Takutp Hayashi in the Sanfrecce goal had already been forced into making two fine saves from Patric and Hiroyuki Abe but could do nothing to prevent the Brazilian no.29 scoring his second.

Patric could have had his hat trick in the 66th minute as Kotaro Omori and Usami combined on the left to find space for the latter to send in a low cross that Patric slid in to connect with. The ball went over the bar from two yards out!

Gamba did finally go ahead for good when Hayashi was again forced into action to parry a superb shot from Abe – who was in fine form – only to see Omori following in to head home the winner.

So, Gamba win in Saitama… and their fans will be hoping for another win at the same stadium when J1 play returns – away to Urawa Reds in the all-important matchday 32! Don’t miss it!

The J-Talk Podcast – Nov. 6th, 2014

https://archive.org/details/TheJ-talkPodcast-2014J1Matchday31

Barry Valder, Cesare Polenghi and Stuart Smith guest on this bumper podcast full to the brim with Japanese football goodness.
In Part 1 Barry discusses Shimizu’s stunning (I use that word a lot) win over Kawasaki and the rest of the relegation dogfight (to 19:05), then Cesare covers the top of the table, the Nabisco Cup final and the Japan squad (to 1:01:10), before Stuart and I celebrate Matsumoto’s promotion, discuss the playoffs picture and review J3.

The Killer “B”s? J3 to have reserve teams? No thank you.

KEEP THE B’S OUT

By Angus MacLeod at http://www.japanfooty.com/comment-2014

A story of some concern which appears to be gathering pace in recent weeks is the speculation that the J.League will expand J3 for next season by introducing several J1 B-Teams into the division.

I cannot imagine why they would feel such a move is necessary, unless there are serious concerns among the top brass over the attendance figures for the inaugural year. Certainly, playing competitive matches on a regular basis would benefit the reserve players of the top-flight clubs, but it would effectively make a mockery of the third tier for genuine fans.

Prior to its creation, I was under the impression that the reasoning behind the push for a third tier of J.League was to create a division comprised exclusively of teams that actually wanted to gain promotion into J2, which was not the case with the JFL.

However, the 11th hour inclusion of a J.League Under 22 side that would be ineligible for promotion appeared to run counter to this, with talk of B-Teams entering the fray leaving me wondering how the resulting composition will be superior to the JFL with its mix of independent professional clubs (or clubs aspiring to be professional) and the office sides that had zero interest in becoming a part of the J.League set up.

Although some casual supporters of J3 sides may enjoy seeing the future stars of the top-flight in action, it would seem detrimental to the integrity of the competition. It certainly does not seem to help the actual J3 sides who are competing for promotion, with the benefit largely being for the established ‘big clubs’ at the top of the J.League pyramid.

If the J.League is concerned that future talent is not getting the game time needed, perhaps it would make a lot more sense to introduce a more flexible loan system for J3 clubs, rather than encouraging the top clubs to stockpile players.

Alternatively, some system could be introduced where J1 clubs have an age cap on the players that they can name on the bench, encouraging the use of up and coming talent rather than the reliance of ‘brand name’ players in their 30s.

Hello to New Readers, and Old … a Philosophy.

We don’t try to be first with anything (although, with the personal contacts we have “inside” Japanese Football, there is plenty we COULD be first with), we don’t try to be exclusive (although a lot of the articles you’ll see in JSoccer Magazine, and on this site actually are!).

We are just here to spread the word about Japanese Football in all its forms… and to allow you access to your JSoccer Magazine fix, too, of course!

The latest results are always up to date at our Results tab at the top of the page. The League tables there, also., but, now and again, we’ll post results in the stories here, too.

One thing we do like to do is round up some stories from other sources that we feel need to be given a wider audience. You will see, in particular, stories from the contributors to JSoccer Magazine – from their sites, or something they’ve done just for us here. The idea is to promote the stories and the sites/authors as much as possible, with all the credits so that you can see more of what they have written, and then follow them in the future, at their sites and on Twitter.

And if YOU have a story, article, or anything interesting about Japanese Football that you think deserves a spot here, send it over!! NOW! alan@jsoccer.com

Thank you always for your support of the site, and the magazine!

Alan Gibson

The J-Talk Podcast

The latest J-Talk Podcast features
https://archive.org/details/TheJ-talkPodcast-2014J1Matchday28

Thomas Birch joins Ben on the first episode of the week to discuss another big win for Gamba Osaka and the other results in the top five of J1 from last Saturday’s Matchday 28 (to 42:10). Ben then rounds up the rest of the top flight games (to 46:00), before finishing the episode with a J2 and J3 update.
We’ll be back later in the week with a review of Wednesday’s J1 Matchday 29.

Matchday 29 details

Matchday 29 is on Wednesday night – plan ahead!! All matches kick off at 19.04 Japan time.

Urawa Reds vs Ventforet Kofu at Saitama
Omiya Ardija vs Yokohama F•Marinos at Nack 5
Kashiwa Reysol vs Gamba Osaka at Kashiwa
FC Tokyo vs Sanfrecce Hiroshima at Ajinomoto
Kawasaki Frontale vs Sagan Tosu at Todoroki
Shimizu S-Pulse vs Albirex Niigata at Nihondaira
Nagoya Grampus vs Vegalta Sendai at Mizuho
Cerezo Osaka vs Tokushima Vortis at Kincho
Vissel Kobe vs Kashima Antlers at Noevir

J1 Round-Up October 18th, 2014 – matchday 28

Tokushima Vortis 2-2 Vissel Kobe
Kashima Antlers 2-3 Kashiwa Reysol
Gamba Osaka 1-0 Kawasaki Frontale
Vegalta Sendai 4-2 Urawa Reds
Albirex Niigata 0-0 Ventforet Kofu
Yokohama F•Marinos 1-0 Shimizu S-Pulse
Sanfrecce Hiroshima 4-0 Nagoya Grampus
Omiya Ardija 1-0 FC Tokyo
Sagan Tosu 1-0 Cerezo Osaka

What a day it was for Gamba Osaka on J1 Matchday 28 of the 2014 season. The second-placed Kansai team were victorious in their home tie with 4th-placed Kawasaki Frontale, quite probably knocking Frontale out of the race for the Championship. The lone goal of the game came from Koki Yonekura – the ex-JEF United right back’s first goal in Gamba colours.

While Gamba continued their seemingly unstoppable rise up the table Urawa Reds went down 4-2 away at Vegalta Sendai. The defeat left Reds “just” four points clear of Gamba. Shinzo Koroki scored both of Reds’ goals before the break, with Sendai notching through Wilson and Takuya Nozawa. Further goals for Vegalta came from Shingo Akamine and Kazuhiro Murakami to take the points and Reds saw left-winger Tomoya Ugajin sent off in the 81st minute, for a second yellow card offence.

The news got even better for Gamba when Tetsuro Ota scored the winner for Kashiwa Reysol over Kashima Antlers as the game entered into additional time. Reysol saw their Samurai Blue defender sent off for a second yellow card in the 76th minute yet came out on top with Ota’s late strike.

Sagan Tosu moved up into 3rd place, and perhaps a final tilt at the title with a very late winner against struggling Cerezo Osaka. The cross for Yohei Toyoda’s winning header was supplied by substitute – and former Cerezo idol – Ryuji Bando, who noticeably did not celebrate and seemed to have mixed emotions at the result. Cerezo went down to yet another narrow defeat, but they all count against them and the Sakura-clad Osakans are now even deeper ito the relegation dogfight, especially after Omiya Ardija’s 1-0 win over FC Tokyo. Shohei Takahashi scored the all-important goal.

Also in trouble in the basement, Shimizu S-Pulse went down 1-0 to Yokohama F•Marinos in a match that was hard to watch, by all accounts, while Ventforet Kofu grabbed an all-important point in a goalless draw at Albirex Niigata.

Finally, in a “meaningless mid-table match-up” defending champions Sanfrecce Hiroshima whipped Nagoya Grampus 4-0, leaving Grampus still in slight danger of being dragged down into the fight, although it would seem that S-Pulse and Cerezo are doing their best to keep Grampus safe!

1 Urawa Reds 56 / +22
2 Gamba Osaka 52 / +24
3 Sagan Tosu 50 / +9
4 Kashima Antlers 49 / +21
5 Kawasaki Frontale 48 / +13

6 F.C.Tokyo 42 / +16
7 Sanfrecce Hiroshima 42 / +6
8 Kashiwa Reysol 42 / -1
9 Vissel Kobe 41 / +3
10 Yokohama F•Marinos 40 / +6
11 Albirex Niigata 38 / -5
12 Nagoya Grampus 36 / -5

13 Vegalta Sendai 32 / -13
14 Omiya Ardija 31 / -14
15 Ventforet Kofu 29 / -9
16 Shimizu S-Pulse 28 / -16
17 Cerezo Osaka 26 / -7
18 Tokushima Vortis 13 / -50

The J-Talk Podcast post-Japan v Brazil

The latest J-Talk Podcast …

Stuart Smith and Jon Steele guested to talk about Japan’s friendlies against Jamaica and Brazil (to 15:00), and their bread and butter, J2, as the races to make (at the top) and avoid (at the bottom) the playoffs really heat up with six games to go (to 1:01:20).
We finish off the episode with a check on J3.

https://archive.org/details/TheJ-talkPodcast-JapanJ2J3

J1/J2/J3 Results for the weekend just gone …

J.League Division 1,  Sunday, 5th October

 

Kashima Antlers 2-3 Gamba Osaka
Shimizu S-Pulse 3-0 Cerezo Osaka
Urawa Reds 2-1 Tokushima Vortis
Vissel Kobe 1-3 Nagoya Grampus
Sagan Tosu 1-0 Yokohama F•Marinos
Kashiwa Reysol 0-0 Sanfrecce Hiroshima
Vegalta Sendai 1-0 FC Tokyo
Ventforet Kofu 0-1 Omiya Ardija
Albirex Niigata 3-0 Kawasaki Frontale

J.League Division 2, Saturday, 4th October

 

Tochigi SC 2-1 Kyoto Sanga
V-Varen Nagasaki 1-1 Fagiano Okayama
Tokyo Verdy 1-0 Roasso Kumamoto
Yokohama FC 0-2 Matsumoto Yamaga
Oita Trinita 2-0 Jubilo Iwata
Kamatamare Sanuki 1-0 Thespakusatsu Gunma
JEF United Chiba 3-0 Avispa Fukuoka
FC Gifu 1-0 Montedio Yamagata
Mito HollyHock 0-0 Consadole Sapporo
Giravanz Kitakyushu 2-2 Kataller Toyama
Shonan Bellmare 3-0 Ehime FC

J3 League

Saturday, October 4th

Zweigen Kanazawa 2-1 YSCC Yokohama

Sunday, October 5th

Fukushima United 2-0 Blaublitz Akita
Machida Zelvia 1-2 Gainare Tottori
SC Sagamihara 1-1 FC Ryukyu
Grulla Morioka 0-2 Fujieda MYFC
AC Nagano Parceiro 5-0 J.League U22 Select