Hindustan Times (Noida)

Made in Japan, shining in Europe

Though many players move abroad, the popularity of the Japanese league is also aiding the team

- Dhiman Sarkar In Qatar

DOHA: Yoshiro Moriyama waited for the translatio­n to understand the question and then smiled. “I could be talking about it for the next two days,” the Japan under-17 coach had said when asked about the country’s youth developmen­t programme ahead of the 2017 under-17

World Cup roundof-16 game against

England. Japan lost on penalties but from there Takefusa Kubo has made it to the 2022 World Cup squad.

One that began its campaign with a stunning win against Germany and will play Costa Rica on Sunday knowing that a win can seal a round-of-16 berth from a group that has two world champions.

Moriyama is still the country’s under-17 coach, said Satomi Tanekura. In a measured tone, Tanekura then summarised what Moriyama said would take much longer than a routine pre-match media interactio­n.

“Each club in the J-league has its own academy,” said Tanekura who is part of the Japan Football Associatio­n (JFA) media team here. “Some start youth programmes at the under-12 level and some at under-15 but it is common for clubs in J League 1 and 2 to have full-fledged teams from the under-16 level.”

The youngest national team, Tanekura said, is the under-15 and there are five more agegroups for each succeeding year till the Olympic team which is the under-21 side. The under-17 head coach is in charge of teams below his agegroup but if there is an Asian age-group qualifier next year, a coach can be appointed for that team, she said.

Football’s popularity can be gauged by the consistent uptick in attendance in J-league till Covid-19, she said. “This despite many players from Japan regularly moving abroad.” According to Statista, annual attendance in J League grew from 4.83 million in 2011 to 6.35m in 2019.

Football is a comparativ­ely new sport in Japan, said Nobuhiro Chiba of Nikkan Sports, the first Japanese sports newspaper which was founded in 1946. “But now it shares the No. 1 spot along with baseball. Among the young, football is more popular than baseball. Our football culture became bigger after the J League started in 1993,” said Chiba through text messages from Tokyo.

The J League began with 10 clubs and now has three tiers, J1, J2 and J3, with the top division comprising 18 teams, the second 22 and the third 18.

The ‘culture’ Chiba was referring to has created conditions for Japanese footballer­s to move to Europe. What started in 1979 with midfielder Yashuhiko Okudera has become a torrent.

According to the website Soccerway, Japan has five players in England including Takehiro Tomiyasu at Arsenal and Kauro Mitoma, both of whom are here for the World Cup. There are 31 in Spain though only Kubo plays in La Liga, 54 in Germany with 10 in the Bundesliga including the scorers against Germany, Ritsu Doan and Takuma Asano, seven in France with three in Ligue 1 and four in Eredivisie, the top league in the Netherland­s. There are Japanese footballer­s in Argentine, Australian, Brazilian, Bangladesh­i, Belgian, Indian and Indonesian leagues among others.

And yet because football is “comparativ­ely new we do not have enough experience of success at the world level. This win will be one,” said Chiba. Most of Japan didn’t think they could beat Germany, he said.

“So this is a good surprise. Now we can be more proud of the Blue Samurai.”

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 ?? REUTERS ?? Japan’s Takuma Asano, who scored the winner versus Germany, plays in the Bundesliga.
REUTERS Japan’s Takuma Asano, who scored the winner versus Germany, plays in the Bundesliga.

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