The Star Malaysia

Iniesta’s J-League debut falls flat in defeat to strugglers

-

KobE: Spanish legend Andres Iniesta’s Japanese debut ended on a flat note as Vissel Kobe crashed to an embarrassi­ng 3-0 home defeat by J-League strugglers Shonan Bellmare.

The former Barcelona playmaker came off the bench after 58 minutes yesterday with Kobe already trailing by two goals and, despite one or two trademark flicks, was unable to inspire a comeback in front of a crowd of 26,000.

Meanwhile, Iniesta’s one-time Spain teammate Fernando Torres also tasted defeat in his J-League debut for Sagan Tosu, who flopped 1-0 at home to Vegalta Sendai.

Expectant fans, many of them clutching Spain flags, were disappoint­ed to learn that Iniesta had been named among the substitute­s for his first game since joining Kobe in the summer.

The 34-year-old’s first touch was a silky turn on the halfway line, releasing teammate Takuya Yasui, who promptly gave the ball straight to an opponent, underlinin­g the gulf in class between the J-League and La Liga.

Visiting Bellmare, who began the day two spots above the relegation zone, had clearly not read the script as goals from Keisuke Saka and Mitsuki Saito gave them the lead.

Iniesta, who has reportedly signed a three-year deal on a J-League record annual salary of US$30mil (RM121.8mil), watched helplessly as Bellmare went 3-0 up thanks to a Shunsuke Kikuchi tap-in 10 minutes after he joined the fray.

The former World Cup winner had fans off their seats two minutes from time when he blazed a leftfoot volley wide, but ultimately there was little he could do to prevent Kobe slipping to their sixth J-League defeat of the season.

Kobe, who kicked off in fifth place, could at least point to the silver lining that Iniesta’s arrival has already proven a commercial success.

Analysts have predicted the Spanish maestro has generated over US$100mil (RM406mil) in tickets sales and merchandis­ing revenue, local media reported.

Iniesta, who lifted 32 major trophies and made 674 appearance­s for Barcelona, looked on quizzicall­y during the first half, stroking his chin as his new teammates failed to make headway.

The midfielder, who joined Vissel after turning down an offer to move to China, produced several cute touches after coming on but cut a forlorn figure as he trudged off the pitch after the final whistle.

Iniesta’s decision to choose Kobe arguably represents Japanese foot- ball’s biggest transfer coup, with many top players now moving to cash-rich Chinese clubs in the twilight of their careers.

It also comes as a timely boost to the J-League, which used to attract luminaries such as Brazilian great Zico and former England striker Gary Lineker when it began in 1993 but has struggled to attract big-name players in recent years. — AFP

 ??  ?? Crowd puller: Vissel Kobe’s Andres Iniesta (right) controllin­g the ball during the J-League match against Shonan Bellmare in Kobe yesterday. — AP
Crowd puller: Vissel Kobe’s Andres Iniesta (right) controllin­g the ball during the J-League match against Shonan Bellmare in Kobe yesterday. — AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia