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Daily Digest for February 10th (February 10th)

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Latest from Aishiteru-Tokyo.com: Daily Digest for February 9th (February 9th) http://is.gd/7Zx96 [aishiterutokyo]
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After wrestling with CSS beasts for a good hour and change, Aishiteru Tokyo has REAL NAVIGATION! Just gotta tweak the colors… [aishiterutokyo]
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Latest from Aishiteru-Tokyo.com: Site Upgrades Complete! & New Material http://is.gd/80pjB [aishiterutokyo]
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@pucchi_c It’s already out there in Japanese, my goal is make it English. FYI I’ll be starting a recuiting drive soon for more writers [aishiterutokyo]
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By the way, the penya application was approved. Formal announcement tonight? ところでペーニャの登録が完了!今晩中は正式発表。 [aishiterutokyo]

Daily Digest for February 9th (February 9th)

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Latest from Aishiteru-Tokyo.com: Daily Digest for February 8th (February 8th) http://is.gd/7Vcsq [aishiterutokyo]
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@benjmaxwell it appears us gaijin supporters are gonna be stepping it up this season. You free to meet anytime this week to discuss ideas? [aishiterutokyo]
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Aishiteru Tokyo is down! I’m upgrading the theme, no need to panic. Should be back up in a few minutes. [aishiterutokyo]
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Latest from Aishiteru-Tokyo.com: Aishiteru-Tokyo.Com is… broken! http://is.gd/7Wh6r [aishiterutokyo]
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@biju_ska yeah, I figured out what was wrong. Just gotta fix that top bit… [aishiterutokyo]
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China didn’t see Saturday’s game on TV. Lucky them. RT: @pitchinvasion: The Sweeper: Chinese Football No Longer Exists http://bit.ly/c6RrJi [aishiterutokyo]
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So it appears i’ll be going to a FCT Twitterer gathering later this month. Should be fun! #aoaka_sawakai [aishiterutokyo]

Daily Digest for February 8th (February 8th)

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Latest from Aishiteru-Tokyo.com: The Season Begins! New Faces Part 1 http://is.gd/7RzH1 [aishiterutokyo]
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@PINA10460 オープニングじゃなくてハーフタイムショーだ [aishiterutokyo]
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@pitchinvasion great scarf! Incidentally I’d like to pick your brain re: supporter groups, would email be best or do you use any IM soft? [aishiterutokyo]
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@pitchinvasion oh, and congrats on the chairmanship as well! [aishiterutokyo]
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@pitchinvasion alright, thanks! it’s nearly 2:30am over here so I’ll write you in the morning. [aishiterutokyo]
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@fctokyo1989 別に面白い試合では無かったのでドンマイだよw [aishiterutokyo]

Aishiteru Twitter Updates for 2009-03-02

  • Setting up the official Aishiteru Tokyo twitter feed! Hopefully this will allow for liveblogging during matches this season. #

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New Year, New Beginning

A very hearty 明けおめ to everyone out in the interwebs.

Unfortunately, an Emperor’s Cup final was not in the cards for FC Tokyo, as though dominating the pitch for most of the game they were unable to score a second goal and fell in the last minute; representative of the finishing problems that have plagued the team all season.  Thus, there will be no ACL matches at Ajinomoto in 2009, with the final slot going to 2008 ACL champions Gamba Osaka.

So now that the season’s officially over, let’s review, shall we?

J.League Division 1

Following the disappointing 2007 campaign, many fans wondered how the team would fare in their 10th anniversary season.  With new uniforms, a new manager, and several new faces, FC Tokyo proved itself to be a new team and gave the supporters an exciting, sometimes frustrating, but always entertaining season.

With eventual ROTY candidate and National Team selectee Yuto Nagatomo shoring up the defense along with Sahara, Asahi, Konno, and Tokunaga, the squad managed to shore up the porous defense that was a major problem in 2007.  FCT’s goal differential had a net change of 13 between 2007 and 2008, going from -9 to +4.  Of course, much of this was also due to some big saves by goalkeeper Shiota, who has adapted well to his role as FCT’s field general.

On offense, departing froward Lucas was replaced with Cabore, 2007′s leading scorer in Korean top division K.League.  Cabore teamed up with Akamine throughout the season and was the team’s second-highest scorer with 13 goals; Akamine lead the team with 18 and was a league leader among Japanese strikers.  Offseason acquisition Naotake Hanyu was an important addition to the Tokyo midfield, and rookie Yohei Otake lit up the field as an often-called subsitute with his small frame and explosive speed.  Yet, scoring seemed to be the one thing Tokyo didn’t significantly improve on; FCT scored only one more goal in ’08 than they did in ’07.  This, however, was enough to get FCT in a 3-way tie for 3rd place on the scoring list, compared to 10th in 2007.  Another disappointment was Sota Hirayama, who continued to underperform throughout the year although he did make his way back onto the starting roster as the season wound to a close.

The season was replete with some exhilarating highs (the first Tokyo Derby in 3 years ‘at’ Verdy, the home game against Kawasaki, the stunning upset victory against Kashima) and some depressing lows (notably the 3-1 loss at Yokohama, the rain-soaked 0-1 loss to Kashiwa, and the 1-2 collapse against Verdy).  Most of the games that ended with a draw or a one-point loss could have been radically altered if FCT had converted on one or more scoring opportunities.  Although the team is making strides in shoring up its offense, without more goals Tokyo won’t be able to stand their ground against high-scoring squads like Kashima and Kawasaki.  Many of the disappointing results were results that could have – indeed, in some cases, should have – been different.  The team’s inability to finish strong in some games cost them several results that might have given them an ACL bid, or even a legitimate crack at the championship.

Though rising from 12th to 6th place is nothing to scoff at, part of the enchantment was that nobody really thought that they would pull it off when the season started.  Expectations are sure to be much higher in 2008.

Record: 16 wins, 7 draws, 11 losses
Ranking: 6th out of 18


Yamazaki Nabisco Cup

The J.League Reserve Players Cup provided some excitement in 2008 mainly due to FCT being placed in the same group as Tokyo Verdy.  This, of course, led to two more Tokyo Derby matches, both won by FC Tokyo and the latter of which featured a Hirayama hat trick.  Shimizu continued to baffle and was the only team that FCT lost to in the group stage.

In the quarterfinals, FCT fell to the turtles at Oita Trinita with 0-1 and 1-1 results in the home-and-away series.  This marks the second year in a row that FCT has been eliminated in the quarterfinals.

Record (Group B): 3 wins, 2 draws, 1 loss
Ranking:  Lost in Quarterfinals to Oita Trinita (eventual champions)

Emperor’s Cup

FC Tokyo made the best of their last chance to reach the ACL with an exciting campaign all the way to the semifinals.  They won against Vegalta Sendai, Albirex Niigata, and Shimizu S-Pulse before their eventual loss to Kashiwa at Ecopa in Shizuoka.  The defense in the semifinal was certainly affected by Hiroyuki Moniwa recieving a one-match suspension following recieving his second yellow card of the tournament in the quarterfinal match, but the team’s inability to score a second goal is what ultimately cost them the match.

Ranking:  Lost in Semifinals to Kashiwa Reysol

As we get closer to the 2009 season (only 64 days away!) I’ll do a Season Preview post, but for now I shall engrave in stone my prediction for 2009: Top 3 and an ACL 2010 bid.  You heard it here first.

Busy Times For All

So, wow, that was a long month.  Much longer than I’d hoped for it to be.

August was, to be frank, a trying time for FC Tokyo fans.  The boys lost to Urawa 1-0 in a game which they easily could have won but just couldn’t pull it off.  Yet, this was a respectable effort marred slightly by improperly unsportsmanlike displays by the Reds supporters.

What followed that, unfortunately, was a loss to Verdy under the rain at Kokuritsu.  Not just a loss, but a fall-from-ahead loss that perfectly mirrored their win against Verdy in April.  So, there was a sick kind of symmetry to the whole thing, but that interesting tidbit did not undue the fact that this was (and still may be) a team in crisis.  When I got home from the match, I saw a mailer from FC Tokyo that included an announcement of the 10th Anniversary Commemorative Wine (red, naturally).  How appropriate that the team offer its fans a way to drown their collective sorrows.  I’ll bet sales shot up after that disaster of a Derby.

FC Tokyo’s roster includes one National Team rep (Konno), two Olympic Team reps (Nagatomo and Kajiyama) and several players who have at one point or another been considered in contention for both (Akamine, Hirayama, Hanyu), yet for a long stretch of time (a VERY long stretch of time) the team was unable to pull off more than one goal in a league match.  FCT’s absolute inability to put points on the board is at once maddening, frustrating, and heartbreaking, for this is a team that was at the time of the recess in June as high as second place in the league standings.  In protest I decided not to attend the away match at Kashiwa – this would prove to be a prudent decision as it rained throughout, but FCT also stole 3 points from the yellow apes w/ a 1-0 victory.  Yes, we would like to see more than 1-0 on the board, but a win’s a win and after two heartbreaking losses it did much to soothe the home fans.

I was unable to view the following match against Omiya as I was in America at the time, but it would seem that Tokyo has finally figured out how to score again, posting a 3-2 victory at Ajinomoto where the Squirrels more often than not triumph.  In their first win at home since the Oita match in late April, Akamine knocked home two goals and Otake nailed the winner on a free kick.  The match also featured the first appearance of striker Tatsuya Suzuki, formerly of Kashiwa Reysol and aquired during the WC Qualifier break in early September.  I dunno much about him but he seems to have had a bit of an impact late in the game so I assume having a Japanese striker who’s willing to Shoot The Goddamned Ball will turn out to be a good thing.

The next match for the blue + red boys is tomorrow at Todoroki Stadium against 5th-place Frontale.  I… will not be there, mainly because a BIG FRICKIN’ TYPHOON is bearing down upon us which may cause the game to be postponed altogether.  And I have a concert in Yokohama but that’s incidental.  I will likely attend the next home match – an afternoon fixture against Jubilo Iwata on Tuesday the 23rd.  While It’s been a long time since I’ve seen them win a league match (I believe the last such event was away @ Omiya during the Golden Week Sprint), two successive wins and a rise to 6th place in the league standings (a scant 9 points out from league leaders Nagoya).  Given that Kawasaki is 5 points up on FCT, two wins and two Kawasaki losses could put the boys back in 5th place and if the other top teams (Nagoya, Kashima, Urawa, and a shockingly resurgent Oita, which along with Shimizu made it to the finals of the Nabisco Cup) are stagnant, first place could be well within reach.

These are trying times for any football fan, but even as frustrating as FCT has been, they are yet in 6th place and may prove to have a top finish in the league – even if they should stagnate in 6th for the rest of the season, they are far above where they were in 2007 and may yet continue to prove a threat in 2009.

Trying times indead, but fun times nonetheless.