Monthly Archive for July, 2009

Match Report: J1 Round 19: FC Tokyo vs. Sanfrecce Hiroshima

J.League Division 1 Round 19
First Half
0 – 0Second Half
0 – 0

Final
0 – 0

July 25th 2009, 6PM Kickoff at Ajinomoto Stadium (Chofu, Tokyo) Attendance 27,846
GK 20 Shuichi gonda
DF 25 Yuhei Tokunaga
DF 4 Bruno Quadros
DF 6 Yasuyuki Konno
DF 5 Yuto Nagatomo
MF 10 Yohei Kajiyama
MF 28 Takuji Yonemoto
MF 18 Naohiro Ishikawa
MF 22 Naotake Hanyu
FW 9 Cabore
FW 13 Sota Hirayama
Starting Members
GK 34 Hirotsugu Nakabayashi
DF 24 Ryota Moriwaki
DF 2 Ilian Stoyanov
DF 19 Kohei Morita
MF 16 Ri Han-Jae
MF 35 Koji Nakajima
MF 6 Toshihiro Aoyama
MF 17 Kota Hattori
MF 25 Issei Takayanagi
MF 10 Yosuke Kashiwagi
FW 11 Hisato Sato
78′ 27 Sotan Tanabe (for Naotake Hanyu)
84′ 24 Shingo Akamine (for Sota Hirayama)
88′ 40 Tetsuya Suzuki (for Naohiro Ishikawa)
Substitutes Half 15 Yojiro Takahagi (for Issei Takayanagi)
73′ 33 Takashi Rakuyama (for Ri Han-Jae)
88′ 22 Tsubasa Yokotake (for Yosuke Kasiwagi)
Goals
34′ Yohei Kajiyama
50′ Cabore
80′ Sota Hirayama
Cautions
Ejections

Report
Comments to be posted later.

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Match Report: J1R18 Omiya Ardija 0-3 FC Tokyo

J.League Division 1 Round 18
First Half
0- 1

Second Half
0 – 2

Final
0 – 3

July 18th 2009, 6:30PM kickoff at NACK5 Stadium (Omiya, Saitama) Attendance 13,527
GK 21 Nobuhisa Kobayashi
DF 2 Taishi Tsukamoto
DF 5 Daisuke Tomita
DF 3 Mato Neretljak
DF 4 Yasuhiro Hato
MF 23 Shin Kanazawa
MF 17 Hayato Hashimoto
MF 11 Chikara Fujimoto
MF 7 Tomoya Uchida
FW 9 Naoki Ishihara
FW 18 Dudu
Starting Members
GK 20 Shuichi Gonda
DF 25 Yuhei Tokunaga
DF 4 Bruno Quadros
DF 6 Yasuyuki Konno
DF 5 Yuto Nagatomo
MF 28 Takuji Yonemoto
MF 10 Yohei Kajiyama
MF 18 Naohiro Ishikawa
MF 22 Naotake Hanyu
FW 9 Cabore
FW 13 Sota Hirayama
44′ 34 Seo Yong-Duk (for Dudu)
65′ 25 Kohei Tokita (for Tomoya Uchida)
81′ 15 Masato Saito (for Shin Kanazawa)
Substitutes 60′ 27 Sotan Tanabe (for Naotake Hanyu)
79′ 32 Yusuke Kondo (for Cabore)
85′ 40 Tatsuya Suzuki (for Naohiro Ishikawa)
Goals 44′ Sota Hirayama
70′ Yasayuki Konno
89′ Sota Hirayama
4′ Mato Neretljak
88′ Chikara Fujimoto
Cautions
Ejections

Report

Omiya’s game plan was very similar to that of mine whenever I play Winning Eleven against my Japanese friends, and worked about as well.  Tokyo was tired and made the usual assortment of passing mistakes (Kajiyama is back to his 5 fuckups:1 good pass ratio), and Yusuke was… embarrassing in his 15 minutes as a substitute.  Jofuku’s out of his right mind if he considers putting him back in the squad for anything but the reserve team until he gets out there and shows some hustle like Akamine did on Wednesday.  Omiya did manage to keep Nao off the scoreboard, stopping his streak at 6 games.  Yet in doing so, the Mighty Squirrels unleashed the beast that is Sota Hirayama, as seen in this photo courtesy of J’s Goal:

hirayama_supersaiyan

…yes, this report was pretty much an excuse to post that image, and I’m comfortable with that.

Reports that #13 is considering a change in uniform number to something over 9000 remain unverified, but the two goals he scored on Saturday night were basically the exclamation point on the incredible two months he’s had ever since shaving his head.  His aggressive play and on-the-field mannerisms have inspired even some Tokyo supporters to refer to him as a heel (the traditional term for ‘the bad guy’ in pro wrestling).  I know Agent Orange over at Go!Go! Omiya Ardija thinks he’s a bastard.  That said he’s our bastard and we love him for it.  Plus there are any number of other players who are bigger douches, when it comes down to it.

In other news, as word of Tokyo’s continued rampage throughout J.League spread, the top 4 teams in the standings managed to soil their pants at the same time.  Kashima, Kawasaki, and Albirex all drew their matches, while Urawa lost on the WWI-era trench zone that is the Kyushu Oil Dome to cellar-dwellers Oita Trinita.  This leaves the top 5 as follows:

1.  Kashima Antlers (43 points)
2. Urawa Reds (34 points)
3. Albirex Niigata (33 points)
4. Kawasaki Frontale (33 points)
5. FC Tokyo (31 points)
6. Sanfrecce Hiroshima (26 points)

The coming month will be crucial for Tokyo as we play three of these teams – Hiroshima this coming weekend, Kawasaki next weekend, and Kashima on the 23rd.  Given how within striking distance we are to 2nd place Urawa (and just behind them on goal difference too; +5 to their +6), should Tokyo’s good run continue summer could end with the team in position for an ACL bid; or even the league championship.

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Emperor’s Cup Bracket Announced

It’s that time of year again!  The bracket for the 2009 Emperor’s Cup has been published here, for the convenience of anyone reading this blog here’s the matches that matter.  This year J1 teams will enter from the 2nd round along with J2 teams; the road to the Cup will take 6 games.

October 10th, 11th, or 12th – FC Tokyo vs. the winner of either the Kagawa or Tottori prefectural tournaments at Ajinomoto Stadium

October 30th or 31st – vs. Thespa Kusatsu or Sagawa Shiga FC, venue TBA

November 14th or 15th – probably vs. either Omiya Ardija or Vegalta Sendai, Kyushu Oil Dome

December 12th – likely Gamba Osaka or Kawasaki Frontale

December 29th – Semifinal

January 1st – Final

They made it to the semifinals last year, can Tokyo go all the way?  We’ll find out starting in October.

In other news, we play Omiya tomorrow and Dudu (2008 K.League leading scorer) will be starting for Omiya.  Much like his namesake I’m sure that our defenders will be wiping him off their cleats by the time the game ends.  Vamos!

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Match Report: Nabisco Cup Quarterfinals First Leg: FC Tokyo vs. Nagoya Grampus

J.League Yamazaki Nabisco Cup Quarterfinal Round Game 1
First Half
4 – 0 Second Half
1 – 1

Final
5 – 1

July 15th 2009, 7:30PM Kickoff at Ajinomoto Stadium (Chofu, Tokyo) Attendance 12,226
GK 20 Shuichi Gonda
DF 25 Yuhei Tokunaga
DF 4 Bruno Quadros
DF 6 Yasuyuki Konno
DF 5 Yuto Nagatomo
MF 28 Takuji Yonemoto
MF 10 Yohei Kajiyama
MF 18 Naohiro Ishikawa
MF 22 Naotake Hanyu
FW 9 Cabore
FW 13 Sota Hirayama
Starting Members
GK 21 Koji Nishimura
DF 32 Hayuma Tanaka
DF 2 Akira Takeuchi
DF 5 Takahiro Masukawa
DF 26 Masaya Sato
MF 10 Yoshizumi Ogawa
MF 7 Naoshi Nakamura
MF 14 Keiji Yoshimura
MF 8 Magnum
FW 19 Keita Sugimoto
FW 9 Davi
Half 24 Shingo Akamine (for Cabore)
68′ 40 Tatsuya Suzuki (for Takuji Yonemoto)
71′ 27 Sotan Tanabe (for Naohiro Ishikawa)
Substitutes Half 11 Keiji Tamada (for Davi)
61′ 13 Kei Yamaguchi (for Keiji Yoshimura)
70′ 18 Tomohiro Tsuda (for Keita Sugimoto)
3′ Sota Hirayama
10′ Takuji Yonemoto
11′ Naohiro Ishikawa
26′ Yuto Nagatomo
75′ Own Goal
Goals 53′ Yoshizumi Ogawa
  Cautions 26′ Akira Takeuchi
88′ Hayuma Tanaka
  Ejections  

Report

Those of you who are familiar with the legendary Blizzard game Starcraft probably remember the one time you played against a Korean player.  You shoulders immediately tensed, the hairs on your arm stuck straight up, a fine line of sweat formed across your brow; all of this before the game even started.  While you attempted to build up your noble Terran army and began to construct factories and even a few bunkers, your opponent already had an army under his command.  Then, out of nowhere, a wave of zerglings overruns you as if you were the last Tickle-Me-Elmo on Black Friday, and they leave behind them a twisted mass of wreckage akin to New Orleans, post-Katrina.  You sat at your computer, desolate, perhaps a small wet spot spreading on the front of your pants, wondering why you’d even bothered showing up in the first place.

That’s more or less what it must have felt like to be a Nagoya fan in Ajinomoto Stadium last night.

Nagoya, stung by a 3-0 defeat on Sunday, attempted to barrel their way to the Tokyo goal and get a couple goals that would, at the very least, help them in the event of a tiebreaker.  Tokyo had other intentions, however, and the first goal was so quick that some fans were probably still pouring into the stadium.  10 minutes later the score was 3-0 courtesy of an incredibly well-placed shot by Yonemoto and yet another score by Ishikawa, bringing his streak to 6 games in a row which sets a new team record.  Nagatomo contributed a score of his own at 26′, and the team basically spent the rest of the first half in incredibly intricate passing sequences, much like bullies passing a stuffed animal back and forth to keep it away from a little kid.  Nagoya’s players were visibly frustrated, as were the fans who hoisted a banner exclaiming “Fight back if you’re man enough! behind their goal.  Pixi looked like he wanted to impale himself on the corner kick flag and end it all right then and there.

The second half featured a lot more miscues, errors, and generally sloppy play by Tokyo; not enough to turn the game to Nagoya’s favor but just enough to wipe out the afterglow of an amazing first half.  One could argue that playing 2 games in 4 days against the same opponent is quite tiring, especially when Nagoya played some dirty football in an attempt to derail Tokyo’s concentration, but some of these mistakes were facepalm-worthy.  Poor clearing choices, missed passes, hesitations on the attack… you name it, they screwed it up.  Fortunately this lapse only lasted long enough to give away one goal, and Tokyo went back to kicking ass and taking names for the rest of the match until newly-signed striker Owen Gouru, appearing on a one-day contract, knocked in the 5th goal.

With the win, Tokyo takes a 4-goal difference into Nagoya in two weeks.  A 3-goal loss or a better result would be enough to send Tokyo into the semifinals, where it will face either Shimizu or Urawa (who won their first match 2-1 at home).

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Aishiteru Liveblogging: FCT vs. Nagoya Grampus, Nabisco Cup Quarterfinal

Got a shiny new iPhone so let’s try this liveblogging thing again! Follow @aishiterutokyo on Twitter for the latest from Ajinomoto Stadium.

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Player News: Akamine Stays, Cabore gets offer, Ishikawa goes for 6

Some player notes as we get ready for tomorrow night’s match against Nagoya:

-Shingo Akamine has decided to reject Jubilo’s offer for a transfer and stay with Tokyo, prompting an enthusiastic response from fans and teammates alike at Monday’s practice. Akamine, the team’s leading scorer last season as well as one of the top Japanese scorers, has joined in most of the games this season as a late-game substitute due to Hirayama’s emergence as a starter.

-In this morning’s editions of Sponichi it was reported that the team has recieved offers from clubs in Saudi Arabia and UAE for striker Cabore. The team is said to be fending these offers off by establishing steep penalities for breaking a contract mid-season, but some fear that Middle East club teams can reach deep into their pockets and pull out all the oil money they need to complete any deal. This season has already seen Middle Eastern clubs pillage J.League, with former Kobe manager Caio Junior and Nagoya striker Davi already heading to the region.

-While most of the press on Monday night had their cameras trained on Naohiro Ishikawa, a few cameras stayed pointed at the press box where NT coach Takeshi Okada was watching the game. Okada gave no indication of his reaction to the score, however, and following the game he merely commented that Ishikawa “look good” and that he wasn’t going to make any rash decisions in terms of selecting members.

With Sunday’s goal, Ishikawa has scored in 5 games in a row and has tied club legend Amaral (who, incidentally, has come out of retirement to play with JFL side FC Kariya) for the team record. He can claim his own place in the record books if he scores tomorrow night.

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Match Report – J1R17 FCT 3-0 Nagoya Grampus

J.League Division 1 Week 17
First Half
2 - 0 Second Half
1 - 0 Final
3 - 0
July 12th 2009, 6:34PM Kickoff at Ajinomoto Stadium (Chofu, Tokyo) Attendance 24,736
GK 20 Shuichi Gonda
DF 25 Yuhei Tokunaga
DF 4 Bruno Quadros
DF 6 Yasuyuki Konno
DF 5 Yuto Nagatomo
MF 28 Takuji Yonemoto
MF 10 Yohei Kajiyama
MF 18 Naohiro Ishikawa
MF 22 Naotake Hanyu
FW 9 Cabore
FW 13 Sota Hirayama
Starting Members
GK 1 Seigo Narazaki
DF 32 Hayuma Tanaka
DF 2 Akira Takeuchi
DF 5 Takahiro Masukawa
DF 6 Shohei Abe
MF 13 Kei Yamaguchi
MF 14 Keiji Yoshimura
MF 10 Yoshizumi Ogawa
MF 8 Magnum
FW 11 Keiji Tamada
FW 9 Davi
 64′ 27 Soutan Tanabe (for Hanyu)
77′ 40 Tatsuya Suzuki (for Ishikawa)
80′ 24 Shingo Akamine (for Cabore)
Substitutes 45′ 17 Yuki Maki (for Yoshimura)
63′ 27 Sho Hanai (for Yamaguchi) 
69′ 19 Keita Sugimoto (for Davi
 3′ Ishikawa
34′ Cabore
89′ Suzuki
Goals
  Cautions  
13′ Davi  Ejections  

Report

Last night’s match at Ajinomoto Stadium was in many aspects a homecoming.  First in the most obvious sense of the word; the match was the first in nearly two months played at Ajinomoto  Stadium following a complete re-sodding of the pitch and repairs to the sprinkler system.  Second in the sense that the team playing in front of just under 25,000 fans last night has finally returned to where they were in 2008: playing nearly flawless soccer and ascending once again to dark horse status.  Though the sidelines were full of cameramen and video crews angling to get a once-in-a-lifetime shot of Naohiro Ishikawa delivering another goal, few in the media have highlighted the fact that Tokyo has now won 4 league matches in a row and has recovered from a dismal first third of the season to once again contend for an ACL bid.

The press didn’t have to wait long; in the 3rd minute of play Nao recieved a header from Hirayama and proceeded to shred the Nagoya defensive line like a packet of pachinko hall tissues, stopping just inside the box for long enough to send a sharp grounder into the left side of the net.

With the supporters in a frenzy and Tokyo showing all the poise and confidence of a champion, Nagoya resorted to pettiness of the sort that we tend to expect from Urawa players.  Davi risked an ejection by arguing with the official after recieving a yellow for roughing Gonda in the box, and expressed his displeasure minutes later when FCT kicked the ball out of bounds following an injury.  Rather than kick the ball towards the opposing goalkeeper as is considered proper sportsmanship, Davi tapped the ball to the sideline, forcing an FC Tokyo throw-in.  This was about as civilized as Nagoya would play for the rest of the night, but Tokyo wouldn’t rise to the bait and ended the match with a clean sheet.  As for Davi, he was neutralized by Bruno and Yonemoto to the point where he was substituted out midway through the second half.  His yellow card was the 4th of the season, ensuring that he will recieve a one-game suspension and will thus be absent for Wednesday’s Nabisco Cup draw.

Tokyo put an exclamation point on the first half with a beautiful display of teamwork; Nao crossed the ball over to Hirayama, who laid in a solid shot that the goalkeeper stopped but could not get a hold of.  Cabore was waiting nearby for an all-too-easy kick-in.

Special notice should be given to Hirayama; although he’s still not quite able to find the net his work ethic since he shaved his head has been stunning.  He may not get the headlines but Sota is helping to carry this team as much as any other player and even a bit more.

Nagoya attempted to fight back in the second half but shot its load too quickly by bringing in three substitutes in quick succession.  Shortly after Davi was substituted a collision happened in front of the Nagoya goal that soiled many pairs of underear in the stadium; mainly because  Ishikawa had attempted to drill the ball into the net with his leg fully extended.  Though he got up and walked away seemingly unharmed, Jofuku decided that the team’s leading scorer had had enough adventure and danger for the night and Suzuki went in for Nao instead of for Cabore as had been planned. 

Nagoya player Sho Hanai did not get up, however, and was taken off the field due to injury leaving Nagoya shorthanded.  Unfortunately Tokyo tried to get too cutesy with its passing and without firestarters Nao or Cabore on the field the team seemed hesitant to attack at times.  Nagoya made its most threatening attacks of the night when they were shorthanded, but Gonda seemed to catch every ball that came his way.

Finally, Tatsuya Suzuki capped off the night in injury time with a goal similar to Ishikawa’s at the start.

By The Numbers

5th place - Tokyo’s standing after 17 games this season

10th place – Tokyo’s standing after 17 games last season

+2 – Tokyo’s goal difference after tonight’s game, the first time it has been in positive territory all season

10 – Goals scored by Naohiro Ishikawa so far this season

5 – Ishikawa’s previous season high

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First Impressions: J1W17 FC Tokyo 3 – 0 Nagoya Grampus

nagoya_victory

This will do until I write my full report tomorrow.  G’nite all!

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Match Preview: J1R17 FC Tokyo v. Nagoya Grampus

July 12th 2009, 6PM Kickoff at Ajinomoto Stadium (Chofu, Tokyo)

Competition Record: FCT 4 wins, 3 draws, Nagoya Grampus 6 wins

Haven’t written one of these in a while, have I…

Background

Both FC Tokyo and Nagoya Grampus started the season with high expectations yet failed to meet them; the difference between the two teams is that Tokyo seems to have regained its footing while Nagoya continues to flounder in the middle of the table, closer to the danger zone than any team should be comfortable with.  While Tokyo has recovered from its slow start to the season (-game winning streak including two Cup matches), Nagoya is wearing itself ragged by participating simultaniously in J1, the ACL, and the Nabisco Cup.  If the orcas want to stay in contention for J1 they may have to make some very tough choices soon about which titles they’re going to put effort into chasing.

Speaking of the Nabisco Cup, FC Tokyo is in the Round of 8 as well; their opponent?  Nagoya.  The teams will play again at Ajinomoto Stadium on Wednesday evening.  I’m not even sure if Grampus is planning on going home in the 2-day interim.  In any case although whoever wins Sunday’s match may have a psychological advantage, but both teams will be able to read each other’s strategy and adjust accordingly for the rematch.

The Matchup

Though billed as an epic confrontation between two of the league’s highest scorers (Davi at the top of the table with 10 goals, and Ishikawa right behind him with 9), that storyline took a (not quite so) surprising turn when it was announced that Davi had been sold by Grampus to a club team in Qatar.  While he will still play the next three matches, a pending medical check will surely keep the Brazillian from making any bold challenges.  Never mind the fact that his heart may not be into helping Nagoya win as much as it will be into considering how to spend all of the petrodollars he’s to recieve.  Tokyo has dodged an additional bullet in that Nagoya’s new Aussie striker Joshua Kennedy won’t be in the lineup until the 18th.

Ishikawa, on the other hand, is scoring goals so phenomenal that even traditionally staid Japanese announcers are showing signs of excitement.  Tokyo’s offensive strategy seems to be “use long passes to break through the opponent’s second line, push the back line into the box, get the ball to Nao at the top of the box, and watch him send a picture-perfect volley somewhere in the vicinity of “between the crossbar and the goalkeeper’s outstretched hands”.  And it’s working.  oh lawdy is it working.

On defense, Konno and Bruno have teamed up to bring stability at the CB position and were successful in shutting down Vissel’s attacks last week.  Yonemoto is also contributing thoroughly on defense; the young star seems to be in 3 places at once on many occasions.

Tokyo’s starting lineup has remained essentially unchanged since league play resumed; given how much the lineup was being tweaked on a weekly basis in the first few weeks of the season this is perhaps the best sign that things have finally calmed down in the capital city.

Predictions

Nagoya may have broken a 4-game losing streak against Osaka last week, but they didn’t win the game so much as a bad goalkeeping blunder lost it for Gamba.  Tokyo is arguably the hottest team in the league right now and they will more than likely continue their winning streak.  If Tokyo can sweep their games this week (a reasonable possibility), it will be a bold statement that the Gasmen are in the running for a title in 2009.

Errata

This will be the first match at Ajinomoto Stadium in a month and a half; improvements and repairs have been made to the pitch and the irrigation system.

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Naohiro Ishikawa’s Flaming Foot

ishikawa's flaming foot

The man with the hot foot has surged to the top of the goals scored table, and the team has surged up the league table at the same time. So here’s a quick look at Ishikawa’s collection of onion bags.

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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.