| 2009 J.League Yamazaki Nabisco Cup Final | ||
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First Half 1- 0 Second Half 1- 0 Final |
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| August 1st 2009, 2:09PM kickoff at “Kokuritsu” National Stadium (attendance 44,308) | ||
| GK 20 Shuichi Gonda DF 25 Yuhei Tokunaga DF 4 Bruno Quadros DF 6 Yasuyuki Konno DF 33 Kenta Mukuhara MF 10 Yohei Kajiyama MF 28 Takuji Yonemoto MF 40 Tatsuya Suzuki MF 22 Naotake Hanyu FW 24 Shingo Akamine FW 13 Sota Hirayama |
Starting Members |
GK 1 Eiji Kawashima DF 19 Yusuke Mori DF 17 Kosuke Kikuchi DF 2 Hiroki Ito DF 26 Kazuhiro Murakami MF 29 Hiroyuki Taniguchi MF 18 Tomonobu Yokoyama MF 14 Kengo Nakamura FW 9 Chong Tese FW 10 Juninho FW 34 Renatinho |
| 60′ 5 Yuto Nagatomo (for Akamine) 74′ 15 Daishi Hiramatsu (for Hanyu) 86′ Hideki Sahara (for Suzuki) |
Substitutes | 70′ 6 Yusuke Tasaka (for Murakami) 79′ 7 Masano Kurotsu (for Renatinho) 84′ 23 Kyohei Noborizato (for Yokoyama) |
| 22′ Yonemoto 59′ Hirayama |
Goals | |
| 58′ Yonemoto 62′ Hanyu |
Cautions | 24′ Yokoyama |
| Ejections | ||
Report
In a season where fans have begun to express concern at the nearly regular showings of diving, complaining, and otherwise poor sportsmanship in the Japanese game, the soccer-kami sat up on their mountain, cracked open a tall can of Sapporo, and declared with a booming voice “on this day, at Kokuritsu, there shall be a good clean 90 minutes of championship-caliber soccer.”
And by Gods, they got it.
This year’s 3rd edition of the Tamagawa Classico played out on the national stage, in front of a sold-out crowd of over 44,000 at Tokyo’s National Stadium with many more watching nationwide on TV. Supporters for both teams were as ready for combat as the players, with fans lining up throughout the frigid and sometimes rainy night. We got to the campout at 5am and enjoyed some chatting with fellow supporters as well as delicious dolphin stew. When the gates finally opened, Tokyo supporters streamed through the turnstiles to hunt for seats, quickly filling the home end of the stadium. Kawasaki fans soon joined them, and both team’s supporters would complete gorgeous choreography displays suitable for such a grand arena. But after all of the flag-waving, balloon blowing, and toilet paper throwing, the match finally began, and of course that’s what you’re here to read about, right?
Well, fuck that, let’s watch those tifos:
The game started with both teams attempting to gain control, and was pretty even in the first 15 minutes. Kawasaki pressed with a couple close shots (including a close-range bullet from Juninho that flew over the crossbar for reasons that defied us at the time), but Tokyo despite their sloppy defensive play somehow fought back and showed that they would not be pushed around. Then, 22 minutes in, Tokyo pressed with a counterattack that saw the ball fall in front of 18-year old Takuji Yonemoto, who had been awarded the J.League New Hero Award (given to an under-23 player for outstanding contribution to his team in the Nabisco Cup) the night before. 30 yards out and with players swarming around him, Yone did what comes natural to a young player with more balls than brains and shot a curving bullet that everyone expected to fly safely into the hands of Kawasaki’s keeper.
Until it went in and the home end erupted in cheers.
Yonemoto’s goal was a fitting sequel to that daisy cutter against Shimizu in the semi-finals, and it threw Kawasaki back on their heels while giving Tokyo the confidence needed to solidify its defense and push on offense. This continued till the whistle to end the first half, which passed by in what seemed like a moment.
15 minutes later, both teams came out for the second half seemingly ready to outdo their first-half performance. Kawasaki pushed hard, committing more men to the attack only to be denied each time as either Gonda or a swarm of Tokyo players practically threw themselves on top of the ball in an attempt to stop the Frontale attack. The fans in the away end, sensing an opportunity to get back into the game, sang at an even greater volume than before.
Suddenly, a Kengo Nagamura free kick lead to a Tokyo counter with Suzuki and Hirayama screaming down the pitch. As Kawasaki’s defenders caught up with them, Suzuki flipped the ball that Sota, whose last appearance on the national stage at Kokuritsu was as a high schooler, was waiting for.
The only thought that came to mind was “finally.” Anyone who’s watched Hirayama play this season knows that he’s had a desire verging on obsessive to score on a header (going so far as to shave his head for aerodynamic purposes), and yet in each game and in each practice shot it appears that once the ball comes into contact with his glittering dome the rebound is almost magnetically attracted to the “anywhere but the goal” area. Well, this day was different and Tokyo took a commanding 2-0 lead with but half an hour left in the match.
With a 2-goal cushion, Jofuku opted to reinforce defensively by bringing in Nagatomo (who started on the bench b/c of his shoulder) and Dashi Hiramatsu. This defensive posturing allowed Kawasaki to press the attack in a series of crosses, volleys, and corner kicks, each of which ended in a spectacularly heart-stopping moment as Tokyo’s supporters struggled to see where the ball was. According to the official statistics Kawasaki took 17 shots in the game, but from where we were standing it seemed like they took 20 in the second half alone. Crossbars were hit, Gonda was flying everywhere, and I recalled the highlights I’ve seen of Tokyo’s stunning effort against Urawa 5 years ago with each player exerting everything they had to stop the ball. Yonemoto was everywhere at once, stealing balls from Juninho and Tese and showing why he was the New Hero. Hiramatsu gave Frontale a free kick minutes after coming on after a hard tackle to stop a Kawasaki drive. And so it continued, punctuated only by a swift counterattack that should have been a 3rd goal as both Nagatomo and Suzuki failed to find an open net. Jofuku completed the defensive alignment by subbing out Suzuki for Hideki Sahara, but by then the wind had left the Frontale sails. Kawasaki pushed, Tokyo didn’t break, and after a surprising 4 minutes of extra time the referee sounded the final whistle, bringing an end to 90 minutes of dive-free, hard-fought soccer and giving Tokyo its first championship in 5 years. And the soccer-kami smiled.

The MVP award was, unsurprisingly, awarded to Takuji Yonemoto, making him the youngest player to win the Cup MVP; he gets one million yen (US$11,000) and bragging rights for the rest of his life.

Many more photos and video to come in a separate post, including the post-game victory rally at Ajinomoto Stadium. For now a hearty congratulations to my fellow supporters and a tip of the hat to Kawasaki’s supporters and players. It seems that the post-game conduct of Frontale’s players has sparked a bit of controversy, but that shouldn’t take away from the fact that they played a fantastic match. Tokyo just played more fantastically, and are deservedly your 2009 J.League Yamazaki Nabisco Cup Champions.


