Thursday, 30 November 2023

Vs Johor DT (home) 28/11/23 ACL Group stage match 5


Kawasaki Frontale 5 - 0 Johor DT

This is perhaps the first week for a long time where I probably should spend some time writing a proper blog post as there are suddenly lots of things to talk about regarding Frontale. Sadly, I only have a little time after this game when I’m not working before we head off to Kyushu for the final league game of the season, so as you have probably come to expect, this is going to be the usual rushed out mess.

I guess the first thing to talk about is obviously this game. Although to be honest, I think the things around the game are actually more important and interesting. In last year’s ACL when Johor basically played all of their games at home and their opponents had to travel they ended up winning the group. This year, they are nowhere near as lucky and nowhere near as effective. They have totally dominated their domestic league, conceding only seven goals in 24 games, but somehow 2023 Frontale managed to put five past them. Toward the end of the game when the goals just kept on coming, I got the sense that perhaps the Johor players weren’t enjoying not having things their own way. There were a lot of snippy tackles late on and they probably should have had a lot more yellow cards than they ended up with. The first half was nowhere near as much of a landslide when it came to goals, but as far as I was concerned, we never looked that uncomfortable in this game, which is something that I haven't said much, if at all, this year. I don’t really know what has happened to us recently. After being truly awful in front of goal for most of the season, suddenly we’re scoring goals for fun. Sometimes also conceding goals for fun too, but we seem to have won quite a lot of games in the last couple of months. Aside from the ACL and Emperor’s Cup though, this has all been too little too late. And in fact the two draws and one loss that we’ve had in the last two months have all come in the league, all to teams who are lower in the table than us. You can’t really say we’ve changed much when it comes to players. Our match day squads are basically still made up of the same players, and most changes that are being made are due to a succession of injuries rather than for tactical reasons. Also, I can’t really see any difference in the approach or tactics, but observing these kind of things has never been my speciality. The only thing I can put it down to is us getting some confidence back. Hopefully we can keep that confidence going for the final three games of our season. The remaining ACL game is utterly pointless for us now. Although I guess we could do Johor a favour by beating Ulsan, but even then, perhaps a win against Pathum wouldn’t be enough for them to progress as one of the best second placed teams. The remaining league game is equally meaningless. There’s a slim chance that a big win and other results going our way could see us finish as high as seventh, but to be honest, I think ninth is absolutely the right place for us this year. It’s been pretty hard going until recently. Anyway, back to this game, it was great to see five goals all from different players. It was also great to see some really good moves too. I said in the first half that Yamane never seems to shoot anymore so I’m going to take credit for him scoring in the second half. Not sure how much we can read into this big win though as Johor seemed pretty average. I thought one moment in the first half neatly summed them up. They did a really fancy kind of reverse back heel sweep pass to beat us on our right hand side and then lost the ball shortly afterwards. Johor remind me a bit of one of those people who does amazing ball juggling on Instagram or those guys who make the videos where they take perfect free kicks with no goalkeeper or opposition or dribble past cones and finish with confidence into an empty net (all with us having no knowledge of how many failed attempts haven’t made it on to the video, I guess). They seem to be good at football skills, but maybe not that good at actually playing football. Perhaps this is a bit unfair on them, but I certainly didn’t see much from  them last night apart from petulant fouls when things weren’t going their way. Their fans on the other hand, were really good. I don’t know how big their drum was but it was absolutely booming, and their singing was pretty loud considering they didn’t have that many fans there. I think they probably brought more than Ulsan or Pathum did though, even if it was mainly the guys around the drum that were making the noise. And they had some good songs too! Whilst praising their fans, I feel I need to put in my usual moan about our support being a bit shit at times. Our call leader group’s apparent absolute refusal to sing when the opposition have the ball made for a very flat atmosphere when they were playing the ball around the midfield. I guess they want to save their support for when we’re attacking, but to go silent when we don’t have the ball just makes for a weird experience. Before I finish this section about the match, I guess I should mention that once again we were supplied with an absolutely dogshit ref. The linesman on the back stand side was pretty good though, I thought. The ref pissed me off, but this is such a common occurrence that in a way, it’s kind of pointless for me to even mention it.


So, aside from this match, there are also a few other things to mention. As predicted by myself in the pub after the game, Oniki will remain our manager for next season. I had no idea the announcement would come so soon after I said so, but I could never imagine that he would leave after getting us through the group stage so smoothly. Presumably he thinks he can help us navigate our way a bit further in the competition. I hope the other prediction I made about us losing to Ventforet Kofu in the next round doesn’t come true, but it would be a very Oniki Frontale way for us to get booted out of the knockout stage of a competition, wouldn’t it? So what can I say about him extending his tenure with us? Well, not much really as any negativity about it happening when we are scoring for fun would seem like extreme sour grapes. I wonder how the decision will look though if we revert back to our shocking old form in the Emperor’s Cup final and lose it. The end of our season has panned out in exactly the way a manager hoping to extend his contract would want it to, our current good run erasing the memories of some very bad games earlier in the year that saw us ruled out of the league title race very early on. Looking at things optimistically, I guess you have to hope that Oniki has made a subtle but crucial tweak to our play which has caused us to suddenly start doing well again. The first half against Kyoto and most of the game away at Kashiwa were pretty awful though. And I don’t know how long the same group of players can keep playing every game, with very little rotation. I suppose there will be a few players leaving at the end of the year. Damiao certainly was acting again like he won’t be at Todoroki next year. It’s a real shame as he seems to be on top of his game at the moment, but you can’t begrudge him wanting to move on. However, there must be some other players who are thinking that they can have a better chance of playing football if they move away. I don’t want to name names, but I can think or three or four who I wouldn’t be surprised to see moving on at the end of the year. Presumably we’ll get some players in too, but whether they will get any match time is another matter. New signings who aren’t big names normally have to spend a year occasionally gracing the bench and nothing more before being allowed to play football. And then think about all of the players who we had great hopes for who haven’t played hardly at all this year and probably won’t play next year without any major injuries or departures. Us retaining our manager might give some players who have hardly been used and were on the fence about whether to stay or go a reason to look elsewhere, perhaps imagining that their chances or being involved won’t improve with the same guy in charge and the same players ahead of them in the squad. I suspect that we won’t have any first team players departing at the end of the season. I don’t think anyone has shone brightly enough to attract attention from overseas. So it wouldn’t be a great surprise to see the first starting line up of next year being almost the same as the last one of this year, (I guess with someone in place of Damiao). Anyway, we’re doing well at the moment, so this makes it a bit difficult to be even slightly critical. Let’s just hope that good form continues and we can make a better fist of the league next year. We’ll have a few more games as the league expands to 20 teams so maybe we’ll need to rotate a bit more. Conversely, the change in the Levain cup structure means that every game is a knockout, which usually means that Oniki doesn’t change the line up much. I hope that us carrying over our good from the end of the season into next season will happen, but there are definitely weak spots in the line up where players are getting older and their level is dropping off slightly and it would be more likely that they’d get worse as we enter another year rather than better. But I don’t know, it’s all a bit difficult to tell, isn’t it? In my opinion, I think the most likely thing is that not much will change though.


I feel like there was some other major talking point I was supposed to write about, but for some reason it has completely left my mind. Please comment if you know what it might have been and I'll add something. Next up Sagan Tosu away on Sunday which I’m really looking forward to, particularly as the result doesn’t matter and I can just enjoy a nice stadium and nice shochu. Well, I say nice shochu, but I’m most definitely not an expert and find it quite difficult to drink, but for some reason, always seem to have a very nice time after I’ve finished my first glass. So cheers to our progression in the ACL, (hang on, did I even mention that had happened? I guess you knew anyway) and cheers to the final game being one in a good stadium!

 

Team

GK 1. JUNG Sung-Ryong
DF 13. YAMANE Miki
DF 31. YAMAMURA Kazuya
DF 3. OMINAMI Takuma (Yellow card 33')
DF 2. NOBORIZATO Kyohei
MF 8. TACHIBANADA Kento
MF 16. SEKO Tatsuki
MF 14. WAKIZAKA Yasuto
FW 41. IENAGA Akihiro 
FW 9. LEANDRO DAMIAO
FW 23. MARCINHO

 
Subs
GK 22. HAYASAKA Yuki
GK 99. KAMIFUKUMOTO Naoto
DF 4. JESIEL
MF 6. JOAO SCHMIDT (on for SEKO 85')
FW 11. KOBAYASHI Yu (on for LEANDRO DAMIAO 67')
DF 15. TANABE Shuto
FW 17. TONO Daiya
(Yellow card 86') (on for MARCINHO 67')
FW 18. Bafetimbi GOMIS
FW 20. YAMADA Shin (on for IENAGA 73')
DF 29. TAKAI Kota
FW 30. SEGAWA Yusuke
FW 33. MIYASHIRO Taisei(on for WAKIZAKA 67')
 
Goals

IENAGA (Frontale) 8' 1-0
LEANDRO DAMIAO (Frontale) 50' 2-0 
MARCINHO (Frontale) 60' 3-0 
KOBAYASHI (Frontale) 69' 4-0 
YAMANE (Frontale) 88' 5-0     
 
Highlights

Sunday, 26 November 2023

Vs Kashima Antlers (home) 24/11/23 J League match 33


Kawasaki Frontale 3 - 0 Kashima Antlers 

What’s happened to us recently? After struggling to play attacking football for pretty much the whole year, now we’re on a massive goalscoring streak. Perhaps it’s because the pressure is off as we’ve been out of the title race for a while. Perhaps Oniki has tweaked the tactics (haven’t really noticed that happening particulary, but what do I know?). Actually the only team we’ve been unable to score multiple goals past in the last month and a half is one of the two teams still involved in the relegation battle going into the final week’s fixtures. Thankfully we got our awful performance against the other one out of the way earlier in the year. Bizarrely, but maybe not so unpredictable given recent years’ performances, the only other game in this run that we’ve failed to win was against Kyoto, a team who were until this round of fixtures, also involved in the relegation battle, albeit slightly tenuously. Whatever the reason for these goal heavy games, it was lovely to keep the high scoring going against Kashima, who at times for me get slightly forgotten as being a true hateable team. I guess they just haven’t been very successful recently 😉. That and the fact that they seem to be completely unable to beat a Oniki managed Frontale team which must be particularly annoying for them in 2023, when pretty much anyone can beat us pretty easily. We’ve got four more games left this year, Sagan Tosu away in the league, Johor at home and Ulsan away in the ACL, and the Emperor’s Cup final. If we don’t win the Emperor’s Cup this will have been a pretty poor season, I think. Even if we do, there is definitely a case to be made that it still has been pretty bad. This sounds like an entitled attitude, but the fact is that we were apparently fully focused on regaining the league title this season and that was probably the worst we did in any competition. Well, perhaps the Levain could also be taken into consideration for this title, but the fact that most teams play the reserves for games in that competition means that it’s always a bit random. So, I guess the key is to intentionally not focus on a competition and then you do well in it. This was one of the first years for a long time that the ACL wasn’t really mentioned as a season goal and somehow we seem to be managing to negotiate a difficult group without too much trouble so far.  2023 has been a weird season, but probably not weird enough to live long in the memory. Certainly I want to forget quite a few of the games we’ve had to watch this year. But anyway, this isn’t an end of season round up. That will, I guess, come in a few weeks. Not sure I can really be bothered to write it though as it’s never much fun when you have almost nothing positive to say.
 

Unsurprisingly, Oniki kept pretty much the same line up for this game. I guess it was slightly interesting that Ominami was back and it was him who partnered Yamamura in defence. Jesiel had a shocker in his last game which led to me pondering on whether he wasn’t really fit. I don’t know if we’ll see him again this season. Yamamura and Ominami looked pretty well organised in this game, so I’d much rather it was them playing at the moment to be honest. Up front we had Oniki’s recently favoured Ienaga / Marcinho / Damiao trio. Probably the main talking point of this game was Damiao who turned back the clock somewhat and could have had a hat trick if Oniki hadn’t intervened and taken the ball off him and given it to Wakizaka for our very much not crucial in any way whatsoever penalty with us leading 2-0 with about 10 minutes to go. Sure Damiao’s recent penalties have left quite a lot to be desired, but at least give hm the chance of scoring a hat trick in what will probably be his last appearance at Todoroki. There has long been talk that he’ll be leaving us and his goal celebration with his kids who were sitting in the main stand and then him climbing in with the drummers for a post game Vai La De Frontale suggests that he was making the most of his last home appearance. It will be a shame if he goes, but probably the right decision. Strikers in Oniki teams seem to struggle recently, and I can’t imagine it’s much fun being a big money player who doesn’t play much and when they do play, struggles to get any chances. I think he’s greatly loved by our fans and seems like a really nice guy. I think we all hope he goes back to Brazil rather than join another J League team, particularly as I suspect he’d start scoring for fun in a different formation or under different tactics. But Oniki, why did you demand Wakizaka took that penalty?! As I always say, there seems to be nothing but nice comments about him and how much of a good guy he is, but there is definitely the cold veins of a psychopath in some of the decisions he makes. Let’s not get too carried away about us scoring three times in this game. The first goal was a nice move and a lovely finish from Damiao. But the second was an absolute gift from a Kashima defender and their keeper got in on the gifting by giving us a penalty for the third. However, we did look pretty solid at the other end so perhaps…. we deserved to win… Perhaps.


Not taking anything away from the joy of putting the despicable Kashima to the sword though. I’m sure there are some nice people involved with the club and I’m sure that not all of their fans are arseholes, but how nice to see Suzuki, Pituca and Iwamasa upset about how this game went. I have nothing new to say about the Spirit of Zico banner, It’s still bizarre. I don’t have anything original to say about Yuma Suzuki’s shorts, which at the start of the match seemed to be pretty normal but soon started to creep up his thighs as if they were trying to sneak their way into his arse without anyone noticing. There was one particular amusing point where his short wearing style seemed to bite him as he kind of swiveled mid air to try to volley the ball and seemed to give himself a wedgie. At the end of the game, Suzuki was furious and gutted by the result, taking his time to half-heartedly join the post game bow line. He may have been gutted but his shorts presumably were relieved as they were by that stage only millimeters away from being completely consumed, never to be seen again. Actually though, I don’t mind him that much. He’s a real Okubo type player, who you love if he’s on your team and hate if he’s on the opposition team. I think he’s probably not as nuts as he seems to be and instead is a bit of an expert in the dark arts. Pituca on the other hand is just an areshole it seems. Constantly complaining about everything, perhaps constantly only moments away from punching someone or kicking something into the crowd. How nice it is that he’ll be leaving Japan soon (apparently). It will mean the end of my jokes about him looking like CJ from Eggheads, but I think no-one ever understood what I was talking about when I made that reference, year after year, much to my own amusement. For the sake of tradition, let’s just one more time refer to his most famous news story by hoping that wherever Pituca moves next, there are no canals, as if there are the local population could be in danger. I feel like I should probably mention their goalkeeper too, who I think is young and looked quite dodgy at times. I could happily enjoy this dodginess though, as before he started being dodgy, he’d been flopping around feigning injury and moaning a lot. I have to say, I find it quite annoying when goalies come out of their box and then go down at the slightest contact. Surely they should be treated the same as outfield players if they want to start heading or passing the ball. But this is probably the ref’s fault and not his. In any case, the keeper somehow managed to combine the characteristics of both a sickly child and a frail OAP, bridging the generation gap. Truly inspirational stuff. A quick word on the Kashima gammon fans who were pretty annoyed at the end of this game. Who can blame them? As their players went to thank them, a shirtless gammon ran towards the extremely low wall separating them from the pitch area and was somehow stopped in his tracks. Another one did that classic Kashima move of simultaneously perfectly playing the roles of angry fan trying to storm the pitch and security guard holding him back, another brave protestor being thwarted by a wall that comes up to just past his knees and the restraining pull of himself on himself. I’d very much enjoyed us beating Kashima, but the reaction of their fans just added that extra bit of satisfaction to everything. Lovely!


A few words on the ref. It was Kasahara and we also had Nishimura on VAR which sounds like a nightmare combination. Although thank you to Nishimura who overruled Kasahara to give us what looking at replays was clearly a penalty. Kasahara managed to keep his red card in his pocket in this game, and was presumably distraught that he couldn’t give a DOGSO red card to us. He didn’t seem very keen to give yellows either. Although he made an exception for Kobayashi’s first tackle after coming on. To be fair I don’t think he made any clangers, but he did give some wired decisions at times and they did start to irritate me. But in 2023 a referee being irritating and making weird decisions but not making any major mistakes counts as a first class officiating performance, so best give credit where credit’s due. Especially as he told Ienaga to go off the pitch behind the goal in order not to waste time and then let himself be completely ignored, and even slightly humiliated. Actually, I should be giving Ienaga the credit here and not the ref, shouldn’t I? So, well done Ienaga.

Next up Johor at home in the ACL. A point will secure first place in the group but it would be nice to beat them, wouldn’t it? After that, our final league game of the season away at Sagan Tosu down in Kyushu. It’s always one of my favourite away trips and perhaps this year it will be even more fun as the game will be 100% meaningless, so when we perform badly as we tend to do, it won’t matter at all!



Team

GK 1. JUNG Sung-Ryong
DF 13. YAMANE Miki
DF 31. YAMAMURA Kazuya
DF 3. OMINAMI Takuma
DF 2. NOBORIZATO Kyohei
MF 8. TACHIBANADA Kento
MF 16. SEKO Tatsuki
MF 14. WAKIZAKA Yasuto
FW 41. IENAGA Akihiro 
FW 9. LEANDRO DAMIAO
FW 23. MARCINHO

 
Subs
GK 99. KAMIFUKUMOTO Naoto
MF 6. JOAO SCHMIDT (on for NOBORIZATO 87')
FW 11. KOBAYASHI Yu (Yellow card 90') (on for IENAGA 87')
FW 18. Bafetimbi GOMIS (on for LEANDRO DAMIAO 87')
FW 17. TONO Daiya (on for SEKO 87')
DF 29. TAKAI Kota
FW 33. MIYASHIRO Taisei (on for MARCINHO 71')
 
 
My Frontale Man Of The Match
 
As it might be one of the last times I can give this to him, and jointly for his first blasted finish and the good grace with which he allowed the penalty to be taken from him, it has to go to….

LEANDRO DAMIAO - lovely guy. It’s been a pleasure having you at our club and we hope you can score a few more before you depart.
 
Goals
 
LEANDRO DAMIAO (Frontale) 34' 1-1
LEANDRO DAMIAO (Frontale) 63' 2-3
WAKIZAKA (Frontale) PEN 84' 3-3


Highlights

Thursday, 16 November 2023

Vs Kyoto Sanga (home) 12/11/23 J League match 32


Kawasaki Frontale 3 - 3 Kyoto Sanga

Sorry this is a bit late but I had an unpleasant start to the week as I think I caught the flu. Given that, I'm a bit worried that I was at the Frontale game on Sunday and then the Brave Thunders game too, (deal on tickets as it was a collaboration with Frontale. Have never been to a basketball game before and it was a lot of fun). This morning I’m feeling slightly human again so am sitting down and trying to get this post out of the way as quickly and painlessly as possible. Time always dulls the details and when you add three days of high fever to this, you can expect that there won’t be much that makes sense in this post but I’ll do my best from the notes I made. Here we go.


People excited by the starting line up and imagining we were changing formation and approach probably don’t know Oniki as well as they think they do. Naturally, no left back in the line up means we’ll probably be playing an attacker there. And so we did. You could say there was some rotation as Takai was in for Yamamura and the front three were changed. It’s basically the same 15 or 16 players still though. I think the last time Takai started at Todoroki he had a nightmare and was directly responsible for three opposition goals. On this occasion he was the solid link in the defensive chain and Jesiel instead was giving away goals for fun. Their second was particularly shocking, when it appeared that Jesiel was stuck in slow motion and could only look on as the Kyoto player easily beat him by… not really doing anything. I suspect that Jesiel has been rushed back from his injury and is feeling the pace. If only we had a manger who actually knew how to rotate, particularly in games that are absolutely meaningless for us! It was a shock when he was replaced at half time though, but definitely the right decision as he’d been really out of sorts. Not sure why Joao also got subbed, but that does seem to be Oniki’s reaction to a poor first half (remove the midfielder who isn’t Wakizaka or Tachibanada). If only we could get to a situation where we could actually choose the right players or approach right from the kick off if would be nice! So terrible have all of our first halves been recently, that if there was a bar in the stadium, it really wouldn’t be worth leaving it till half time. There’s one thing we can always guarantee recently and that’s that we’ll concede for fun in the first half. At least in this game we managed a couple of goals in the first 45 minutes and they were nice ones. Miyashiro was back starting again and scored a good goal and got an assist for Kobayashi's goal. I wonder what might have happened if Oniki hadn't dropped Miyashiro (our then top scorer) completely from our squads earlier in the year? Anyway, to sum us up in this game, we still look utterly surprised that teams will come and try to score goals against us, totally unprepared for what they might try to do, struggle to get decent shots in from our normal ponderous build up play, and will apparently persist in playing anyone at left back apart from an actual left back. I’m surprised he hasn’t given Kamifukumoto a go there yet. It’s weird that in a year when we are targeting reclaiming the league title we are woefully off the pace and when we haven’t mentioned the ACL and are in tough group we seem to be negotiating it pretty well. I think the only conclusion we can draw is that we’re not very good at doing what we want to do, or perhaps that our manager's plans to get what we want are so poor that they have no chance of succeeding. I guess the even more bizarre thing is that Oniki has never really been one for prioritising any one competition. In anything other than very early Emperor’s Cup rounds against amateur or university teams, Oniki’s gone with pretty much the same group of players and the same approach. Surely it can’t only be me who has noticed that they don’t work, can it?


On to the opposition and the officials. Let’s start with Kyoto as there’s not much to say about them really. They haven’t really looked like they were in relegation trouble for a while this season but as it comes to the crunch they find themselves hanging around in the wrong area again. So should be easy picking for a resolutely mid-table team like us, right? Well, of course not. Previous to this game they’d only scored 33 goals in their 31 games, but we let them score three against us. It seems to me that Kyoto have three main skills, time wasting, play acting and cutting through our defence with ease and scoring against us. Thankfully they devoted the second half to the first two having had their fill of the latter in the first half. I don't really have anything moany to say about them. We all know that with their manager they will be well organized and difficult to break down, We probably didn’t imagine that they’d cut us to pieces though. I normally get really angry about their captain but the only bitchy note I wrote about this game was that ‘their keeper is annoying’. I’m not sure the point has guaranteed their safety. Three would have done and looked likely for most of the match. They are definitely not the team I want to go down the most who are in the bottom five. Let’s move on to the officials or more accurately the ref. Takasaki was a new name for me and as I tweeted, this usually is a bad sign but I wasn’t going to pre-judge him. I should have trusted my gut though as he was by far the worst ref we’ve had for absolutely years! Apparently unaware of basic rules and almost always looking in the wrong direction at all times, I felt like he was a youngster who in their first proper game was determined to show that he wasn’t going to play favorites and give decisions to the home side and overcompensated the other way. He also seemed to be making every decision by using a complicated system of dice rolling like the dungeons and dragons nerd he probably is. (Sorry D&D fans, you probably weren’t expecting a dig at you here, but at the same time, I guess you’re kind of used to that kind of thing happening). The first dice roll was for whether to have his eyes open or not, then another roll for the direction in which to look, one for whether to blow his whistle or not, one for which team to give the decision to. There was probably another dice to roll later on when writing his report to decide how to justify his totally random decisions in the game. I can’t help but feel that if his first dice roll had come up with eyes closed and whilst his eyes were closed someone had nicked all of his dice and therefore he had to officiate the rest of the game by sound alone, we would have had a more consistent and accurate performance from him. 
 

Ironically, the most egregious error he made, which cost us a goal and was confirmed as a horrible mistake by J League Judge Replay, (presumably to absolutely no consequence to the referee), was one that I didn’t see at all. Probably because I already had my head in my hands as we were clearly about to gift the opposition a goal. Little did I know that it was the ref who’d passed the ball out wide for the Kyoto play to make the assist. Our players surrounded the ref afterwards which is never a good look, but is something we don’t normally do, so I guessed something shocking had happened. Perhaps he thought he’d play an advantage instead of giving the absolutely obviously correct drop ball decision, as maybe he wants to get a reputation as a ref who lets the game flow. I’d like to see his career flow straight down the plughole if I’m being honest right now. Apparently VAR can’t intervene in this situation as there wasn't a foul committed, so it’s good to see that VAR, with its strictly prescribed guidelines, is ruling out those errors that we all care the most about, namely whether a striker’s toenail is offside or not, but failing when it comes to the reason for its whole existence, ie. fixing clear and obvious errors. Not saying I think it should be used more. I personally think we should just dump it now and forget it ever existed. Surely no-one thinks the game is better with it? I don’t think VAR was used at all in this game, which suggest that for a ref with very little experience and apparently very little skill, Takasaki was quite confident in his own abilities. Oh well, at least it wasn’t a shocking refereeing error in a potentially title deciding game…. oh 😺. Not being a fan, (and that’s quite an understatement), of either Vissel Kobe or Yokohama F Marines, it has been a bit difficult for me to decide who I would prefer to see win the league this year, but perhaps Vissel Kobe winning it, in part thanks to a truly awful refereeing cock up and therefore really irritating YFM fans whilst at the same time undermining Vissel’s first league title, well, that would suit me just fine I think. But there are still two games left, so plenty of chance for some more clowning from the guys who apparently know the rules of the game but seem to forget them every time they step on the the pitch and get their hands on their whistle. Some people have welcomed the introduction of the J League Judge Replay program to draw attention to the mistakes that are made, but it doesn’t seem that them highlighting previous cock ups has made it is any less likely that future cock ups will happen. So perhaps in the end, the whole thing only has the purpose of undermining the refs further. I would imagine that they don’t watch it anyway. After all, they are the experts and have nothing to learn. I don’t know if there have been more mistakes this year, but it feels like it. I know it’s a hard job, but is it too much to ask that some of them aren’t absolutely terrible at doing it?


Next up Kashima at home in another one of those pointless league games. Then we have Johor at home in a very important ACL game only four days later. What’s the betting he’ll start pretty much the same team for both of those games? Quite high I’d say. Sorry this post is a mess. I've had to make a lot of corrections already in my post-fever state and have probably missed some more. But you don't come here for accuracy anyway, do you? You come here for the wonderful insight, right? Sorry that is once again absent too. And not even much trolling of the opposition. See! I clearly am still a bit ill.

Team

GK 1. JUNG Sung-Ryong
DF 13. YAMANE Miki
DF 4. JESIEL
DF 29. TAKAI Kota
DF 30. SEGAWA Yusuke
MF 6. JOAO SCHMIDT
MF 8. TACHIBANADA Kento
MF 14. WAKIZAKA Yasuto
FW 11. KOBAYASHI Yu
FW 18. Bafetimbi GOMIS
FW 33. MIYASHIRO Taisei
 
Subs
GK 99. KAMIFUKUMOTO Naoto
DF 2. NOBORIZATO Kyohei
MF 16. SEKO Tatsuki (on for JOAO SCHMIDT 46')
FW 20. YAMADA Shin (on for MIYASHIRO 71')
FW 23. MARCINHO (on for GOMIS 61')
DF 31. YAMAMURA Kazuya (on for JESIEL 46')
FW 41. IENAGA Akihiro (on for SEGAWA 79')
 
Goals
 
FUKUDA (Kyoto) 7' 0-1    
MIYASHIRO (Frontale) 19' 1-1
TOYOKAWA (Kyoto) 42' 1-2
TOYOKAWA (Kyoto) 45+1' 1-3
KOBAYASHI (Frontale) 45+5' 2-3
WAKIZAKA (Frontale) PEN 90+1' 3-3


Highlights

Friday, 10 November 2023

Vs Pathum United (home) 7/11/23 ACL Group stage match 4


Kawasaki Frontale 4 - 2 Pathum United

So we’re back to the 4-2 wins again after the brief diversion of a dodgy 1-1 draw. It would be wrong to say some things never change as not all of our last five games have been 4-2 wins. When it comes to us having terrible first halves though, some things really never change. Thankfully in this match, our visitors gave us two penalties. Which was a bit of luck as I didn’t think we were going to score otherwise. I have no idea why we’re so useless in the first half of games recently, but it’s pretty undeniable. At the same time as we were clutching at penalty kick straws, our former player Chanathip was scoring for fun up the other end. He never really seemed to do that for us. I wonder why…? Perhaps because he was always played out of position? Oh well, perhaps our esteemed chairman was right and he should just have waited for his chance to play, (presumably when hell froze over with the ice encasing the rest of our midfielders and attackers). Anyway that’s all in the past now so I can just be pleased that he got his chance to show us what could have been and also enjoy his nice greeting to our fans and our reaction to him. I don’t think any of us wanted him to leave, but I don’t think many of us can begrudge him for doing so. 

 


On paper this was our easiest game in the group stage of this year’s ACL. Our group isn’t the easiest but somehow we seem to be navigating our way through it quite nicely at the moment. Bizarrely we haven’t conceded against the two ‘stronger’ teams, but have conceded four times in the two games against Pathum. To be fair though, one of the goals in the previous game was an absolute gift from a hopeless ref and both in this game were gifts from our defence and Sung-Ryong. The Sung-Ryong one was particularly weird, almost as if he forgot Chanathip wasn’t playing for us anymore. Plenty of Pathum’s dangerous moments came courtesy of us and our ridiculous tactics at the back. It seems that Oniki is definitely right back to the play-it-around-at-the-back-to-‘draw-out’-the-opposition tactics. It’s never really worked particularly well, and on the occasions in this game where we managed to get a couple of their players drawn out and play the ball past them, perhaps successfully implementing the tactic, we then followed Oniki’s second rule of football which is that as soon as you enter the opposition half, you immediately need to pass the ball backwards, which was perfect for allowing their strikers to retreat into position and therefore make the whole first part of the tactics utterly pointless. It does feel like we’re deliberately trying to make things more difficult for ourselves recently. It was perhaps a surprise to see Wakizaka taking our penalties. It seems that we’ve gone through quite a few penalty takers recently and none of them have exactly shone. Therefore it was nice to see Wakizaka put both of his away nicely. Particularly as aside from the penalties he didn’t have a great game, I thought. But then again, no one did really. Marcinho was perhaps unlucky to get two goals disallowed through VAR, (haven’t looked back at them as I wasted enough time on VAR at the game to want to waste any more watching replays), but at the same time, he did seem to do his usual thing of making a really good run, but sadly one that outwitted not only the opposition but also his teammates, and then couldn’t do anything with the ball. Ienaga missed what for him were a couple of absolute sitters. Damiao seemed to try to do an overhead kick from just in front of the goal line, when it presumably would have been easier and more effective to do almost anything else (this was at the other end of the pitch though, so I might have seen things slightly differently from reality). Yamane was still doing his ‘hit it first time thing’, to the extent that this really must be either a new Oniki tactic or the case that he’s developed an intense fear of the ball. Perhaps the low-light of the game for me was when Tachibanada burst into the box in the 81st minute with Gomis lurking at the far post and instead of kicking the ball towards the goal, we went backwards and away from the goal instead. Just kind of summed up the match really. That, and the fact that our time wasting started over ten minutes before the final whistle. It was really a surprise that we managed to get our fourth goal actually as there seemed to be a lot more focus on doing anything other than attacking at that stage. Plenty of weird things happened in this game. At the time it felt like one of our worst performances for ages, but somehow we won, even after we had two goals chalked off. Which all sounds like the whinings of a fan spoilt by recent seasons success (not including this or last season obviously!), but blimey, aren’t we getting some luck recently? Long may that continue!


On to the match officials, all of whom were overshadowed in this game by our old friend VAR. I think I’ve actually stopped moaning every week about VAR recently, which I guess is something of a surprise, as I still intensely hate it. The fact is, it’s clearly here to stay, in spite of the fact that it doesn’t eliminate refereeing errors, the one thing that it was implemented to get rid of. Instead now we have the potential of errors coming from two angles, apparently depending on the seniority of the person on VAR compared to the ref on the field. In this game, I didn’t have any problems with the outcome of the decisions, mostly because I haven’t actually checked most of them, and we didn’t get any replays in the stadium. The amount of times decisions were sent to VAR was crazy though. We had nine minutes of injury time at the end of the second half and I think most of this was for finger on the ear moments when everyone on the pitch and in the stands was just hanging around twiddling their fingers. Some have said that the red card was a bit harsh, but from a quick look at a replay it seems like a stamp on an ankle nowhere near the ball so I think it’s probably fair enough. This seems to be happening to Seko every game recently. Perhaps because he’s so cool on the ball and maybe some opponents have focused on him as being the key player in the middle for us. Every game sees him get booted after he’s already passed the ball and most of the time the refs don’t really even notice. On this occasion, the ref didn’t even give the foul and VAR only intervened when we’d put the ball out of play for Seko to get some treatment. Surprisingly, the linesman nearest to us was so bad that he made the ref look like the star graduate of the refereeing academy. Constantly either behind the play or running on the pitch instead of behind the line (what is it about that in the ACL? Don’t think I’ve ever seen it in a J League game), he was absolutely hopeless. For Yamamura’s goal it was our friend the lino who alerted the ref to the fact that the Pathum players thought there had been a handball. There was no way he could have seen it himself from his position so basically he was just giving them an official line of complaint. If requested, he probably would have taken care of their post-match interviews for them and cleaned their changing room afterwards. To be fair to the ref, he looked as bored and pissed off by the VAR delays as everyone else was. It’s all too easy to focus on the cock ups VAR makes and forget about the absolute ruination of match atmosphere that it’s responsible for. When every possible goal is accompanied by the potential of it being ruled out after an interminable wait, it becomes difficult to know how or when to celebrate. I’m sure there is a lot more initial celebration of goals that are ruled out compared to celebration when goals are awarded after a lengthy delay. I’m also sure that this really is not how delayed gratification works. If you deny yourself the beer till after you’ve deep-cleaned the bathroom it might taste nicer. But if you pour the beer before you start cleaning, by the time you get round to drinking it, it might not taste as nice anymore. Every goal celebration is now undermined by the very real prospect that it could be ruled out and the knowledge that even if it is given, the intervening minutes will have taken the shine of the moment sufficiently that the excitement becomes about as heightened as seeing your number come up on the screen at the post office. The fun of seeing the build up and the ball hitting the net is undermined, the experience being reduced to seeing the result of a toss of a coin broadcast on a massive TV and not even getting to see the bit where they flip it. One last word about the officiating. The ref booked a Pathum player for an obvious dive in the second half. It was one of the best things I’ve seen this season. I can’t remember the last time anyone in the J League got booked for diving. I really wish they’d do it more often and I can think of plenty of players who absolutely deserve those cards!


I should probably put in this last paragraph something about the Pathum fans who had traveled in reasonable numbers and who did their best to cheer on their team stuck away down in the far corner. I hope they had a nice time in Kawasaki. And also a word about the Pathum players who very graciously waited for our overlong end-of-game celebrations to finish so that they could come round and bow to our fans. One in particular seemed totally amazed at the reception Chanathip got. How nice it is to support a team who clap the opposition at the end of an ACL game, rather than one who hate everyone who ever comes to their stadium. Not mentioning any names… hehe. Next up, Kyoto at home on Sunday, another one of these pointless end of season games. Given that Oniki didn’t make any changes until the 76th minute in this match, you’ve got to think he’ll change the side significantly for that match, right? Hahahahahahaha. After that, almost two weeks till the following game. It’s a good thing we crammed all those matches in early on in the season isn’t it? So now we can have a nice leisurely and excitement undermining run in. I mean, there’s nothing for us to play for in the league anyway, so I guess it doesn’t really matter. But it does seem that most football associations have a knack of finding exactly when the fans don’t want and implementing it every time. The next new innovations will probably be replacing the seats in the stands with thorny bushes, forcing any player who scores or assists a goal to immediately retire and playing the Emperor’s Cup generic ‘uplifting and lightly funky but with plenty of rock guitar solos’ theme song at ear-splitting volume throughout every game, but putting the song back to the beginning every time the ball goes out of play so you never even find out what happens in the middle section (probably a light breakdown with a more mellow but still rocking guitar solo). Looking forward to seeing those changes coming in in 2024!

 

Team

GK 1. JUNG Sung-Ryong
DF 13. YAMANE Miki
DF 4. JESIEL
DF 31. YAMAMURA Kazuya
DF 2. NOBORIZATO Kyohei
MF 8. TACHIBANADA Kento (Yellow card 90+4')
MF 16. SEKO Tatsuki
MF 14. WAKIZAKA Yasuto
FW 41. IENAGA Akihiro
FW 9. LEANDRO DAMIAO
FW 23. MARCINHO
 
Subs
GK 22. HAYASAKA Yuki
GK 99. KAMIFUKUMOTO Naoto
MF 6. JOAO SCHMIDT (on for SEKO 84')
FW 11. KOBAYASHI Yu (on for MARCINHO 84')
DF 15. TANABE Shuto
FW 17. TONO Daiya
FW 18. Bafetimbi GOMIS (on for LEANDRO DAMIAO 76')
FW 20. YAMADA Shin
FW 24. MYOGAN
DF 29. TAKAI Kota
FW 30. SEGAWA Yusuke (on for WAKIZAKA 90+5')
FW 33. MIYASHIRO Taisei (on for IENAGA 76')
 
Goals

WAKIZAKA (Frontale) PEN 16' 1-0
CHANATHIP (Pathum) 33' 1-1
WAKIZAKA (Frontale) PEN 40' 2-1

CHANATHIP (Pathum) 41' 2-2

YAMAMURA (Frontale) 68' 3-2 

MIYASHIRO (Frontale) 90+8' 4-2 


 

Highlights