Tag Archives: Bundesliga

Yusuke Tasaka, VfL Bochum

Yusuke Tasaka
By Pedro Iriondo

During the summer of 2012 Takashi Inui moved to Eintracht Frankfurt after a fantastic season at Vfl Bochum (30 apps, 7 goals). Bochum – experienced with J.League players (Shinji Ono 2007 to 2010, Chong Tese 2010 to 2012) – reacted quickly, signing Yusuke Tasaka. As with many other teams in the region, Bochum offers Japanese stars the chance to play at a traditional German club with a large fan-base while living close to Dusseldorf’s large Japanese community.
Tasaka started his career in Sanfrecce Hiroshima’s youth team and then spent six years at Kawasaki Frontale before moving to Europe. ‘Tasa’, as he is called in Germany, is a brilliant dribbler and arguably the most skilled and creative player in Bochum’s squad. As a result of his quality to assist and score, Tasaka bears the responsibility of wearing the number 10 on his back.

When Tasaka joined Bochum his dream was to lead the team to the 1.Bundesliga. The project looked promising. Since 1971, Bochum had been relegated eight times to the 2.Bundesliga but had always managed an instant return to the top flight. Two seasons after Tasaka’s arrival things look very different. Bochum has had three coaches in that time and last season the team struggled until the last game to avoid the relegation to the 3.Bundesliga.

Luckily for Tasaka, his situation has changed for the better since the arrival of the legendary trainer Peter Neuerer. From the very beginning of his tenure, Neuerer demonstrated full confidence in the Japanese player. While trying to avoid relegation last year, he defined Tasaka as his ‘secret weapon’ who ‘fights like a Samurai’ and ‘does not know how good he is’.

Tasaka’s quality did not go unnoticed and the German media linked him with 1.Bundesliga teams like Eintracht Braunschweig and Freiburg. In both cases Neurer rapidly announced that his player was not for sale. However, after such a troublesome season, the 29-year old attacking-midfielder considered the option of returning to the J.League.
In previous seasons, Tasaka was often shifted to the right wing where he had difficulties in displaying his skills. Some disappointing performances on this position earned him his first criticism from German fans. Neuerer has now brought him back to the centre of Bochum’s attack where he performs at his best. Since then, Tasaka has scored two goals and assisted for another in the first six games, and his team remains unbeaten.

This season the 2.Bundesliga will be harder to get out of than ever before. It seems that the rich and almighty RB Leipzig will likely secure a place in the top three. For the other two places Bochum will have to fight with strong candidates such as Kaiserslautern, Nurnberg and Greuther Fürth.

It will not be easy but Yusuke Tasaka can finally dream again of playing in the German top flight. For now, Japanese football fans should keep an eye on him.

Shinji Kagawa – a Manchester United Legend in the Making!

Shinji Kagawa was already playing for Barcelona when he was 12 years old – FC Miyagi Barcelona in Sendai, Japan, that is. This Kobe-born (well, technically, Tarumi-born, a Kobe suburb, but I am not letting that get in the way of me saying he is from my hometown!) football protégé had already turned heads at that early age and, eventually signed professional forms with Cerezo Osaka before finishing high school.

He became a lynchpin of a young Cerezo side in division 2 of the J.League and, while the Osaka team narrowly missed out on promotion three years in-a-row, they finally made it back into the top flight in 2010. Kagawa had come close to a goal every other game over a century-plus of appearances, including 27 in 44 games in that successful promotion-winning season, and J1 defences soon found out he was the real deal as he notched seven goals in his 11 J1 games before boarding the plane for Germany.

It was clear in that first season in J2- and I saw him close-up, often – that this teenager was destined to be a star. Veterans of the team gushed praise, TV stations clamoured to get him on their shows and the fans wearing Kagawa on their backs soon outnumbered others, by far. When long-serving Cerezo Osaka and Japan hero Hiroaki Morishima retired, after 17 years at the club, Kagawa was given the coveted no.8 shirt – a huge honour for the player, and a bold statement from the club on the faith that they had in this youngster.

Even now, after two successful campaigns far away in Germany and a move to England on the cards, one can still see countless Kagawa no.8 shirts on the terraces at a Cerezo Osaka game – such is the adulation for their hero.

What is even more amazing – especially to those outside Japan who don’t know of the adulation bestowed upon their heroes by the Japanese fans – is that, after Kagawa announced he was leaving the club, attendances rose as fans clamoured to see their hero one more time in the pink shirt of Cerezo. They did not come to pour scorn upon him, or call him a traitor. They did not come to accuse him of deserting their team just as things had begun to look promising. They didn’t look down upon the youngster, thinking his head had been turned by money… they turned up in their thousands to see him on his way! In his final game in the J.League – which I witnessed firsthand – the average attendance was left way behind and, as Kagawa took a lap of honour around the field – collecting countless presents, letters, bunches of flowers – the away fans – who had just seen their team beaten by, you couldn’t have scripted it better, a winning goal from Kagawa – gave the player a standing ovation and chanted his name! Only in Japan!

Thanks in part to the strength of player agents in Japan, and the weakness and inexperience of clubs who are left with little choice but to accept contracts that heavily favour the freedom of the player (allowing the agent to shop the player around cheaply), Borussia Dortmund paid a reported fee of just 350,000 Euros – due to a release clause in his contract if it was for a move abroad – and the 23-year-old midfielder played a key role in Borussia Dortmund’s two championships in-a-row, including the Double-winning success of 2011-12. The Bundesliga team were very reluctant to allow him to leave, however, with just a year left on his contract, and the player making public his desire to move to the Premier League, they had to sell or risk losing him for free in 2013. Reports suggest that Dortmund offered to triple his salary if he extended his contract, so it is clear that money is not the top priority for the talented Japanese.

“Manchester United is delighted to announce that it has agreed terms with both Borussia Dortmund and Shinji Kagawa for his transfer to the Club,” read a statement from Manchester United today… “The deal is subject only to the player medical and obtaining a UK work permit. These conditions are anticipated to be completed by the end of June.”

While that work permit may not be guaranteed, due to a metatarsal injury that forced him out of Japan’s triumphant Asian Cup campaign in 2011 – surely the “player of special talent” loophole that has been used in the past can come to the rescue! If ever there was a “special talent”, then Shinji Kagawa is it! Upon returning from that injury he still managed to get back to full fitness and core – regularly – making the Bundesliga team of the Year! Anyway, in the back of my mind I am pretty sure that games when a player was not available through injury, but “experts” consider he would have been chosen if not for the injury, are taken into consideration in the long run, and the percentages adjusted. Anyone have any small print details!!?

While Kagawa has been racking up the goals and the medals in Germany, he has not been neglecting those fans of his in his homeland and recently became the youngest ever player to reach ten goals for his country. In less than 30 games. From midfield. How can anyone doubt that this dynamic playmaker will succeed in the Premier League!?

Manchester United will be gaining a player who is as comfortable out wide on either side of an attacking midfield as he is in the hole behind the forwards. He can create space and goal-scoring chances with devastating vision and inch-perfect passes, while possessing a turn of pace that can give the player himself the openings that bring goals. I know, I’ve been watching since this kid first strode out in a Cerezo Osaka shirt! He’ll do the red of Manchester United proud.

It says a lot about the state of the transfer market – as well as Manchester United’s finances, perhaps – that the reported (initial) price of 17.5 million Euros is seen as relatively modest but, whereas Chelsea have splashed bigger cash on, perhaps, as yet unfulfilled potential in Eden Hazard, United have something close to the finished article arriving at old Trafford for the new season!

If Sir Alex Ferguson gives Kagawa the no.7 shirt, have no doubt that this Rising Son can add to a legend that includes the names of Best, Robson, Cantona, Beckham and Ronaldo!

END

Alan Gibson is based in Kobe, Japan and is the editor of JSoccer Magazine – Japanese Football in English (and Japanese!). Issue 4 is out June 15th and features Shinji Kagawa, as well as the next Japanese player to take the Bundesliga by storm – Hiroshi Kiyotake – joining Nurnberg after the London Olympics. JSoccer Magazine is available through the web site www.jsoccer.com (PDF or old-fashioned full colour magazine), mail alan directly at alan@jsoccer.com or follow Alan on Twitter and get the details there @JSocccerMagazine

Alan Gibson is editor of JSoccer Magazine and owner of www.jsoccer.com, and has been in Japan for over 20 years and covered the J.League for various publications – until starting his own – since the opening day! He regularly referees J.League teams’ friendly matches, takes care of the English side of the web sites for both Vissel Kobe and Gamba Osaka and is known to do some stadium announcing, too! J.League from the inside – for sure!

Kiyotake On The Move!

Hiroshi Kiyotake will be the latest Japanese up-and-coming youngster to leave Cerezo Osaka and move to Germany after various media outlets “revealed” the badly-kept secret that the U-23 star will move to the Bundesliga’s FC Nuremburg in the European summer transfer window. In a nutshell, the deal had been on the cards for months but both parties were waiting for confirmation that the team would still be in Germany’s top division for next season. Nuremburg were also reported to have shown interest in Takashi Inui and Takashi Usami, both of who are still on their radar – what a trio that would be for the German team!

Kiyotake’s agent, Yoshinori Nishimata of JSP, revealed to me last week that the deal was 99.9% done and the full details would be released as soon as possible. It appears that Cerezo Osaka will be getting a fee somewhere a little closer to a “real” value – compared to the paltry fee that Borussia Dortmund paid the club for Shinji Kagawa – around 1 million Euros is the quote making the rounds. The player himself smiled quietly to himself, and kept his lips sealed when I quizzed him about it on Sunday…. wait and see! Or more of a case of I can’t talk about it, YET!

In an interview for Issue 2 of JSoccer Magazine last autumn, Kiyotake spoke about a move to Europe, and did not deny that he had his heart set on a move abroad sooner rather than later, but said that he couldn’t really discuss it in detail at that time! I noted that he should at least wait until after the Olympics – I actually meant to wait to make the DECISION, not the actual move but, hey, I did my best!

In the last year teams as disparate as Manchester City, Leicester City, Rangers, Feyenoord, and most of Germany have been keeping tabs on the player as he made the successful graduation from the Olympic youngsters to the full national team and Nuremburg faced interest from other clubs, but, with the JSP – Thomas Kroth (executive director of the agency PRO Profil) connections, it was only ever going to be the Bundesliga for Kiyotake!

On the Move to the Bundesliga ...
Kiyotake Walks

Personally I would have hoped that Kiyotake would wait until the end of the 2012 season, rack up a few National team appearances, and have more of a choice of club to move to (in England’s Premier League, for example, a player needs to have played in 75% of the last two years’ national team games) in 2013 but he and his agents have taken this step before the player has had the chance to qualify for that Premier League visa! I expect Manchester City will keep tabs on “Kiyo” and, in a few years Nuremburg will be cashing in, while the agents count their percentages, too!

As for Cerezo Osaka, they replaced Shinji Kagawa. They did without Takashi Inui. They moved on from Akihiro Ienaga. Saying sayonara to Hiroshi Kiyotake is just business as usual for the J.League’s most inconsistent club – perhaps I can give a hint as to why they’re having trouble putting together that winning feeling that they seek season after season!