Global Times

Japanese fans crushed as Belgium complete comeback in injury time

- Reuters Page Editor: wanghuayun@globaltime­s.com.cn

Japanese soccer fans fought back tears and wondered what could have been after a last-gasp goal by Belgium crushed their dreams of a historic World Cup quarterfin­al berth in heartbreak­ing fashion.

The Samurai Blue looked on track to reach their first quarterfin­al in three last16 attempts after going 2-0 ahead early in the second half, only to see Belgium roar back and snatch a 3-2 win with an explosive counteratt­ack deep into stoppage time.

“When we took the lead I thought we were going to win,” said 21-year-old university student Nao Okada, who burst into tears at a Tokyo sports bar as the final whistle sounded.

“It hurts but it was a really good game and I feel moved. I want Japan to keep playing hard next time,” she said.

The 61st-ranked Japanese were given little chance of making an impact at the tournament, but their gritty group-stage display and last-16 match versus Belgium won over the fans.

“This was a really good team, their passing and scoring and teamwork,” said 39-year-old hairdresse­r Kenichi Okegami.

“At 2-2 I thought we were heading for a penalty shootout... it’s crushing.”

Belgium became the first side to win a World Cup knockout game from two goals down since 1970, making the loss all the more gut-wrenching for Japan and their supporters.

Tokyo’s iconic Shibuya pedestrian scramble, normally the site of post-game revelry, was markedly more subdued as fans staggered out of sports bars into the harsh early daylight after the game wrapped up at about 5 am local time.

Still, supporters tried to take away positives from the result, taking pride in a better performanc­e than the 1-0 loss to Poland that saw Japan advance from the group stage on the strength of a better disciplina­ry record.

Japan drew criticism for their tactics in the Poland match after playing the final several minutes passing around the ball to run down the clock, knowing they would advance despite a loss.

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