Thursday 24 November 2016

Vs Kashima Antlers (home) 23/11/16 - Championship semi final

Kawasaki Frontale 0 - 1 Kashima Antlers

So, finally we can say without a doubt, that our league campaign is over. It’s a shame it had to happen like this, as I don’t think we can really say we did a good job in this game, but maybe if we were going to lose at some stage in this Championship stage, it is a bit less painful to fall at the first hurdle. And given that we only needed a draw to progress today and we couldn’t manage that suggests that maybe our race was run already. I imagine that this might be a bit shorter than other posts as there wasn’t actually that many noteworthy incidents in this match and I don’t really want to remember much of it. We did our best this year, but unfortunately, it wasn’t good enough.


We started the game with the same starting line up as against Urawa with a couple of changes on the bench. Harakawa and Kano were replaced with Kengo and Otsuka (bit of a surprise that one!). The starting shape seemed to be the same as well, (although the Frontale website suggests otherwise), Okubo playing deeper and Hasegawa and Miyoshi being the main attackers. One big change off the pitch was the presence of a couple of extra officials to the side of the goals. Not sure if this is a trial and something we might see more of next season or if it is to mark the special occasion. To be honest, they didn’t seem to do much, but to be honest, I’m not exactly sure what they are supposed to do and which calls they can make. The first half was pretty nervy from both teams and quite tight. We had a few early let offs with Kashima missing the target and our passing wasn’t quite in order. We were giving the ball away a fair bit, maybe because of the physical stuff Antlers were hitting us with, as they did at their place a few weeks ago. Once again we had a ref who was very keen to keep his cards in his pocket which some might praise, but I think it gives other teams a license to kick us out of the game. 2016 has been the season of the injury (think these things go in twelve year cycles like the zodiac animals and years thing does). Kashima’s physical play suggested we might be getting a few more, but when the next one came it was eerily reminiscent of the game we played in Kashima. Hasegawa who had once again been looking lively chased a ball heading for their keeper and pulled up with a muscle strain, exactly as Kobayashi had done. Like Kobayashi, he couldn’t continue, so the not-quite-fit Kengo was brought on. Only 20 minutes gone, the game plan out of the window. The rest of the first half seemed to pass quite quickly. Neither side was setting the world alight and chances were few and far between.


The second half started similarly and then they scored. From where we were it looked like the ball had gone off before the Kashima player crossed it, but there were certainly plenty of people closer who didn’t say anything. Kanazaki got in front of Edu and headed into the corner. I think both Edu and Sung-Ryong could have done better unfortunately. We have been conceding goals like this all season and normally we can cancel them out with some goals of our own. But not today. Conceding definitely caused us to up our game but it also caused Kashima to put pretty much the whole team behind the ball for the rest of the match. It’s a miracle we managed to create so many chances, but sadly, it’s all too familiar that we didn’t manage to convert them. We have definitely been lacking goals recently. We couldn’t stop scoring at the start of the season, but I guess at that stage Okubo looked interested and we didn’t have so many players on the treatment table. Now, through a lack of willingness to shoot, or what was more of a problem in this game, a lack of ability to hit the target, the goals have dried up and that has accounted for our league campaign’s sad demise. On 67 minutes Nobori came on for Tasaka and ten minutes later, Morimoto came on for Itakura, Yoshito dropping back into midfield again, but then pushing slowly further forward as we ran out of time. The last ten minutes was mainly taken up by us lumping the ball forward, losing it and then barely managing to avoid conceding as they counter-attacked. There was desire but didn’t seem to be much thought behind it. Our plan A was ruined early on, the normal plan B didn’t work, so we just hit it and hoped. Watching early highlights it seems we made more chances that I remember, but you win games on goals and not on chances. I read that we have twelve shots in the whole game and I guess most of these were in the second half. The telling statistic is that only three of them were on target. Kashima had nine in total, seven of which were on target. I guess this sums up our day. We tried but didn’t do too well.


It seems stupid to talk about positives and negatives but I guess I will. Negatives first. A bad performance at a time when it was important not to have one. Another injury and once again to a player who was starting to play well. Our Championship challenge is over. Terrible finishing. Yoshito’s constant barrage of moaning, particularly to Miyoshi. That’ll do I guess. Positives… erm… none really. I don’t want to pick on Yoshito again, as plenty of people didn’t play well today, but maybe it’s a good thing that he’s going to FC Tokyo and that now we can start the game with 11 players who can be bothered. He’s been an automatic selection and really hasn’t warranted his place for quite a few months. I wouldn’t be surprised if he picked up a mysterious injury that keeps him out of the Emperor’s Cup game against FC Tokyo as that’s all going to be a bit awkward. But to be honest, no positives really. I’m just gutted, particularly because I guess we got what we deserved in the end. We didn’t deserve to be champions given that we finished 2nd in the first stage and season overall and 3rd in the second stage. I’m torn about the final. Urawa deserve to win, I guess, as they got the most points over the course of the season. But, I don’t like them. And it would show up how stupid this whole Championship system is if Kashima won the Championship after getting only 20 points from their last 17 league games and finishing 11th in the second stage. I suspect I might just not watch it. Oh, I remembered a positive! Next year we will be back to the crazy concept of the team who plays the best over the course of the season winning the league.

Next up, not a lot. The next game (Emperor’s Cup vs FC Tokyo), is on December 24th when I’ll be back in the UK for Christmas, so as far as my attendance of games goes, I’m done for this year. 36 games and out. Seems weird that some teams still in the cup will have had such a long time between games, but could work out for us as we really need to get some players back from injury. I’ll write an end of season round up soon with some thoughts on who has done well and who hasn’t and try to think about what our squad is going to look like next year. But for the time being, let’s all not think about football for a little while. It might be easier that way.

Team

GK 1. Sung-Ryong JUNG
DF 6. TASAKA Yusuke
DF 23. EDUARDO (Yellow card 90+4')
DF 5. TANIGUCHI Shogo
MF 28. ITAKURA Ko
MF 21. EDUARDO NETO (Yellow card 44')
MF 18. ELSINHO 
MF 13. OKUBO Yoshito
MF 20. KURUMAYA Shintaro
FW 16. HASEGAWA Tatsuya
FW 26. MIYOSHI Koji

Subs

GK 30. ARAI Shota
DF 2. NOBORIZATO Kyohei (on for TASAKA 67')
MF 7. HASHIMOTO Koji
FW 9. MORIMOTO Takayuki (on for ITAKURA 77')
MF 14. NAKAMURA Kengo (on for HASEGAWA 21')
MF 19. MORIYA Kentaro
MF 27. OTSUKA Shohei

Goals  
KANAZAKI (Kashima) 50' 0-1 

Highlights

Wednesday 16 November 2016

Vs Urawa Reds (home) 12/11/16 - Emperor's Cup 4th round

Kawasaki Frontale 3 - 3 Urawa Reds (AET) (4-1 on penalties)

The end of the season this year is a bit of a weird one. This game saw us take on my least favourite team Urawa in the Emperor’s Cup. If we manage to get to the Championship final, we’ll be meeting them again quite soon. In order to do that, we have to beat Kashima, who we played a couple of weeks ago. Things are definitely getting quite familiar. I think we’ll all know each other’s game in quite a lot of detail now, so there are going to be some interesting results. I’d say after we snatched three points from Kashima in the league, they will be quite keen to get some revenge. They pretty much dominated that match and got nothing from it. Urawa might be equally keen for revenge if we end up meeting them in the final. However, I wouldn’t say they dominated us like Kashima did. In fact this game was one of the most open games I’ve seen for a while. Our usual tactics of attacking and hoping we score one more than we concede were in full effect. And Urawa seemed to have come with a similar game plan. It was a very exciting and entertaining match. Not sure I would be so excited and entertained though if we hadn’t won in the end.

There were a couple of big pieces of news coming in to the game. Firstly, Kazama’s heir has been announced and it is very much keeping things in the family, with his assistant Toru Oniki, former Frontale and Kashima midfielder, being handed the reins. I’m cautiously optimistic about this. I think it means we will be playing the same kind of football, which I’m very happy about. Maybe he is not the most experienced candidate, but he certainly will know the club and the squad well which has to be a good thing. The second big piece of news is the departure of Okubo, who will leave us at the end of the season for FC Tokyo. Whilst I am not particularly upset about this, (he’s not been contributing much recently), the timing of the announcement is a bit weird. I have no idea why, even if the deal had been done, the announcement wasn’t saved for after the end of the season. After this victory in the Emperor’s Cup, we will now face FC Tokyo in the next round, which is going to be a bit weird for him and for us and for them. If he doesn’t play well for us, we’ll definitely have something to moan about. If he does, it’s going to be a strange start to his FC Tokyo career. I wonder what kind of reception he’ll get. Just weird timing all round. I don’t get it at all. I wish him the best of luck in the future (apart from when he plays us…). He’s given a lot to Frontale in his time with us, but I think realistically we all know it’s probably time for a change.

Getting round to the game, there were a couple of notable pieces of team news. Sung-Ryong was back in goal after his injury. And as one player comes back from injury, another gets crocked (Kengo). I don’t think it’s very serious, but he wasn’t able to play against Urawa. Itakura started, which is a good thing for us looking towards the future. Hasegawa and Miyoshi featured up front again and Okubo seemed to be playing a much deeper role. He was announced as a midfielder. But then again, Tasaka was announced as a striker and he seemed to be taking his usual position at the back. Itakura and Neto were playing in central midfield and Itakura was getting forward a lot. I didn’t realise that he could play there. I guess it says a lot that I can’t really say the exact formation after watching 120 minutes of the game. Positions seemed pretty fluid, and it was a very strange game. Very, very open with plenty of chances for both teams. Once again we were treated to a wildly inconsistent referee, a new one for my list, Ueda. Some of his decisions were extremely dodgy, but pleasingly the dodgy ref seemed to be handing out bad deals to both teams fairly equally. Some pretty meaty challenges were ignored and some pretty innocuous ones punished. I reckon both teams were denied what were probably penalties. Us when Itakura was knocked down in the box, and them when a ball definitely seemed to hit a Frontale hand. But the most baffling thing was when one of our players was flagged offside and he let Urawa take the free kick from well inside our half. Thankfully it didn’t come to anything. So much happened in this game that it’s difficult to remember everything, but the notes I made on the first half remind me of a truly horrible miss from Yoshito right in front of the goal and a strong first half performance from Neto. Also it would be a shame for me to not mention the rotten Urawa fans. When they really get going the noise they make is very impressive. But this happens so rarely. They spend most of the time fairly silent and only made noise when we have the ball, booing and whistling. Maybe they believe that this is what the English hooligans they model themselves on do. I just don’t get it.


The second half started with some singing from Urawa. Amusingly it was to the tune of ‘Go West’, that football hard man tune recorded by tough guys the Village People and covered by the Pet Shop Boys. I wonder if they are aware of the connotations that come with the song. Given the general bigotry (for example, the famous JAPANESE ONLY!! banner) of some of their fans, I suspect this has gone over their heads. Kind of amusing anyway. By the way, I should have mentioned that our fans singing was in a bit better order this week with the return of the banned ‘Kazoku’ member who leads the singing. Also we seem to have introduced a snare to our drumming arsenal which gave things a jaunty feel. It sounded pretty good to be honest. On the pitch, loads of chances were being made again. Yoshito seemed to be getting involved quite a lot which was nice and his criticism of the other players wasn’t as intense as it has been previously. Neto began to give the ball away a little but was still doing a decent enough job. Just not as perfectly as he was in the first half. There was a heartbreaking moment when Miyoshi managed to dribble into the box but couldn’t quite get the shot away and stumbled instead. Elsinho, (who was playing well, got stretchered off the pitch but thankfully managed to come back on after a bit of treatment), was replaced by Moriya, who played in a kind of right wing back position, not exactly his favoured position. Hasegawa, who had also done a pretty good job and run himself into the ground was taken off and Noborizato brought on. Our formation got a little more confusing, but it seemed that Okubo moved forward a little and Itakura was still all over the pitch doing a great job. This is where my notes start to run out. The game got a bit too intense and as the highlights for the Emperor’s Cup take ages to come online I can’t use them to refresh my memory. I remember the way Urawa took the lead though. A long ball hoof caught us flat-footed and Koroki was able to take the ball round Sung-Ryong and slot home. It’s a shame that we conceded in such a way, but we were still in the game as we were making a lot of chances. We rolled up our socks and kept on pressing and making chances and we were equal on 86 minutes. It looked like we had missed another chance as the shot was saved (if I remember correctly), but the ref pointed to the penalty spot, Moriwaki having handled in the box. Yoshito and Morimoto (who had come on for Kurumaya by this stage), did a weird thing in that they had a conversation at the side of the goal whilst having a drink, presumably well within earshot of the Urawa keeper, I guess discussing how the penalty would be taken. I can’t say if the mind games worked or not, but Yoshito was able to put the penalty away, even though the keeper got a hand on it (see photos below. The first time photo burst has been any use for anything for me). Given that this was on 86 minutes, it looked like we were heading for extra time. And we were, but not before a couple more goals were scored. Urawa once again took the lead through a not so dangerous shot, as far as I can remember, which Sung-Ryong decided to punch instead of catch and straight at a prone Noborizato’s foot and the ball bounced into the net. Pretty ridiculous. This was on 88 minutes, so once again, we had scored and then conceded pretty much straight after. This is when we seem to be most vulnerable recently. So, it looked like we were going out of the cup. But in the five minutes injury time we managed to equalise again. Nobori crossed the ball into the box. Edu who was pretty much playing up front now, swung and totally missed the ball and it dropped for Morimoto who lifted a volley over the keeper into the corner of the net. Extra time!


In extra time, Urawa again took the lead. Things were really stretched at this stage, but you have to blame our defending again. On a quick counter attack, Urawa crossed the ball along the floor and a completely unmarked Aoki was able to sweep it home. Looking at a replay it does look a bit like Edu is tugged back when he tries to get towards him though, but it would have been a tough call to give it. On 117 minutes we were level again. Miyoshi crossed a lovely ball over, Itakura headed the ball back into the centre of the box and Edu was able to head it into the corner. Lovely finish! So on to penalties it was. I can’t remember ever watching one of my teams win on penalties. I’m sure it has happened sometime in the last 25 years, but if it has, the memory has long faded. They are undeniably exciting, but I think I probably could have done without the extra stress at this stage. Although as it turned out, maybe I needn’t have worried so much as we coped with them pretty comfortably. Yoshito put our first one away fairly easily. Their first penalty hit the post but was then retaken and scored as Sung-Ryong was a little off the line the first time (and got booked for being so. Not sure what the ref would have done if he did it again…). Our second was gutsily taken by Miyoshi and bent right into the corner. Perfect! Their second was saved by Sung-Ryong diving to his left. Our third was scored by Edu, again very gutsily chipping the ball down the centre of the goal. He must have some nerve to do a Panenka in this situation! Then Koroki hit the post after doing one of those annoying run ups where he pretty much stops half way. Not sure why he’s allowed to get away with that to be honest. Justice! Our fourth to seal the win was smashed home by Neto, the keeper getting a hand on it, but it probably was a bit too powerful. And then everything went nuts. It was particularly satisfying to win for a few reasons. Firstly, it was against Urawa. We had been behind three times in the game but had really dominated on chances and we had managed to do it with three big players missing through injury. I would say this is a great morale booster going into the Championship, but given how these things tend to work out, we’ll probably just have made Urawa angry and that is if we even get to the final, having to defeat Kashima first, who we also pissed off recently. So, still plenty to do. But it was a thoroughly enjoyable evening. Which is a big contrast to the last time we were at the Todoroki!


Positives and negatives. Let’s start negative this time. Injuries (but not from this game). Hope Kengo and Oshima are back soon. Poor defending for all three goals we conceded. Positives, plenty. Good performances again from Hasegawa and Miyoshi up front with plenty of energy and threat. Long may that continue. Itakura was something of a revelation, doing a great job all over the pitch. Neto was great in the first half. Yoshito seemed to care a bit more. Let’s hope he can continue that and leave us on a high. Crucial goals from Morimoto and Edu. Winning on penalties, with some young players having the nerve to step up and managing to score. And also credit to Sung-Ryong, who did a great job in the shoot out. If you save one you’ve done well and I’ll give him credit for the miss too as the mind games is all part of it. And finally, we’re in the next round, but sadly (for me) it’s on Christmas eve, so I won’t be able to watch it as I’ll be in the UK. An interesting match against FC Tokyo (hello Yoshito!).

Now, we have a week and a half off until the first Championship game on the 23rd against Kashima. This should hopefully give my voice a bit of time to recover. I got a little excited in that last game. Let’s hope we are not swinging from good to bad performances and we can keep things going in a positive way. Kashima didn’t have a very good second stage, but then neither did we really, and like I said above, they’ll probably be looking for revenge but let’s hope we can stay strong and keep the momentum going!

Team

GK 1. Sung-Ryong JUNG (Yellow card 120')
DF 6. TASAKA Yusuke
DF 23. EDUARDO
DF 5. TANIGUCHI Shogo
MF 28. ITAKURA Ko (Yellow card 63')
MF 21. EDUARDO NETO (Yellow card 76')
MF 18. ELSINHO 
MF 13. OKUBO Yoshito
MF 20. KURUMAYA Shintaro
FW 16. HASEGAWA Tatsuya
FW 26. MIYOSHI Koji

Subs

GK 30. ARAI Shota
DF 2. NOBORIZATO Kyohei (on for HASEGAWA 68')
MF 7. HASHIMOTO Koji
FW 9. MORIMOTO Takayuki (on for KURUMAYA 75')
MF 15. HARAKAWA Riki
MF 19. MORIYA Kentaro (on for ELSINHO 53')
MF 25. KANO Kenta

Goals  
KOROKI (Urawa) 71' 0-1 
OKUBO (Frontale) 86'  1-1
NOBORIZATO (Frontale) OWN GOAL 88'  1-2
MORIMOTO (Frontale) 90+1' 2-2
AOKI (Urawa) 97' 2-3
EDU (Frontale) 117'  3-3

Penalties
OKUBO (Frontale) 1-0
ABE (Urawa) 1-1
MIYOSHI (Frontale) 2-1
ZLATAN (Urawa) 2-1 (saved)
EDUARDO (Frontale) 3-1
KOROKI (Urawa) 3-1 (hit post)
EDUARDO NETO (Frontale) 4-1
  
Highlights

Friday 4 November 2016

Vs Gamba Osaka (home) 3/11/16 - 2nd Stage match 17


Kawasaki Frontale 2 - 3 Gamba Osaka

So, the second stage is finished and as far as I’m concerned, good riddance to it. It’s been a topsy-turvy few months with us veering between half decent performances and displays that are so abject that is was a miracle we managed to finish third in the second stage and second overall. We finished up with the visit of Gamba and it was somehow appropriate that we played a game that perfectly encapsulated our season as a whole. It was a true game of two halves with us playing some of the best stuff I’ve seen us manage for a long time in the first half before shooting ourselves in the foot in the second. Our chances in the Championship don’t look great judging on how we finished the second stage to be honest. Sorry the photos are terrible again, but I guess that's kind of appropriate for this game to be honest.


Once again we had been hit with the injury stick so had to juggle the team. Edu was absent, still no Oshima, Kobayashi out for 6 weeks and therefore missing the rest of the season pretty much. Kazama shuffled things up considerably with a front four of Okubo, Miyoshi, fresh from his Asian U19 triumph, Elsinho and Hasegawa. It was pretty surprising to be honest, especially the fact that it was Hasegawa in the middle and furthest forward. Tasaka played right back and Noborizato left. Kurumaya moved into central defence. Still no sign of Sung-Ryong so Arai continued in goal after his great performance against Kashima. We made an amazing start, wiping away all lingering memories of our last two woeful first halves against Hiroshima and Kashima. We were playing with drive, pace and enthusiasm and they were having real trouble dealing with the running of Miyoshi, Hasegawa and Elsinho. Okubo was sitting back a little in more of a playmaker role, playing pretty well and he seemed to be up for it for a change. Gamba were quite physical (seems everyone is against us recently. Maybe they worked out we don’t deal with that kind of thing very well) and there were loads of little fouls being committed. The ref kept his cards in his pocket though, as they seem to have been doing recently. Instead of being swamped by attacks as we were in the last two games we were winning the ball much further up the pitch and breaking fast. We were totally destroying them down our left hand side, Miyoshi doing a great job. Our first goal was very pleasing. It’s great to see young players scoring, especially when they could be very useful in the near future. On six minutes, Nobori swung a ball across which was nudged on by a sliding Gamba player. Okubo shot from close range, it was blocked by the keeper, but dropped to Hasegawa who smashed it into the roof of the net. His first J League goal. Well done him! Not long later the lead was doubled when Okubo floated a nice ball through for Elsinho who turned and laid it off to Miyoshi who cracked it into the corner. We were playing well and everything was great. A little while after,  Hasegawa played a great ball across for Okubo whose overhead went just wide. We had lots of chances. We really probably should have scored a few more. If only we had.


The second half started fairly well for us with Miyoshi hitting the post and Okubo hitting the bar. Then everything fell apart. Gamba broke and Shota couldn’t quite stop the cross/shot and it dribbled into the net. The defence were caught flat-footed. A minute later they were level. Okubo possibly played the ball a little too far ahead of himself deep in his own half and was flattened by a Gamba player. Gamba grabbed the loose ball, passed it to a rapidly advancing Kurata who ran straight past several defenders and hit a shot at goal. Shota stopped it but basically just laid it off for the Gamba player to pass the ball into the net. Have to say, Shota probably should have done better for both of these goals but don’t want to blame him too much. I would say so, as I am clearly biased towards Frontale, but I’m not sure the challenge on Okubo was anywhere near fair. It was hard and with no intention of winning the ball and I think the ref could easily have given us a free kick. We still should have defended better though. There weren’t any challenges for either of these goals really. Hasegawa was taken off the equaliser for Moriya, who to be honest, didn’t have a great game but didn’t exactly have much to work with. Another substitution followed shortly afterwards with Tasaka being taken off and replaced by Nakano, which could have worked, but didn’t. It gave us a bit more going forward, but we were still shaky at the back. The third goal came ten minutes after the second. Ademilson was given plenty of time on the edge of the box to shoot and he scored. No challenges again. For all three goals, we had plenty of defenders around but there was so much time and space for them to be able to easily shoot and score. Just not good enough. Miyoshi was replaced for Morimoto after we went behind but it was too little too late. The rest of the game was played out with us lumping the ball forward and losing it, repeatedly for about 15 minutes. There was a total lack of ideas and inspiration.

Of course the real punch in the guts came when we found out that Yokohama had done us a favor and held Urawa to a draw. If we had held on to our lead we would have gone straight to the Championship final as overall league winners and had the moral high-ground. As it is, if we are to get anything from this season it will be with a bit of a bad taste in the mouth as it will have to be through the ridiculous Championship play offs. Even if we win this year which judging by recent performances will be extremely unlikely, I’m still glad that next year the whole first and second stage nonsense will be gone. We deserve to finish second and no higher, because we just haven’t been able to do it when it counted. The thing that hurts about this performance is that it was so predictable. We have rarely been able to play two good halves of football in the same game this season, particularly in the second stage. We either get hit early before we get going and then manage to salvage something or start great and end up hanging on desperately. If I have to look for what went wrong in this game, I’d have to say that the substitutions didn’t work, although the score was level by that time anyway. Although if we’re removing Hasegawa, why not put Morimoto on to add a bit of muscle up front? By the time he came on it was a pretty much lost cause. I guess we can complain about injuries this season and it does feel like we get an inordinate amount of them, but most of them are coming from training. How unlucky are we really? Definitely, yesterday’s starting eleven would have been different if everyone was fit, but the fact is we played really well with that eleven for 60 minutes, but just couldn’t shore things up when we needed to. Do any of us really believe that we are going to beat Kashima and then Urawa over two games? It would be great if we did, but I think it’s more likely that we won’t even make it to the final. We were very lucky to beat Kashima last week and I’m sure they are going to want to make a point when they play us in what is now a much more important game.

So positives and negatives. Positives first. A great first half performance (although we should have scored more). Great to see Hasegawa and Miyoshi on the score sheet. Yoshito playing a bit better for periods of the game. Negatives, total capitulation through non-existent defending in the second half. Another two goals conceded in rapid succession, I guess due to total lack of concentration. Having the chance to win the league overall and throwing it away. Confidence and moral taking a beating with another crushingly bad performance, even if we were good for 60 of the 90 minutes. Not taking the chances we had. To be honest, it seems like I’m writing the same things most weeks recently.

So, next we have Urawa at home in the Emperor’s Cup. We beat them last time at their place so they'll be up for revenge and they have just taken advantage of our huge slip-up so I can’t see us having much confidence compared to them. But who knows, if we can play like we did in the first half, we can do them some damage. Gamba and Urawa both looked pretty bad in the Levain cup final and we proved yesterday that we could destroy a team playing like Gamba did. Unfortunately we also proved that we can destroy our own chances with some suicidal play. I have no idea which way it will go, but will be there supporting and hoping for the best as usual.  We really need to sort things out though if the early promise we showed this season and some of the great performances we put in early on are not going to count for nothing. A nice win against Urawa in the cup would certainly help to bring back a bit of sunshine for the team and the supporters into what has recently become a very cloudy sky.

Team

GK 30. ARAI Shota
DF 6. TASAKA Yusuke
DF 5. TANIGUCHI Shogo
DF 20. KURUMAYA Shintaro
DF 2. NOBORIZATO Kyohei
MF 14. NAKAMURA Kengo
MF 21. EDUARDO NETO (Yellow card 77')
MF 18. ELSINHO 
MF 26. MIYOSHI Koji
FW 13. OKUBO Yoshito
FW 16. HASEGAWA Tatsuya

Subs
GK 24. ANDO
Shunske
MF 7. HASHIMOTO Koji
FW 9. MORIMOTO Takayuki (on for MIYOSHI 78')
MF 19. MORIYA Kentaro (on for HASEGAWA 67')
MF 22. NAKANO Yoshihiro (Yellow card 79') (on for TASAKA 71')
MF 25. KANO Kenta
DF 28. ITAKURA Ko

Goals  

HASEGAWA (Frontale) 6'  1-0
MIYOSHI (Frontale) 18' 2-0
FUJIHARU (Gamba) 65'  2-1
IDEGUCHI (Gamba) 66'  2-2
ADEMILSON (Gamba) 76'  2-3

Highlights

Wednesday 2 November 2016

Vs Kashima Antlers (away) 29/10/16 - 2nd Stage match 16


Kashima Antlers 0 - 1 Kawasaki Frontale

Firstly, apologies it has taken me so long to write this post. Saturday saw us make the relatively short but particularly arduous journey to Kashima. On the map it doesn’t look so far but the transport connections to Kashima and in particular their stadium make the journey a bit of a pain. The game was a 14:00 kick off but the gates opened three hours before so we aimed to get there around that time. On arriving at Tokyo station to get the bus (pretty much the only way to get there unless you drive yourself) we found that there were a huge amount of people doing the same thing. This big crowd was mainly made up of football fans, but there was also a contingent of people traveling to Kashima for other reasons who probably were wishing that they were going on a different day. After queuing for an hour we managed to get on a bus, but there was still a huge amount of people behind us. Maybe this congestion was the reason they open the stadium so early, to give people a chance to arrive late, but still on time, if you know what I mean. One thing that really surprised me was the large number of Kashima fans, who presumably make this horrible journey every home game. The bus arrived promptly in Kashima city after about 1h40m, but then we had to weave round the city stopping at various places before finally arriving at the stadium about two and a half hours after we left. The journey back was worse. We didn’t have to stop anywhere as we were on a direct bus, but due to everyone leaving the stadium at the same time the heavy traffic made the journey take around three and a half hours. Bit of an ordeal all in all, and I think if we had lost and I had to make that journey back I would probably have never watched another football game or ridden on another bus. But anyway, this blog isn’t supposed to be about traffic and transport so I guess I’d better talk about the game a bit. 

This game was kind of a must win, but at the same time, one which we didn’t actually have to win. This post is full of contradictory statements, isn’t it? If we wanted to go into the last game with any hope of being top of the table overall, we had to win it. But given that we need Urawa to slip up and that we are already qualified for the championship, it didn’t actually matter. It was nice again to be in a stadium with no running track and the view was pretty good. It was unfortunate that I had to remove all the caps of my water bottles before entering, meaning that I had to rapidly drink a liter of water as I was worried I was going to spill it otherwise. I’m used to this kind of thing in the UK but I think this is the first time I’ve seen it in Japan. Maybe they thought I looked a bit dodgy. There was one change to the team from the last game, the injured Oshima being replaced by Moriya. Hashimoto was back on the bench. The team lined up in pretty much the same way as Hiroshima. This time Tasaka was announced as a striker instead of a midfielder but took his usual position as one of three centre backs. Glad we are still doing that bluff though. We took a lot of fans, I think around 3000 and we were in good voice and competently waving our big flag. The same can’t be said for Kashima who were having an upper-tier nightmare, wrestling with two huge twisted and backwards flags whilst singing a pre-game song that had about five verses and definitely went on too long. Apparently the Kashima fans' main gripe after the game was this song and flag display and they were very complimentary about our abilities in both respects. Thanks!

Their team though weren’t having the same problems. The first half was very similar to the Hiroshima game with us not being able to do much and losing the ball a lot and spending a lot of time penned into our own half. Kashima were a bit better than Sanfrecce though and they hit the bar a couple times. We were definitely living dangerously. Their front two of Kanazaki and Suzuki were causing us problems. Suzuki was a particularly unpleasant individual, tripping, kicking, shirt pulling and constantly diving. Definitely a new hate figure for me. The referee once again was the hopeless Nishimura, making completely random decisions, letting lots go and punishing non-existent infringements. How he is still allowed to officiate, I don’t know. Arai was having a very good game in goal. He made several very important saves and one of the times they hit the bar was because he had got just enough on it to stop it going in to the net. I’m really pleased he’s playing and that he’s playing well. He kept us in the game. One big bummer about the first half was Kobayashi being stretchered off. He pulled up when racing through on goal in one of our rare chances. I hope it’s not serious and that he can play soon, if not against Gamba on Thursday, then when the Championship games start.


The second half wasn’t so different. We seemed to switch to something more like a 4-4-2 with Tasaka in the midfield, but he was also at the back too so all in all I was a bit confused. The play wasn’t so different though. Nishimura was still hopeless. He seemed to have forgotten his cards as there were some dubious challenges that warranted cards going unpunished. I have a feeling that we will have to deal with him again this season before it’s finished. We were winning the ball from Kashima quite well but then pretty much immediately giving it back to them. Our passing wasn’t working and Okubo was still playing like he has been recently. Plenty of anger towards his teammates and not much else. On 55 minutes Nakano came on for Moriya and his running started to get us out of our own half and start threatening a little. Our goal though came down the other side of the pitch on 65 minutes. Taniguchi played a lovely pass out to Elsinho who drove into the box and shot towards the far corner of the goal. The keeper saved it but could only parry the ball to Morimoto who tapped it home and celebrated like crazy. Really pleased for him! The goal might not have been completely against the run of play but did feel a bit lucky considering how we had been battered in the first half. 25 minutes to hang on… After the goal Kashima started to commit a few more players forward and we had a few chances on the counter attack. Kashima hit the bar again and things were pretty tense. As you can see from the video below, Kashima pretty much dominated the game and we did a bit of a smash and grab on them. There’s not much in the way of Frontale highlights on there, although we did almost manage to double our lead near the end of the game but Morimoto’s shot was saved well. Noborizato made a late appearance replacing Nakano, which can't felt good for him, but was probably intended to give us a bit more defensively. So, we held on and got the three points but sadly Urawa won too so we’re still in second place overall. One last chance on Thursday as we pay Gamba at home and Urawa go to Yokohama. Can our neighbours do us a big favour I wonder? I hope so.


Positives and negatives. Positives first as we can do those a lot quicker. Great game from Arai, and we managed to get three points we really didn’t deserve. A Morimoto goal has got to be a good thing too as we really need a striker who is scoring. Which brings me on to the negatives. Okubo had no shots in the whole game. He clearly seems to be out of form and all out of enthusiasm. Why people will say nothing bad about him but slag off Nakano for misplacing a pass is baffling to me. At least one of those two players is trying. Okubo has been a great player for Frontale, but he should not be playing at the moment. We are effectively starting every game with ten men when he is one of our eleven. There seem to be a few teams interested in him and I’d say it’s almost certain he’ll be leaving in the summer as he apparently can’t be bothered any more. Good luck to him, but I think we’ll do better without him now, and I mean the end of this season as well as next season. Bet he won’t be dropped though. I hope he proves me wrong and scores a load of goals in the championship. Aside from singling him out, our attacking was not up to scratch in this game. Too much sideways and backwards movement, but more crucially, too much giving the ball away. We need to improve fast. The two players who had the most shots were Elsinho and Morimoto (who only played half the game), but both of them only had three, so not exactly setting the world on fire up front. And our defensive performance was another negative. Apart from Shota, we had a bit of a nightmare. That also needs to be sorted fast. And possibly the final big negative, the injury to Kobayashi. Hope it’s not too serious. [Apparently, it is, six weeks...]

So, next we close off the second stage with Gamba at Todoroki. Another one of these potentially must win/potentially meaningless games. What happens at Yokohama will be more significant. It would be classic Frontale I guess if Yokohama did us a favor and we lost to Gamba. But anyway, we’ll know soon and then we can start thinking about the Emperor’s Cup against Urawa and the championship game(s). Miyoshi and Itakura might be back from the U19 Asian championship (which they won! Congratulations!) but I heard Miyoshi has an injury so probably won’t play. It’s a shame, as it would be nice, if Kobayashi is still injured to see a front two of Miyoshi and Morimoto. But I guess it will probably be Okubo and Morimoto. Come on Yoshito, make me look like an idiot (please! please!) and score a load of goals. I’d be happy to eat my words. So, come on Frontale! And come on Yokohama too!

Team

GK 30. ARAI Shota
DF 5. TANIGUCHI Shogo
DF 23. EDUARDO
DF 6. TASAKA Yusuke
MF 14. NAKAMURA Kengo
MF 21. EDUARDO NETO
MF 18. ELSINHO 
MF 19. MORIYA Kentaro
MF 20. KURUMAYA Shintaro
FW 11. KOBAYASHI Yu
FW 13. OKUBO Yoshito

Subs
GK 24. ANDO
Shunske
DF 2. NOBORIZATO Kyohei (on for NAKANO 90+1')
MF 7. HASHIMOTO Koji
FW 9. MORIMOTO Takayuki (Yellow card 90+3') (on for KOBAYASHI 37')
MF 16. HASEGAWA Tatsuya
MF 22. NAKANO Yoshihiro (on for MORIYA 55')
MF 25. KANO Kenta

Goals  

MORIMOTO (Frontale) 65'  0-1
  
Highlights