And FC Tokyo has nobody on it. Neither do 8 other J.League teams. Kashima has 6 players in the all-star lineup plus their manager, Urawa has 3, Gamba and Kawasaki have 2, and a smattering of other teams have one player.
My opinion? Fuck it, let Kashima’s starting lineup deal with the jet lag and getting the smell of kimchi out of their clothes. Nobody really seems to be giving Tokyo credit for their post-break comeback, and as far as I’m concerned the fewer teams that see us coming the better.
| J.League Division 1 Week 16 |
 |
First Half
0 – 0Second Half
0 – 2
Final
0 – 2 |
 |
| July 4th 2009, 7PM Kickoff at HOMES Stadium (Kobe, Hyogo) Attendance 14,915 |
GK 1 Tatsuya Enomoto
DF 25 Yosuke Ishibitsu
DF 4 Kunie Kitamoto
DF 14 Tsuneyasu Miyamoto
DF 15 Toshihiko Uchiyama
MF 22 Kenji Baba
MF 10 Botti
MF 18 Hideo Tanaka
MF 50 Yoshito Okubo
FW 13 Kazuki Ganaha
FW 21 Hiroto Mogi |
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 |
56′ 7 Park Kang-Jo (for Kenji Baba)
64′ 31 Akihito Kusunose (for Kazuki Ganaha)
85′ 8 Alan Bahia (for Botti) |
Substitutes |
73′ 40 Tatsuya Suzuki (for Naotake Hanyu)
78′ 33 Shingo Akamine (for Cabore)
84′ 24 Jo Kanazawa (for Takuji Yonemoto) |
| |
Goals |
50′ Naohiro Ishikwa
55′ Cabore |
42′ Toshihiko Uchiyama
89′ Kunie Kitamoto |
Cautions |
69′ Takuji Yonemoto |
| |
Ejections |
|
Report
Y’know those games that are unbalanced not because one team is playing particularly poorly, but because their opponent is in such a groove that they are simply outmatched? Where you almost feel embarassed for the losing squd because they simply have no chance and everyone in the stadium knows it?
That’s pretty much how I felt watching the second half of Saturday night’s fiesta in Kobe (a late afternoon nap caused me to sleep through the first half). In recognition of the 4th of July, the blue and red boys put on some white and added a few fireworks to the evening.
Tokyo outshot Kobe 19 to 4. Let me repeat that because I ‘m not entirely sure I believe it. 19. to 4. There were so many 2-on-1, 3-on-1, even 4-on-1 breakaways that Vissel is very lucky that their goal differential only took a 2-point hit. Kobe resembled a mouse underneath the paw of a giant cat, doing its damndest to put up a fight but ultimately resigned to the fact that it would eventually be crushed and consumed. If you told me that over 2/3rds of the second half were played on Vissel’s side of the field, I would not be surprised in the least. When Kobe did mount a counterattack, it was quickly snuffed by the likes of Yonemoto or Konno, whose performance was so outstanding that El Golazo gave him Man of the Match status.
But of course while defense saves games, offense wins them. There are truly not enough terms in the footballing vernacular to describe Naohiro Ishikawa’s form at the moment. His play is worthy of praise from bombastic ESPN commentators declaring that you cannot stop Ishikawa, you can only hope to contain him. While the entire front line worked together to trap the Vissel defense and open up the top of the box, Nao produced a shot that made his needle-threading against Shimizu seem like childs play. He now sits at the top of the league scoring table along with a couple of foreign players, but sooner or later he will likely stand alone.
Hanyu should also be lauded as well for his beautiful pass to Cabore which managed to shred Kobe’s defense completely and make the second goal a mere formality.
After a fortuitous set of results on Sunday, Tokyo sits alone in 5th place, 6 points out of an ACL slot and something like 13 away from league leaders Kashima. We have a big test coming next week – 3 games in 7 days, two at home against Nagoya and one away at Omiya. While I’d of course like to see Tokyo advance in the Nabisco Cup (since I’ve started following the team they’ve been eliminated in the quarterfinals twice), now that the team has regained its footing all eyes should be on cracking the top 3.
Vamos!
Norio Suzuki, who wore blue and red from 2002 through 2007, has been transferred to French Ligue 2 side Angers SCO for a couple of baguettes, as far as anyone can tell. Suzuki score 13 goals in league play for Tokyo during his tenure and continued to be a fan favorite, recieving hearty cheers whenever Kobe came to town (at least after the game; during the game he would be loudly booed by half the stadium whenever he came within about 15 feet of the ball). Best of luck, Norio!
In other news from Vissel territory, manager Caio Jr. announced his sudden resignation from the team yesterday. He will be replaced by interim manager Masahiro Wada for their match against Tokyo on Saturday night.
Will Vissel rally around their new coach or will the disappearance of one of their talented young players and unsteady leadership cause them to collapse like a house of cards? We’ll find out in three days.
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