Business Day

Hope returns to Kamaishi as stadium opens

- Agency Staff Tokyo /Reuters

Kamaishi, one of the host cities for the 2019 Rugby World Cup and still recovering from the devastatin­g earthquake and tsunami in 2011, held the inaugural match at its new Unosumai Memorial Stadium on Sunday.

More than 6,000 fans packed into the stadium, which will host two matches during the 2019 tournament and has been built on land that was previously the site of the local school that was wiped out by the tsunami seven years ago.

The children’s decision to race for higher ground meant every pupil at school that day survived and many of them were in the ground on Sunday.

Kamaishi lost 1,145 of its citizens in the wake of the tsunami and was chosen to be a World Cup city as a symbol of Japan’s desire to use the tournament, as well as the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, to promote reconstruc­tion in the area.

However, Kamaishi is also historical­ly a rugby town. There has been a profession­al rugby team there since 1959 and Nippon Steel Kamaishi, who would eventually become the Seawaves, won seven national championsh­ips from 1979-85. The new stadium will be their new home.

KAMAISHI IS READY

On Sunday, the Seawaves faced Yamaha Jubilo, a poignant fixture given the history shared between the two sides.

Just months after the tsunami destroyed most of the town, Yamaha were the first team to visit the area in a fixture against the Seawaves that was charged with emotion.

Sunday was an emotional day too, but for drasticall­y different reasons, as officials, players and local residents spoke of the hope that the stadium represents. Following a poignant rendition of the school song performed on the pitch, 17-year-old pupil Rui Horaguchi addressed the crowd before breaking into English to send a message to the world that Kamaishi is ready.

“Thank you everyone for all your support.

“We have recovered and are looking forward to welcoming you,” said Horaguchi.

The festivitie­s featured a performanc­e from J-Pop band Exile, as well as a host of Japanese rugby stars, including the 2015 Rugby World Cup hero, Ayumu Goromaru, who was instrument­al in Japan’s historic win over SA in that tournament.

Goromaru, who was injured and therefore could not play for Yamaha, said it was important to all of Japanese rugby to come back to Kamaishi.

“Being able to be back here today is a really important thing for us to be involved in,” he said.

“Going forward, in terms of the recovery ahead of the World Cup, we want to be as involved as possible.

“For Japan as a whole, the earthquake was a huge shock, so to have this stadium here now is a real sense of history.

“I hope that many people from overseas have a chance to visit us.”

Yamaha may have won the match with a score of 29-24, but the result seemed meaningles­s given the significan­ce surroundin­g the event.

As the crowd slowly filed out of the stadium, 30-year-old Keiko Yamashita summed up the mood perfectly.

“Rugby isn’t everything, it is just a game,” Yamashita said, dressed in a souvenir Kamaishi rugby shirt.

“But sometimes what people need is a game to remind them of what is good and that is what happened here today.

“We were reminded of what is good.”

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