Monthly Archive for March, 2009

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Match Report: J-League Round 2: FC Tokyo @ Urawa Reds

J.League Division 1 Week 2
First Half
1 – 1

Second Half
2 – 0

Final
3 – 1

March 14th 2009, 2PM Kickoff at Saitama Stadium 2002 (Saitama, Saitama) Attendance 50,802
GK 23 Ryota Tsuzuki

DF 6 Nobuhisa Yamada

DF 2 Keisuke Tsuboi

DF 4 Marcus Tulio Tanaka

DF 3 Hajime Hosogai

MF 13 Keita Suzuki

MF 22 Yuki Abe

MF 24 Genki Haraguchi

MF 10 Robson Ponte

FW 11 Tatsuya Tanaka

FW 17 Edmilson

Starting Members
GK 20 Shuichi Gonda

DF 5 Yuto Nagatomo

DF 15 Daishi Hiramatsu

DF 2 Teruyuki Moniwa

DF 25 Yuhei Tokunaga

MF 6 Yasuyuki Konno

MF 10 Yohei Kajiyama

MF 22 Naotake Hanyu

MF 40 Tatsuya Suzuki

FW 9 Cabore

FW 32 Yusuke Kondo

57′ 19 Naohiro Takahara (for Genki Haraguchi)

78′ 34 Naoki Yamada (for Tatsuya Tanaka)
86′ 20 Satoshi Horinouchi (for Edmilson)

Substitutes 58′ 19 Yohei Otake (for Tatsuya Suzuk)

60′ 24 Shingo Akamine (for Yusuke Kondo)

66′ 18 Naohiro Ishikawa (for Naotake Hanyu)

4′ Yuki Abe

50′ Edmilson

83′ Robson Ponte

Goals 13′ Own Goal (initially credited to Cabore)
63′ Nobuhisa Yamada Cautions
Ejections

Report

On an overcast, rainy day, roughly 2,000+ visiting supporters travelled to see FC Tokyo take on Urawa Reds and their home army of almost 60,000 at a sold-out Saitama Stadium 2002.  Shuichi Gonda would once again settle b etween the posts for Tokyo, and Jofuku elected to make a couple changes in order to tweak the lineup from last week’s Niigata debacle: Tatsuya Suzuki got a start at midfielder, and Cabore teamed up with Yusuke Kondo on the front line.

The first goal of the match, ominously, was a quick strike from Urawa midfielder Yuki Abe on – you guessed it – a corner kick.  FC Tokyo would fight back, however, and 7 minutes later Tokunaga set up a perfect pass to Cabore who drove the ball in, though it would deflect off a Reds defender and be declared an Own Goal.  Much like Nagatomo’s game-winner last year against Verdy, there was no doubt as to whose effort was responsible for the point.

The teams battled back and forth for the rest of the half, with Tokyo at times threatening and many times scrambling to deflect Urawa’s attack.  Near the end of the first half, a chilling moment silenced the stadium as FCT defender Teruyuki Moniwa and Urawa defender Marcus Tulio Tanaka collided as they both challenged for a header, each player receiving a nasty cut for their troubles.  4 minutes of stoppage time were added as a result of this incident, and while Urawa briefly challenged Tokyo held strong to end the half at 1-1.

In the second half, Urawa managed to strike quickly when Yusuke Kondo went down in contact and FCT players hesitated, expecting Urawa to kick the ball to the sideline.  Instead the referee waved the play on, and the defenders got caught off-guard as Ponte whipped an unstoppable cross to Edmilson to give Urawa the advantage.

Having learned from the defensive-minded substitutions he made last week, Jofuku attempted to stemp the tide by reinforcing on offense, sending in Otake, Akamine, and Ishikawa onto the field to replace Suzuki, Kondo, and Hanyu.  Nao would have one of the best chances for Tokyo, a long bullet from the edge of the box that clanged against the top post.

As the game reached its end and with the FCT defense in disarray, Ponte used a defender as a screen to slip an insurance goal past Gonda for the 3-1 final.

Analysis

After two goals to begin the game, the first half was a constant struggle between stemming back the Red Tide and trying to establish an offensive rhythm.  Somehow or another Tokyo always managed to get the ball away from the attackers at the last second, but rarely seemed to think ahead in terms of establishing its own beachhead and advancing forward.  Again and again, Tokyo’s attack revered to a series of short passes that would have been clever if they hadn’t picked off half the time.  Halfhearted clears resulted in Urawa regaining position and pressing the attack again, halfhearted attacks never seemed to fully form, and the team only had a depressing 7 shots on goal the entire game according to the official statistics (even when compared to Urawa’s 9, I assure you that I’d take 9 Urawa chances against 20 of the sort that Tokyo had all day).

With Kajiyama and Konno playing at defensive midfielder, the back line of Tokunaga, Nagatomo, Moniwa, and Hiramatsu theoretically had enough strength to keep a solid line of defense, but they constantly allowed Urawa players to get into close range.  I saw Sahara once or twice on the sideline, seemingly chomping at the bit to get into the game.  One can only wonder what kind of effect he could have made.

On offense the team is plainly neutered for reasons I can’t even begin to consider; I spent much of the game having flashbacks to 2007 and our dreadful strategy of passing down the sideline, crossing it into the goal area, and seeing what happens.  Ishikawa was by far the biggest substitute contributor with his attacks down the right side, and the game might have taken a totally different form had his shot not bounced off the crossbar.  Akamine was useless as many of the team’s crosses were picked off by Urawa defenders, and Otake physically struggled against a physically larger Urawa team.

The most disconcerting part of the game was that as the minutes ticked down in the second half, the players visibly seemed to lose their fighting spirit, which is part of what allowed the 3rd goal.  They were outclassed and outplayed by an Urawa side that, while strong, certainly had weaknesses of its own.  And yet on this cold March afternoon, the Gasmen seemed unable – or worse, unwilling – to fight on.

Tokyo’s next game is on March 21st against Montedio Yamagata, a team that has been the surprise of J.League between its dismantling of Jubilo Iwata in Week 1 and a surprising draw against league frontrunners Nagoya Grampus that was played on a snowy field.  Teams that had taken newcomers Montedio for granted are beginning to wonder if they had judged too soon, while those who predicted Tokyo’s success are left wondering just what the hell is going on.  A win next week will be crucial toward establishing some sort of rhythm for the team; any kinks can be worked out in the interval as FCT has Nabisco Cup matches on the 25th and 29th of the month before returning to J1 play against Jubilo Iwata on the 4th.  No matter what happens, this is a team in dire need of a quick recovery before dreams of an ACL bid are quickly lost.

Errata

As my ticket was for the visitor’s section, I had the opportunity to see Tokyo supporters crammed into one small area of the concourse, walled off with fencing and blocked by guards.  While Urawa’s fanbase is certainly large and that should be respected, conditions for the visiting fans were lackluster to say the least; a couple tables selling food (with long lines to boot) and one bathroom per gender.  That the rain forced many to wait in the concourse before the game started didn’t help matters either.  At a world-class facility like Saitama Stadium, the Reds organization should be ashamed that this is the best level of service they deem fit to provide to their guests.

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Match Preview: J1 Week 2 Urawa Reds vs. FC Tokyo

March 14th 2009, 2PM Kickoff at Saitama Stadium 2002 (Saitama City, Saitama)

J1 Competition Record: Urawa Reds 8 wins, 2 draws, FCT 6 wins

Background

While Urawa has dominated in meetings between the two teams in the last four years, Tokyo’s last victory came on the championship stage as the team prevailed in a shootout to win the 2004 J.League Cup.  Since then, there has always been a particular sort of animosity between the respective teams’ supporters, and while Urawa has risen to become one of the premiere clubs in Asia, FCT has struggled to shake off its mantle of perennial underachiever.  Though FCT has put in solid efforts in its last few encounters, Urawa has always prevailed.  That said, on any given Saturday J.League will shock even the most cynical of followers.

Urawa and Tokyo are both hoping to follow opening-day losses with Week 2 rebounds; the Reds following a loss away at Kashima and Tokyo after its distressing home defeat to Niigata.  The match will be the first home game of the season at Saitama Stadium 2002, and to suit the occasion Urawa is apparently calling out Rod Stewart to play a pregame concert.  His set will likely include “We Are Diamonds”, the Red’s fan anthem based on his hit song “We Are Sailing.”  Given that he’s a Celtic fan, he should be singing You’ll Never Walk Alone.  The things some people will do for money.  In any case, giant flags will likely be flown, card displays utilized, and fans on both sides threatened with bodily harm.

The Matchup

For the second week in a row FCT will head into a game with an inexperienced goalkeeper, shaky defense, and a front line that has more questions unanswered than otherwise.  Unlike last week, however, there can be no doubting of the opposition’s strength.  Though Urawa is said to have played poorly in last week’s match, this week they’ll have the advantage of a sold-out Saitama Stadium providing the atmosphere.  Urawa is one of a handful of teams that relishes its homefield advantage and no matter how vocal FCT’s supporters are, they will be drowned out by the moooing of Reds fans on all sides.

On the field, Shuichi Gonda will be taking his second turn between the posts following his baptism of fire against Albirex Niigata, and he will face a much stronger attack this time around.  However, he’ll also have stronger defensive support with DF Sahara apparently back at full strength and itching to return and MF Kajiyama spending time in practice this week trying out the role of defensive midfielder.  In an attempt to close up some of the seams in its defense, the team has focused on practicing set plays this week.

On offense, Cabore will likely get the nod and he’ll be joined up front by either Yusuke Kondo or Shingo Akamine, though Hirayama might not be such a surprise either.

In Urawa’s loss to Kashima in Week 1, they largely displayed the same problem that FC Tokyo has faced; while they are often able to gain solid control of the midfield the team is unable to get through that last line of defense for the score.  If neither team is capable of breaking through then it may become a case of “who screws up first,” a scenario in which Urawa more than likely has an advantage over FCT.

Predictions

Rod Stewart will suck, the Urawa supporters will be scarily impressive with their tifos, and the stadium will reverberate with moooing whenever an FC Tokyo player touches the ball.  That much is certain.

As far as the outcome, it will either be (in order of difficulty from easiest to hardest) a blowout loss, a well-earned tie, or a surprising victory.  Although the eternal optimist in me (i.e. the kid who was raised from birth to cheer for Philadelphia teams, accept the futility that comes with it, and then hope for next year) would love to say that the team will take last week’s loss as the slap on the ass it needs to kick into high gear and win out the last 33 games, the reality is much harsher.

So let me put it this way; if Tokyo plays like it did last week, we will lose embarrassingly and supporters are going to start to get awfully worried about Week 3′s matchup against a Montedio squad that is nothing short of surprising so far this season.  If the defense coalesces and Gonda makes a few big plays, there’s a good chance FCT can walk away with a draw and its first point of the year.  If the defense coalesces, Gonda makes a lot of big plays, and the offense finds its testicles, it could be a shock win and Tokyo fans will have to escape before angry Urawa fans start tearing down the security fencing.

I, personally, am not going to SaiSta expecting a victory, nor do I think any but the most diehard optimistic FCT supporters are as well.  But in a league where Montedio Fucking Yamagata is currently in first place, anything can happen.

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Ishikawa returns to practice, could be in Urawa lineup

Nao Ishikawa returns to practice

Chuunichi Sports reported in today’s issue that MF Naohiro Ishikawa, who missed the first game of the season w/ inflammation in his left knee, has jumped back into full practice and could make it into the lineup against Urawa Reds this Saturday.  Nao took passes at top speed, shook off defenders, and scored a goal off his right foot in an unsual 9-on-9 practice game, and was repeatedly praised by manager Hiroshi Jofuku for his efforts.  Jofuku is quoted as saying “Nao’s return is the medicine that the team needs.  As soon as he can play at 100% for 90 minutes, our options at midfield look a lot better.”

This is, it goes without saying, a very good thing for the team.  Nao’s presence was missed on Saturday and against Urawa the team will need all the weapons it can get a hold of.  Obviously putting him back on the field before he’s at full strength is a risk that Jofuku doesn’t – and shouldn’t – want to take, but if Nao feels up to the task then he would certainly be a welcome addition to the starting eleven.

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Injury Report: Satoru Asari out 2-3 weeks

FCT announced today that MF Satoru Asari would be out for two to three weeks due to an inflamed right Achilles tendon.

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Responsible party sought in damage at Ajinomoto Stadium

According to a post on the official FC Tokyo website, a chair in section 57, row 15 (located behind the home goal) was found to be broken following the game.  The damage came as a result of strong force on the back of the chair, which caused the clasp that connects the seat to the pole underneath to break.  The location of the chair can be seen via these photos posted with the announcement:

Section 57 is the domain of the LA12 supporter group, as seen in this photo from last year:

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Based on that, the person responsible was probably in row 16, standing with his foot on his chair (in row 16) and his other foot on the back of the chair in front of him (the chair in question in row 15).  I would imagine that the damage wasn’t from vandalism, but rather from heavy jumping throughout the match as supporters are wont to do.

The announcement goes on to say that should the person responsible not step forward before the gates open for the next home match (3/21 vs. Montedio Yamagata), an area of that section including the broken chair will be blocked off from entry.

For what it’s worth, I was in row 15; my seat was 3 or 4 to the right of the broken chair if you’re looking from the perspective of these photos.  I’m about 80% sure I know who was sitting in that seat… obviously I shouldn’t speculate in case I’m wrong, but if I’m right that person wouldn’t have been responsible for that sort of damage.

In any case, this sort of thing is disappointing especially in light of the fact that fans were allowed for the first time in over a year to stand in the walkway area in front of the seats.  I’m not quite sure how large a section the team would block off in the event someone doesn’t come forward in the next two weeks, but I hope that someone does take responsibility for their actions and allows the team’s supporters to continue to show their strength behind the goal area.

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YouTube roundup: 3/7 vs. Albirex Niigata


Home end video of Albirex’s first goal at the very end of the first half.


Full highlights and interviews with Albirex’s Pedro Junior (2 goals) and Albirex’s head coach.

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Match Report: J-League Round 1: FC Tokyo vs. Albirex Niigata

J.League Division 1 Week #
FC Tokyo First Half
0 – 1

Second Half
1 – 3

Final
1 – 4

Albirex Niigata
March 7th 2009, 1PM Kickoff at Ajinomoto Stadium (Chofu, Tokyo) Attendance 27,568
GK 20 Shuichi Gonda

DF 5 Yuto Nagamoto

DF 15 Daishi Hiramatsu

DF 2 Teruyuki Moniwa

DF 25 Yuhei Tokunaga

MF 6 Yasuyuki Konno

MF 17 Jo Kanazawa

MF 10 Yohei Kajiyama

MF 22 Naotake Hanyu

FW 24 Shingo Akamine

FW 32 Yusuke Kondo

Starting Members
GK 1 Takashi Kitano

DF 17 Jun Ichida

DF 5 Mitsuru Chiyotanda

DF 6 Mitsuru Nagata

DF 29 Gilton Ribeiro

MF 15 Isao Homma

MF 10 Marcio Richardes

MF 7 Toshihiro Matsushita

FW 11 Kisho Yano

FW 16 Hideo Oshima

FW 9 Pedro Junior

62′ #40 Tatsuya Suzuki (for Jo Kanazawa)

64′ #4 Bruno (for Naotake Hanyu)

64′ #9 Cabore (for Yusuke Kondo)

Substitutes 81′ #20 Young Cheol Cho (for Hideo Oshima)

87′ Kazuhiko Chiba (for Toshihiro Matsushita)
89′ Gotoku Sakai (for Marcio Richardes)

51′ Yusuke Kondo Goals 44′ Gilton Ribeiro

53′ Pedro Junior

68′ Hideo Oshima

72′ Pedro Junior

69′ Yohei Kajiyama

87′ Yasuyuki Konno

Cautions 78′ Isao Homma
Ejections

Report

Jesus Christ on a cracker.

Following a 6th place finish in the 2008 season, with which FC Tokyo seemed to imply that its days of being a chronic underachiever may have finally come to an end, the team managed to squander the goodwill of the supporters in 90 minutes of frustrating and at times atrocious play in front of a surprisingly underwhelming crowd of just under 28,000.

After some pomp and circumstance (Nobuo Kawaguchi’s ‘retirement fairwell’ to the crowd and the first in-stadium performance of Tokyo Dorompa, who, to be fair, can bust quite a move), the game started on a somewhat awkward note with neither team unable to find any sort of rhythm for the first 15-20 minutes of play.  Following that, however, it was almost all FC Tokyo as they continuously pressed the attack, setting up consecutive chances in front of the Niigata goal but never managing to succeed.  Even more impressive is that Tokyo was able to keep up that pressure with 10 men, as newcomer Daishi Hiramatsu lived up to his reputation for complete disregard for personal safety and spent a couple agonizing minutes on the sideline receiving treatment for a cut to his forehead.  On the rare occasions that the ball found its way back into the Tokyo penalty area, rookie goalkeeper Gonda proved his technical skills with some booming kicks that left the crowd speechless.

Everything seemed on-course for a 0-0 draw to end the first half, until Albirex was awarded corner kick late in extra time.  Anyone who follows the team knows that defending against corner kicks has always been a perpetual weakness, and this corner was no exception.  A perfect cross connected to Gilton Ribiero, who sailed it in on the left post just past Gonda’s outstreched fingers.  The whistle sounded for the half and many FCT players visibly expressed their frustration at this lapse.

Early on in the second half, things seemed like they could possibly turn around as Yusuke Kondo scored a beauty of a goal from beyond the penalty box, evening the game at 1 all.  Yet 2 minutes later, another corner kick would lead to another goal for Albirex.

While FCT was clearly the dominant team in the first half, the second half saw an unorganized mess of a squad trying to keep pace with an Albirex team that has apparently improved significantly since their last encounter in late 2008.  The third Albirex goal came as a horrid back pass from Hiramatsu ended up in control of new Albirex transfer Hideo Oshima, who made easy pickings of Gonda for the score.  The last nail in the coffin came a few minutes later as Albirex swarmed Gonda, who was unable to stop Pedro Junior’s effort by himself.  Though FCT made some valiant efforts in the last 20 minutes, Albirex were unable to capitalize on at least two opportunities that could have meant a 1-6 finish.

There is a lot of blame to go around for today’s loss; the only player who probably deserves it the least is Gonda, who performed about as well as one could expect for a second-stringer with no experience on the field.  Hiramatsu was reckless and stupid and it cost the team dearly.  Akamine failed to convert one of any number of opportunities in the Albirex box.  Kajiyama was careless in his passing, resulting in several turnovers.  Players all over were losing the air battle with the regularity of a Swiss watch.  The defense was unable to hold together without Sahara, who may still be out for the Urawa match.  The list goes on.

Yet the person who burdens the most responsibility could be manager Hiroshi Jofuku as a result of his questionable lineup and even more questionable substitutions.  Especially puzzling were his decisions to start Jo Kanazawa at midfield (when Otake would probably have been a much better choice), to not start Cabore, and to bring in Bruno to replace Hanyu at a time when the team needed more offense, not more defense.  Another fact that’s become blindingly apparent is that the team is hurting from that empty 3rd foreign player slot and should start taking resumes for defenders w/ tall vertical reaches as soon as possible.

While the supporters behind the goal didn’t boo following the loss, that’s probably more out of respect to Jofuku’s 2008 performance and out of deference to Gonda, who needs all the encouragement he can get before facing Urawa in a week.  Should the team recieve a similar result in Saitama Stadium, the boos that were part and parcel of an FC Tokyo game 2 years ago may come back into favor sooner rather than later.

Quotes

It’s very difficult to win in J.League when you give up two goals off of corner kicks in a game.  We absolutely have to reflect on the fact that we’re repeating such mistakes.

The 3rd and 4th goals we surrendered were due to the mistakes of individual players, and any team that allows those sorts of mistakes to continue has no right to say that they’re in contention for the J.League title.

We can and must learn from Albirex’s strength in front of the goal.

~Hiroshi Jofuku, excerpts from postgame press conference

Errata

I had the pleasure of meeting a few of Aishiteru Tokyo’s readers following the game and I’m pretty sure they’ll all be chipping in their opinions of today’s debacle in the comments section.  In addition, when I mentioned my blog to a woman I was sitting next to before the game, she told me that her husband had actually seen my site.  So, apparently we’re spreading in popularity, slowly but surely!  Once we finish expanding the site and getting content and media organized, work can begin on my next Big Idea: an International Supporter Group in the vein of the small but dedicated groups of foreigners supporting teams such as Shimizu and Yokohama.  I have a neat idea that involves taking over a section (or agreeing to meet at a certain area of the concourse) and offering English conversational practice in return for donations towards material for flags and banners.

Also, Urawa lost and Jubilo got embarassed by Montedio fuckin’ Yamagata.  So the day wasn’t a total loss.

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Game Preview: J1 Week 1 FC Tokyo vs. Albirex Niigata

March 7th 2009, 1PM Kickoff at Ajinomoto Stadium (Chofu, Tokyo)

J1 Competition Record: FCT 6 wins, 0 draws, Albirex Niigata 8 wins

Background

After two and a half months of endless waiting, the 2009 J.League season is finally upon us!  FC Tokyo will open the 2009 campaign at home against Albirex Niigata, who will likely bring its sizable contingent of supporters along for the ride.  Both teams are looking to win for totally different reasons; FC Tokyo hopes to prove its legitimacy as a title contender, while Niigata wants to forget the mediocrity of last season as quickly as possible.

The Matchup

FC Tokyo will be limping into the opening match following what could only be described as an unusually rough offseason.  The team will be without their first-string GK Shiota (still in the hospital following complications related to his emergency Appendectomy in February), and most likely without DF Sahara (right hip) and MF Ishikawa (left ankle).  I’m seeing reports that Hokuto Nakamura did something to his leg as well but I can’t find anything solid on that front.  DF Nagatomo, who injured his knee in training camp, has been practicing normally with the team and claimed he would be ready for Saturday.

To ante up the drama, FW Cabore returned to the team on Wednesday following an urgent trip to his home country of Brazil to visit his ailing father.  Cabore is said to have continued his training while in Brazil so as not to lose ground and should have shaken off the jet lag by kickoff.

As for the team’s formation, while FCT changed from the 4-3-3 formation it used in 2008 to a 4-4-2B formation in training camp, Weekly Soccer Digest is predicting, for reasons unknown to me, a 4-3-2-1 spread.  The team has opted to conduct its final practice matches under a complete media blackout so for all I know they’re trying out 2-3-5… which would be kinda fun to watch, but I digress.  WSD is hot off the presses so I’m going to assume 4-3-2-1 until I see a starting lineup announcement, in any case.

With Nagatomo’s return, he’ll likely take the left back position with Tokunaga on the right and Moniwa pairing up with new aquisition Daishi Hiramatsu as center backs.

At midfield will be Bruno, Konno, and Kajiyama.  Ahead of them will Hanyu and Akamine, with Cabore taking the charge up front.

In goal will be second-string goalkeeper Shuichi Gonda, who celebrated his 20th birthday on Tuesday with a promise to give 100% effort to his team.  Gonda, in his third year with FC Tokyo, has yet to log playing time but is considered by some to have skills superior to Shiota’s based on what he’s demonstrated in practice.  In a way, this will be the perfect baptism by fire for the young goalkeeper; he will be exposed to all of the trappings of a major game (as season openers tend to be portrayed as): a large crowd (could reach 30,000), a large number of visiting supporters (as is the case with Albirex fans), and all the pomp and circumstance involving the new mascot and suchlike… but then the game starts and he only has to face Albirex Niigata.  Granted, it’s not like they’re playing Montedio Yamagata, but they’re not throwing him to the wolves of Kashima or Urawa.  That comes next week.

Critical to stopping Albirex’s attack will be containing forward Hideo Oshima, who transferred in the offseason from Yokohama FM.  This task will likely fall to Moniwa and he’ll have ample backup from Hiramatsu should things go pear-shaped.

On offense, FC Tokyo will need to shoot, shoot, and shoot some more.  The sooner FCT can get a goal or two on the board, the faster Gonda will get some confidence and once he asserts himself on the field it’s likely a done deal.

Predictions

Albirex’s mascot may be the swan but from what I’ve seen they’re little more than a paper crane.  Though Tokyo isn’t going into the game at full-strength and Shiota’s presence will be missed, a strong supporter presence and Cabore’s influence on team morale should make up for that.  Gonda will inevitably concede a goal through a stupid rookie mistake but that won’t get in the way of a Tokyo victory, after which the team can begin preparing for its pivotal match against Urawa in Week 2.

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Injury Report: Hokuto Nakamura out 2-3 weeks with knee injury

FCT reported today that MF Hokuto Nakamura, one of this season’s biggest new acquisitions, suffered a injury to the cartilage in his left knee in Wednesday’s practice match against Chuo University. He’s expected to be out of the lineup for two to three weeks, so he should be back on the field in mid-March, about the time of the first Nabisco Cup matches.

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Changes at Ajinomoto Stadium for 2009

There’s been a few notable announcements about FCT’s home ground of Ajinomoto Stadium on the official website, so let’s sum them up:

Starting from this year, concourses at Ajinomoto Stadium will be smoke-free.  Special areas will be set up for smokers before the match, and smokers will have access to the same areas as last year during half time.  Unlike last year, “Smoker Cards” will not be handed out, so smokers must present their tickets for re-entry.  Info and area maps here for those who care.

Food service is being significantly expanded at the stadium.  No longer are fans limited to the tyranny of Foody’s (standard Japanese stadium fare) or KFC, with 3 new restaurants being added around the stadium.  In addition, catering trucks will be set up in the concourse area at various locations, which will hopefully reduce lines.   Personally I don’t care if they serve fried rat testicles on a stick if they would just let me bring bottles of water into the stadium without having to smuggle them in.  Anyway, maps and more info here.

And for news that isn’t totally boring, the prohibition on accessing the bottom level of the stands (the walkway in front of the short fence) has been lifted, allowing fans to get a little closer to the action.  In 2008 the space was blocked off with rope following fears that fans would want to jump onto the field; somehow it took team officials a year to figure out that if you tell Japanese people not to do something, they generally won’t do it.  While fans will be allowed to congregate on the bottom walkway, standing, sitting, or straddling the fence is still prohibited.

Finally, an explanation has emerged for why I have to figure out where Komazawa Stadium is.  Ajinomoto Stadium will be repairing its pitch in June; re-sodding, re-turfing, repairing and upgrading the irrigation systems, that sort of thing.  As a result, FC Tokyo won’t be using the stadium from late May (their last match in Ajisuta will be on 5/24 against Kawasaki Frontale) through mid-July (the first post-rennovation match will be vs. Nagoya Grampus on 7/12).

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About This Site

Aishiteru-Tokyo.com was launched in April of 2008 when dokool decided to troll the Rising Sun Forums and was instead invited by other English-language J.League bloggers to start his own.

About the Writer

dokool lives in Tokyo, Japan, where he spends his nights at punk shows and his weekends at FCT matches (and more punk shows. He can be found at most home games (and reasonably accessible away games) in the LA12 cheering section, often snapping away with his DSLR.