Daily Dispatch

JAPAN SURPRISE

How the country made it to the big stage

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Cricket is barely on the radar in Japan, where baseball, soccer and sumo wrestling dominate the sporting landscape, but all that could be about to change after its under-19 team qualified for the World Cup in SA.

It is early days yet, of course, with the Japanese Cricket Associatio­n (JCA) founded in 1984 and made an ICC member only in 1995. The U19 side was founded in 2017 and took part in 2019’s East-Asia Pacific qualifying tournament to get some practice.

After a 170-run win over Samoa in their opener, however, they went undefeated to book their place in the U-19 World Cup, which starts on Friday. The team includes five players of Indian origin and several with mixed heritage, reflecting Japan’s slowly increasing cultural diversity.

“Cricket is an internatio­nal sport and with the changing Japanese domestic demographi­c, this is what the future is going to be,” said JCA CEO Naoki Alex Miyaji, who has a Japanese father and Scottish mother.

Miyaji pointed to the success of Japan’s rugby team at the 2019 World Cup, where a squad featuring 16 players born outside the country reached the quarterfin­als for the first time.

“We need to change and see that traditiona­l Japanese thinking is not going to help Japan in the future. Japan needs to open up a bit,” Miyaji said.

“We need to learn (from) ... the really good reception from the Japanese people after the World Cup. Those players ... are Japanese, they speak the language and they represent the values that people can relate to.”

In a bid to increase the number of people playing cricket from the current 3,000, the JCA have targeted two “Cities of Cricket ”— Sano, which is 80km north of Tokyo, and Akishima, which is to the west of the capital.

“Rather than throw a massive blanket over Tokyo and capture everyone we can, we have gone for a more targeted approach,” said the JCA’s head of operations, Alan Curr.

“We got cricket into the schools and set up the junior Cricket Blast programme. It is six-a-side, fun cricket where everyone gets a bat, everyone gets a bowl. It is all about being inclusive and having a laugh.”

The programme has produced 11 of the 14 players in the under-19s squad, including Kazumasa Takahashi, an allrounder who debuted in Japan’s senior team the day after his 15th birthday.

Japanese cricket is keen to differenti­ate itself from the harsh, discipline­d approach to training at junior level in baseball and other more popular sports.

“We want to be seen as a Japanese sport, of course, as we are a Japanese organisati­on ultimately, but there are parts of Japanese sport we aren’t particular­ly fond of,” Englishman Curr said.

“Kids should be kids.” Curr recently took the squad on a whirlwind 10-day, fivematch tour of Australia to prepare for the World Cup, and vice-captain Neel Date said he was living the dream.

“Playing internatio­nal cricket in some form was always a huge dream for me, and the under-19 World Cup is making that dream a reality,” the 18-year-old said.

Date, who has Indian heritage but has lived in Japan since he was an infant, said his love for cricket had begun to rub off on his Japanese school friends.

Regardless of how they perform in SA — where they have been drawn in a pool with Sri Lanka, New Zealand and defending champions India — the players hope this is just the beginning for cricket in Japan.

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 ?? IMAGES/ MATTHEW LEWIS-ICC Picture: GETTY ?? GOTCHA: Kento Ota is congratula­ted on bowling Angus Guy of Scotland during their ICC U19 Cricket World Cup warm up match.
IMAGES/ MATTHEW LEWIS-ICC Picture: GETTY GOTCHA: Kento Ota is congratula­ted on bowling Angus Guy of Scotland during their ICC U19 Cricket World Cup warm up match.

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