Japanese Soccer News - Okada's Japan in Serious
Trouble
Japan held at home by Uzbeks
Michael Tuckerman
Takeshi Okada resembles a man stuck in quicksand without a rope.
On the surface there appears little reason for panic after Japan
came from behind to snatch a 1-1 draw with Uzbekistan in front of
55,142 fans at Saitama Stadium on October 15 in Asian Group A. Yet the
manner of the draw and Okada's increasingly dejected demeanour suggest
that the Japan coach is working on borrowed time.
The draw comes in the wake of Japan's dreadful showing in a friendly
against the United Arab Emirates in Niigata six days earlier. Just
when Okada needed his team to turn in a display of ruthless efficiency
to silence his growing army of critics, it was more of the same
from the Blue Samurai, who went behind following a mistake in defence
from Marcus Tulio Tanaka and who spurned numerous chances to register
a winner after drawing level through Keiji Tamada.
Tulio and veteran Yuji Nakazawa are both self-styled leaders at
the heart of the Japan defence, but the experienced central defenders
were brutally exposed by a bustling Uzbekistan strike force. On
the half hour mark an innocuous chip forward should have been comfortably
dealt with by Tulio, but rather than take the safety-first option
of playing the ball into touch, the Brazilian-born Tulio attempted
an acrobatic scissor-kick clearance that was headed on to Timur
Kapadze, and his cross was turned in by Uzbek talisman Maxim Shatskikh.
The goal was symptomatic of Japan's current plight - routine football
blighted by individual mistakes, and it was no surprise to see Tulio
desperate to atone for his error.
It was the much-maligned Yoshito Okubo who almost drew Japan level
as he failed to get on the end of a Shunsuke Nakamura free-kick
by a matter of inches, and those two players then combined to set
up Japan's equaliser, as Nakamura's floated ball forward was hooked
back by Okubo to an unmarked Tamada to bundle home.
Before the match both Okubo and Tamada had received extra shooting
practice in a bid to remedy Japan's chronic lack of confidence in
front of goal, but whatever good Tamada's goal may have done for
his flagging self-belief, it will have evaporated by the time referee
Albadwawi Ali Hamad blew the full-time whistle as Tamada wasted
a series of second half chances.
First he hooked a difficult chance wide following a cross from
the marauding Atsuto Uchida, before the Nagoya Grampus front man
saw a curling left-foot strike pushed away by Uzbek keeper Ignatiy
Nesterov. With twenty minutes remaining Tamada somehow conjured
to volley over when it seemed easier to score, but an offside flag
saved the shaky striker his blushes.
Japan's best chance came in the final minute when Tulio saw his
goal-bound effort acrobatically turned away by Nesterov, as Uzbekistan
held on for a gritty draw. The result was hardly a categorical disaster
for Japan, yet the disappointment etched into Japanese faces says
much about the current psychological state of the team.
Coach Okada is, for many, the man to blame. The Blue Samurai have
made little progress since Okada stepped in as coach for the stricken
Ivica Osim, despite the fact that in his second spell as Japan coach,
Okada has now overseen seventeen competitive fixtures since taking
over from the Bosnian.
Okada's critics point out that far from motivating his team, the
po-faced tactician has instead heaped pressure on them. Before the
World Cup qualifiers kicked off, Okada claimed that it was his mission
to top South Korea's fourth place showing at the 2002 FIFA World
Cup. Yet when Japan laboured through the opening round of World
Cup qualifiers, Okada was quick to bemoan the lack of self-belief
rippling through his ranks.
Japan's saving grace will surely be the fact that they been drawn
in the easier of the two Asian final qualifying groups. While Australia
top Group A with a maximum six points from six, Japan are just two
points behind them having won their opening qualifier away in Bahrain.
With the top two teams going through as automatic qualifiers for
the 2010 FIFA World Cup, Australia and Japan remain favourites to
book their places in South Africa in two years time, leaving Uzbekistan,
Bahrain and Qatar to battle it out for a playoff place against the
third-place finisher from Group
B.
Few would be surprised if Takeshi Okada is not at the helm in
2010, however, with Japan struggling to cut down mistakes on the
pitch and desperate for an injection of confidence off it.
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