MD 41 Preview: (9) FC Ryukyu vs (6) Albirex Niigata #FC琉球

Intro

Oh what could’ve been! Many fans, both Ryukyu and Niigata, may have earmarked this game at Match Day 21 as a potential title decider, but alas, it is not the case. Both of these sides screamed out of the starting block, both will ponder where it all went wrong. But here we are nonetheless on Match Day 41 with nothing on the line short of another win in what is, for both teams, a lost season.

  1. Weather & Match Day Info
  2. Previous Match Day Highlights
  3. Round 40 Summary
  4. Team Previews
    • FC Ryukyu
    • Albirex Niigata
  5. Keys to Victory
  6. Round 41 in J2
  7. Conclusion

1. Weather Forecast & Match Day Info

I am going to try and re-introduce the notion of tailgating to the Okinawan faithful so screw the weather. FC Ryukyu will also try a CV-19 Vaccinated only supporter section. Probably no cheering but at least no masks. But hell. It will be windy. Match Day info from FC Ryukyu

2. Previous Match Highlights

Tokyo Verdy 1-1 FC Ryukyu
Thespakusatsu Gunma 0-0 Albirex Niigata

3. Round 40 Summary

FC Ryukyu achieved something remarkable this past Sunday. Taguchi saved two PKs in a single match and though I cannot locate the J-League stats, that feat has only been accomplished 7 times in the entire history of the English Premier League. The unremarkable part was we couldn’t muster a single shot on net the entire second half while Higuchi was besieged ala Verdun circa 1916. The sheer amount of shots on net is enough to give any man shell shock yet he stood his post until the 89:45 mark. Well done for him, sad for those that couldn’t support that tremendous feat.

4. Team Previews

FC Ryukyu: Today is a tough day for this blog. Hiro Ikema, @cafedecampnou, has decided to hang up his boots as the head of the FC Ryukyu supporter group after nearly 21 years at the helm. Something he told me on Thursday but did not make official until Friday. I want to spend a little bit of time talking about what he has meant to me and the club.

The man hails from Miyako-jima, came to Okinawa for high school, and picked up the mantle as the head of the Ryukyu sappo in 2003 when FC Ryukyu first came into existence. His first ever encounter with the club happened when he approached the club in 2003, when they thought he was a sponsor, when he was simply seeking info on the club. He has been a staple, more like an ambassador, for this club since that time appearing in numerous printed articles, interviews, providing meals to players, teaching supporters how to cheer, and one of my good friends. It was “Hiro,” as I know him, that brought me into this fold when the only thing red I had to wear at games was an Arsenal kit. He greeted me at every home game despite our language barriers, adopted me into the Ryukyu family as one of their own, and was the driving force behind this blog. When I voiced my frustrations about the lack of English language coverage for this team on the way home from Omiya in 2019, he simply said, “start an English blog.” Genius! I know many of you because of him, all of which I am thankful for.

I have been lucky, more like fortunate, to know this man and share with him many memories. My memories include the J3 title lifting game; the Tanaka missed PK in 2016 when I shouted WTF; joining him and supporters on the pitch that same year to take a photo with the team after an Emperor’s Cup match win; breaking bread at my house; but most importantly, when I was new to the club he asked me and my family to partake in a group photo at the end of 2014, my first season supporting FC Ryukyu. A photo I seek to obtain to this day.

The man’s legacy can never be matched down here because it can only be carried on and celebrated.

Albirex Niigata: Whatever hit Ryukyu has also hit Niigata. Going 1-3-1 in their last 5 and with one of their best players linked to a move to J1, what ya got on Sunday Niigata? It so unfortunate that, yet maybe not unexpected, Niigata feel from the top. Like Ryukyu, Niigata are prone to fast starts and mid-season collapses. Yet, this is not an entry to talk about failures, it’s more to applaud what each other has done.

I always thought Ryukyu and Niigata were playing with house money at the start of the campaign. Could they keep the pace? No, and that sucks.

5. Keys to Victory for FC Ryukyu

At this point my expectations are managed. Are yours?

6. Round 41 in J2

Likely trophy lifting time for Iwata while the relegation battle hits its crescendo. (18) SC Sagamihara hosts (22) Matsumoto Yamaga in a death match to determine each others fate. Lose, and go home, if Sagamihara win, enjoy J2 in 2022. (21) Ehime FC have one last shot at redemption on the road at (11) Mito Hollyhock or else they’ll be enjoying the rainy nights in Gifu next year. Same could be said about (20) Giravanz Kitakyushu when they host (15) Tochigi SC. Which leaves us (19) Zweigen Kanazawa with it all left to do at home to (7) Montedio Yamagata. The promotion/relegation battle could be done and dusted come Sunday evening but there maybe a free broad cast on the J.League Int’l channel I just can’t locate it though. Click>>> J.League YouTube Channel.

7. Conclusion

The last time we will see this team for at least 8 weeks while they go on break and head into 2022. And they will do so with Kina taking over the permanent managerial duties. Let’s just get loose in the stands while celebrating some goals FFS. Miss that feeling so much (less time in the bathroom I suppose, or more?).

MD 40 Preview: (12) Tokyo Verdy vs (8) FC Ryukyu #FC琉球

Intro

Well we’re back, sort of. It has been quite some time since I’ve released anything on this blog and much has changed during my sabbatical. Ryukyu dropped way out of the promotion race following a run of poor results beginning just before the Olympic break and continuing through to October which led to the firing of Manager Yasuhiro Higuchi after 7 games in a row without a win (1 draw and 6 losses). Shintaro Shimizu was released by the club following several violations of the team’s rules and policies and then of course the injuries to several key members of the squad really sucked the life blood out of the team. While there hasn’t been much to be excited about down here in Okinawa these days, nothing recharges the batteries like a match with one of your heated rivals, or at least that’s how I view Tokyo Verdy.

  1. Weather Forecast
  2. Previous Match Highlights
  3. Team Previews
    • Tokyo Verdy
    • FC Ryukyu
  4. Rivalry Week
  5. Keys to Victory
  6. Prediction
  7. Round 40 in J2
  8. Conclusion

1. Weather Forecast

I really do not care what the weather is like for this match as it is the first away game I will be able to attended in over two years. But for those of you that may be in attendance, the forecast looks decent.

2. Previous Match Highlights

FC Ryukyu 2-2 JEF United Chiba
Zweigen Kanazawa 0-4 Tokyo Verdy

3. Team Previews

Tokyo Verdy: Verdy have been hanging around the mid-table of J2 for much of the season. They have a near equal home road splits as far as points, but have found success on the road more favorable these days as Verdy has lost 5 out of their last 6 home games. And haven’t won at home since September 11th. Verdy also had to suffer through a stretch of 8 consecutive road games, with 4 losses and 4 draws, to accommodate the Tokyo Olympics. That is possibly the reason why they are enjoying so many road wins as of late as they had so many attempts at road wins during the summer.

Verdy went 2-1-2 over their last five games with wins over Montedio Yamagata and Zweigen Kanazawa; losses to JEF Chiba and V-Varen Nagasaki; and the lone draw to Ventforet Kofu. JEF absolutely destroyed Verdy at home to the tune of 5-1. Though Verdy managed to level the game in the opening half, they went into halftime down 3-1. By the time Verdy finally came to life in the second half, it was already 5-1 for JEF. Strangely, Verdy rebounded from that trouncing to put in a spirited effort at home to Kofu where both sides played to a 0-0 draw. Each team had a chance in the waning minutes of stoppage time to win, yet neither could find the back of the goal.

Verdy’s strong form carried over into the next round when they defeated Montedio Yamagata 2-1 on the road. Verdy capitalized on an an early PK, from a Yamagata handball in the box, and followed that goal with a second goal in front of halftime. However, Yamagata scored a PK of their own, from a Verdy handball, but were never able to find the equalizer. That was Yamagata’s first loss in four games and has sent them into a bit of a tailspin as of late. But all that hard work by Verdy was for not as they were beaten by Nagasaki the following week.

Verdy managed to hang in for most of this game despite having one of their players sent off in the first half. It took Nagasaki until the 75th minute to open the scoring but once they did, the flood gates opened up. Nagasaki put another two past Verdy in stoppage time through two breakout plays where the Nagasaki attackers ran the better part of half the pitch untouched. Verdy’s most recent game was a dismantling of Kanazawa, on the road, where they scored two goals in each half.

Like Ryukyu, Verdy had a much better start to the season compared to the second half. They own nearly identical records in both parts of the season with both sides only accruing four wins since match day 22. Like Ryukyu, Verdy had a stretch of games (7 for FC Ryukyu & 8 for Tokyo Verdy) without a win shortly after the restart from the mid season break. I guess you could say that these are two evenly matched teams squaring off on match day 40.

FC Ryukyu: It has been one heck of a rollercoaster ride this season supporting FC Ryukyu. There were the high points of being near the top of the table and playing outstanding defensive football; the low points with all the injuries and of course another mid season collapse. The firing of a manager and player during the season – something I’ve never seen Ryukyu do before – as well as having to refrain from attending games four months due to the COVID situation in Okinawa, but ultimately returning to the grounds a few weeks ago really typifies the ride we’ve been on as supporters. Though there isn’t much left to play for, besides pride and possibly a job next season, Ryukyu will undoubtedly end 2021 as their most successful season in J2.

Ryukyu hit the halfway point of 2021 in 2nd place on 13 wins, 4 draws, 4 losses while outscoring their opponents 36 to 19. They managed to shutout their opponents 9 times while only being shutout 5 times. In the second half of the season Ryukyu have dropped to 8th place while mustering 4 wins, 5 draws and suffering 9 losses. They’ve scored 17 goals in the past 18 games yet have conceded 25. Ryukyu have been shutout 9 times since the break and have registering a single shutout of their opponents. Pretty much an unprecedented fall from grace for this team, but one that occurred quite regularly under Higuchi.

Unlike last season when Ryukyu had two players in double digit goals, Ryukyu’s top goal scorer has been Kiyotake (8). But just like last season, Abe has gone missing near the end of the campaign and there has been no word as to why. Abe has surpassed his 2020 total of 2 assists with 6 this season and though he isn’t scoring as much as he was last year, his contributions were felt across the flailing Ryukyu attack with his workman like rate throughout the summer.

Another player that has had a rough go of it lately is Koya Kazama. Koya had 3 goals and 7 assists by the midway point of the year but has managed only 1 goal since. It was always going to fall on Abe and Koya to shoulder the load of the attack when Ryukyu lost Ikeda and Tanaka to injury, but they’ve only accounted for 3 goals and 3 assists in this half of the season. What was also a position of strength for Ryukyu, goal keeping and defending, became their Achilles heel during the abovementioned collapse.

First, Okazaki could never get healthy after his injury in May which left it all to Chinen in central defense. Second there were injuries to Taguchi, and Dany, forcing Inose – Ryukyu’s 3rd choice goalie – to play behind a weakened back line. Third, Ryukyu lost Keita Tanaka, pretty much the engine driving the Ryukyu attack for the season. Fourth, Numata suffered an injury forcing FWD Uehara to play LB and finally (most heartbreaking), there was the season ending injury to Chinen. Though Numata, Okazaki and Taguchi have since returned from injury, it just isn’t the same set of players that propelled Ryukyu to their blazing start of 2021.

So yeah, it was a lethal combination of the lack of goals, and shots to be quite honest, coupled with a makeshift back line that sealed our fate in 2021. Though it is unlikely that we will ever know if it was the hard training and heat that contributed to the collapse, we’ve seen similar results from Ryukyu during the past summers in J2. The change to Kina as manager was probably a necessary healing process for the club but they have yet to regain the confidence we saw from them to open the year.

4. Rivalry Week

We all know that FC Ryukyu do not, at least for the moment, have the traditional cross town rival that so many other clubs in the J-League enjoy for your typical ‘derby day.’ However, over the past three seasons Ryukyu have some interesting history with Tokyo Verdy as these sides produce some heated moments when they clash.

Though it is not a lengthy history between these two, the match on Sunday will only be the 6th time that Ryukyu have played Tokyo Verdy, it still has seen its fair share of fouls, sending offs, and dust ups. Ryukyu own the all time series advantage with 3 wins, 1 draw and 1 loss. The first ever meeting between these clubs occurred in 2019 where Dany Carvajal had his nose broken attempting to stop Ryohei Hayashi on a break away, resulting in a yellow card for Dany and PK for Verdy. Dany, bloodied and with gauze hanging out both nostrils, saved the PK, which allowed Uesato to smash home his first ever goal for Ryukyu on a volley deep into stoppage time ending the match one all.

Dany bloody and broken, but stopped that PK

The return leg in Okinawa that year saw Verdy put 5 past Ryukyu behind Junki Koike’s hat trick. Verdy marked that momentous occasion in an otherwise uneventful season by releasing T-shirts commemorating Koike’s achievement. Ridiculous, but, we don’t have a leg to stand on as Ryukyu also did the same when Kiyotake netted a hat trick this season. Can we just get some better schwag at the good store instead of novelty t-shirts? Anyways, at the end of 2019, this wasn’t really a rivalry as Verdy had gotten the better of Ryukyu and embarrassed them in front of their home crowd.

High point in another lost season for this once proud club

2020 is when things began to really heat up. Ryukyu earned their first ever win over Verdy on MD10 when Shohei Takahashi took umbrage with an aerial challenge from Uehara. Shinya landed – as what normally happens when two players get tangled in the air – on Takahashi. Shohei decided it was a good time to bust out the mule kick to Uehara’s mid section, the problem was that foul occurred in the Verdy penalty area, and was seen by the linesman. After several minutes (10 to be exact) of some disgusting scenes by the Verdy players, Abe stepped up and netted the winner on the PK.

Takahashi putting the boot to Uehara in the box

Ryukyu returned the favor from the 5-1 loss in 2019 by defeating Verdy by four goals on MD 37 of 2020 while also shutting them out for the second time in a row. 2021’s series started off with a bang when, to everyone’s surprise, Yuhei Sato from Verdy decided to impale Yu Tomidokoro’s testicles with the heel of his boot. Yu went after a loose ball from a challenge by the now laying on his back Sato, but Sato wasn’t going to allow a Ryukyu player the advantage of collecting the ball and heading into attack. Instead he opted for a less than professional foul. Too bad that challenge occurred in front of the referee, fourth official, Higuchi and pretty much everyone watching at home. That resulted in a red card that reduced Verdy to 10 men and allowed Ryukyu to score two goals towards a 2-0 victory. The second Ryukyu goal, a PK, came from another infraction inside the penalty area by Verdy.

Yuhei Sato channeling his inner Vlad the Impaler

In just five games, there has been 3 penalty kicks, 1 sending off, 1 bloody nose, fouls on both sides for unsportsmanlike behavior and a t-shirt. But here is one final fun fact. Since Koike’s third goal, and fifth for Verdy on match day 36 in 2019, Verdy have yet to score a goal against Ryukyu. Perhaps this is just my way of manufacturing something out of nothing in order to replicate the so called derby day, or it is just a way to put a little something extra on a rather meaningless game between two midtable teams. I’ll let you be the judge.

5. Keys to Victory

The Scale: 5- An almost certainty it will occur 4-Fairly-Certain it will happen 3-Somewhat Certain it could happen 2-Very Unlikely that it happens 1- Requires a Miracle for it to happen

1. More shots equal more chances. Likelihood 1. The clear and obvious key to victory this week but also the least likely to happen. Ryukyu are not generating the attempts on net that can lead to scoring outbursts. Verdy are so vulnerable to spilled balls, rebounds and second chances as evidenced by the video footage for their past five matches. We often see Ryukyu players in possession in the opposing end only to witness them pass the ball back and restart the attack from our central defenders thus allowing our opponents time to regroup in defense. Good things will happen when you put quality shots on Verdy’s net so let’s hope that Ryukyu can do that on Sunday.

2. Avoid the “Ryukyu Double.” Likelihood 2. Last week Kiyotake and Kanai were responsible for both Ryukyu goals. However, they were also involved in both the opposition’s goals. Kiyotake was caught ball watching instead of man marking which led to the JEF equalizer, while Kanai completely whiffed in an effort to clear the ball from danger inside the Ryukyu box leading to the second goal for JEF. So that was actually more like a Ryukyu Double-Double. This feat has occurred on more than one occasion this season and if we intend to depart Tokyo with a win, then Ryukyu need to stay sharp throughout the entire 90 minutes.

3. Get on the scoreboard first. Likelihood 3. Verdy looked good when they took the early lead in their past two wins, and lifeless when they conceded the first goal. It is vital that Ryukyu start fast, and score (unlike what they did against Renofa), as that could lead to even more opportunities and goals for a side struggling in the atatck. Ryukyu have not won by more than two goals in any game since match day 20, which was also the last time they’ve scored more than two goals in a game. However, 11 of Verdy’s 16 losses have been by more than two goals this season. Perhaps this provides a little glimmer of light at the end of an abysmal goal scoring tunnel for Ryukyu.

6. Prediction

I am done doing these as I am usually wrong. I just want a Ryukyu win.

7. Round 40 in J2

Jubilo Iwata has already booked their ticket back to the J1 and with only 9 points up for grabs, Kyoto Sanga can book theirs if they maintain their 7 point lead over V-Varen Nagasaki. Seeing how the promotion race, without any playoffs, is nearly complete, all eyes will be on the race to escape relegation to J3.

Matsumoto Yamaga, a team in the J1 just two seasons ago, is likely headed to J3 next year. They are bottom of the table, only five points behind 18th Kanazawa, but haven’t won in 7 games. Yamaga will host Renofa Yamaguchi who have pulled themselves out of the relegation zone but are themselves only six points above the drop. 21st Ehime FC will host 20th SC Sagamihara in what should be an exciting match to watch for any neutral. A draw helps neither side so someone will need to win and move up at the expense of the other. Kitakyushu travels to Chiba with hopes that the hosts will be looking to close out the campaign without suffering any needless injuries.

Zweigen heads to Tochigi in another battle to stave off relegation as Kanazawa sits just above the drop with Tochigi only four points clear from safety. Omiya will look to secure safety with a win over their neighbors to the east in Mito while Gunma face a real test at home to Niigata.

There are two free international broadcasts this week on the J.League International YouTube channel. Both matches are on Saturday November 20th and feature Jubilo Iwata hosting V-Varen Nagasaki followed by Kyoto Sanga traveling to Fagiano Okayama. Perhaps Jubilo could lift the trophy on Saturday but it seems more likely that will occur at a later date. Click>>>> J League Int’l YouTube Link

8. Conclusion

It feels good to be back and I apologize for the lengthy absence. Right, you’ve read it all so you know the only thing left to do is for Ryukyu to go out there and get the win. Enjoy your weekend and stay safe.

Coming for ya Verdy!