The Guardian (USA)

Japan manager Hajime Moriyasu hails ‘historic moment’ of win over Germany

- Jamie Jackson at Khalifa Internatio­nal Stadium

Hajime Moriyasu described Japan’s 2-1 comeback win against Germany as a “historic moment” after his team shocked the four-time World Cup winners.

Hansi Flick’s side took the lead via Ilkay Gündogan’s 33rd-minute penalty and dominated the first half before Moriyasu made five second-half substituti­ons that changed the course of the Group E opener. One of his replacemen­ts, Ritsu Doan, equalised on 75 minutes before another, Takumu Asano, scored the winner eight minutes later.

“I believe it’s a historic moment, a historic victory, to say the least,” Moriyasu said. “If I’m thinking of the developmen­t of Japanese football, we have been building up. It’s a big surprise and we are now reaching the global standard. We saw Saudi Arabia with a surprise win [beating Argentina on Tuesday],

so we are showing our capability of Asian football. “From the start we decided to be aggressive; however Germany’s aggression was higher. This was no surprise for us. They have a wonderful goalkeeper, Mr Neuer. However our squad were very intelligen­t, they were smart and played well persistent­ly. They fought really hard.”

Moriyasu pointed to the fact that his squad’s developmen­t had been aided by a contingent who play in Germany and England, including the match-winner, Asano, who is with the Bundesliga club Bochum.

“Of six of our squad, four play in the Bundesliga, two in the Premier League,” Moriyasu said. “They are fighting in these very strong tough leagues. They’ve been building up their strength. So in that context, if those leagues have been contributi­ng to the developmen­t of our Japanese players, I respect that and I’m very grateful for this.

After Germany’s second consec

utive opening-game World Cup defeat, Hansi Flick offered an honest appraisal. “With this defeat and no points we are under pressure, there is no question about this,” the head coach said. “We are to blame. We can only blame ourselves. We have to make sure we can come out of this. We need to be courageous.”

Spain, who thrashed Costa Rica 7-0 in the other Group E game, are next in a match they have to win to ensure control over their own destiny. “We’ll analyse this game as we always do. Of course Spain is a different team and we’ll have a different gameplan,” Flick said.

He brushed off Gündogan’s postgame claim that some Germany players did not want the ball. “The statements he made, it’s his opinion and he’s free to express it.”

 ?? Photograph: Eugene Hoshiko/AP ?? Japan players celebrate their famous win over Germany.
Photograph: Eugene Hoshiko/AP Japan players celebrate their famous win over Germany.

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