Intro
Ryukyu need to put their recent loss to Omiya in the rearview mirror and focus on Tokushima Vortis right now. Time is definitely not on the side of Ryukyu anymore as they quickly approach the halfway point of the 2022 season on just fourteen (14) points. Short of a miracle winning streak to push Ryukyu up the table and closer to forty points, which seems all but a pipedream at the moment, we need to collect points in as many games as we can. The best Ryukyu can hope for in the interim is to keep within striking distance of Omiya and Iwate to keep this a three horse race for relegation.

Weather Forecast & Match Day Info
We may actually see the sun in Okinawa for the first time in six days! But you still need to prepare for wet weather.

Click>>>> Match Day 19 Information from FC Ryukyu
Team Previews
FC Ryukyu: I really have no idea what to write about for the Ryukyu team preview this week. Too many times we’ve talked about Ryukyu holding loads of possession and failing to score. Something that plagued us against Omiya. We’ve talked about the team’s inability to finish despite the aforementioned possession. Clearly indicated by the fact that Ryukyu have only scored more than two (2) goals in a game four (4) times this season, while conceding more than two (2) goals ten (10) times in eighteen (18) games. So what should we talk about then? Injuries? Sure.
Kusano’s injury is absolutely catastrophic, and since we have no idea what he is dealing with – perhaps to let whatever swelling that may have occurred in his knee to subside so they can get an accurate MRI – we can only hope it is not a lengthy injury. But then again, we never heard anything from the club about the injury (probably a pulled hamstring) that Abe has been dealing with the past twelve (12) games. We could really use Abe back in the near term, that is, until Kusano returns, or we sign a striker on loan. Compounding the current crisis are the injuries to our central defense in which we have a patchwork back line, though to their credit, is doing enough to at least put Ryukyu in a position to win some games. They are certainly not the reason why we lost at Omiya.
That loss last Wednesday stems directly from sloppy play – balls passed out of bounds, wild shots, careless turnovers – and a lack of understanding what to do when near the oppositions goal. Ryukyu have not improved at all on defending, or attacking, set pieces this year which seems a very simple thing to fix throughout training. The constant rotation of players week in, week out, has yet to produce a solid lineup and the injuries certainly don’t help. But we are also talking about a team loaded with veterans and experienced players, not a team full of rookies making their J2 debut.
What we need is an on field general to start getting in the asses of some of these players when play begins to dip. Someone needs to be more vocal out there to get the boys back in line and that starts with the captain. Taguchi currently wears the captain arm band, which could change if Okazaki returns this week, but other than setting his back line, how can he influence play at the top? At this point our only real hope is we haven’t totally capitulated and for an outfield player to assert themselves, outside of just their play, to lead this team. But who will that be?

Tokushima Vortis: Tokushima are not finding life in the J2 as easy as when they departed it back in 2020. They started off the year undefeated in their opening eight (8) fixtures but with only one (1) win to their credit. After suffering their first loss of 2022 Vortis rebounded with a pair of wins and a draw but still found themselves in the lower half of the table with fellow demoted side Oita Trinita, a place that Vortis currently occupy.
Over their last five (5) games Vortis had one (1) win, two (2) draws, and two (2) losses. They suffered consecutive losses for the first time all season when they were handily beaten by Yokohama FC before pulling one back in stoppage time, and then were shocked at home the following week when Tochigi SC beat them 1-0. This past Wednesday night they only managed a draw against Kofu after taking the early lead and even with Kofu having a man sent off in the second half. But lets not kid ourselves as Vortis are a very good defensive side having conceded only eleven (11) goals all season which is good for best in the league.
Another feather in the defensive cap of Vortis is the nine (9) shutouts in eighteen (18) J2 games played this season. That includes five (5) games with nil/nil score lines. Vortis maybe very good at shutting down the opposition’s attack, but they also struggle to find the back of the net as they’ve been shutout two other times for a total of seven (7) this the year. A bit like Tochigi SC last year, who we beat at home in 2021 despite their impressive defensive record. Still, I’d gladly switch struggles with Vortis at the moment as they are likely to figure out the problem in the attack long before they breakdown at the back.
Tokushima also have nearly identical home/road splits for wins, draws, losses and goals scored/conceded. I thought they looked a bit shaky in two of their past road matches but they turned things around against Kofu before surrendering a needless PK. Finally, forward Shota Fuji may lead the team in goals with five (5), but the Vortis attack funnels through one man, MF Kazuki Nishiya. Kazuki is so heavily involved in much of the Vortis build up play that if Ryukyu can somehow take him out of the game, tactically not physically, they could easily grind the Vortis attack to a halt.
Keys to Victory for FC Ryukyu
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. Execute shots from distance, pepper Vortis with crosses into the box, and for god’s sake, score from a set piece. Likelihood 1. Right, three things Ryukyu haven’t done all year and have struggled with all season. But these type of ‘long balls’ into the box maybe the only defensive weakness to this defensively strong Vortis team. Vortis can deal with the up close pressure pretty well barring some deflections, but if we dance around with possession looking for the perfect pass to unlock the Vortis defense, we will lose. If we try more of the long game approach as outlined above, like Gunma and Tochigi did, we may actually walk out of the ‘Tapista’ with points (or a win) on Sunday.
Kinain’ Ya Around
Maybe I got a little out in front of my skis last week when I assumed Ryukyu were primed to take the leap above Omiya and move up in the table. After doing a little research on transfermarkt, a phenomenal website by the way, I came across some stats that are really worrisome. Since 2019, FC Ryukyu have gone 6-3-10 (W-D-L) against teams in the relegation zone. If you include the loss to Iwate this year, though not in the relegation zone at the time of the match, as well games against teams who were in similar positions as Iwate when they faced Ryukyu earlier in the season, Ryukyu’s record stands at 7-3-12 (W-D-L). Which equates to winning about 1/3 of those games.
FC Ryukyu have zero (0) wins against teams that are either currently, or were once inside the relegation zone this season. They have suffered five (5) losses with what seems to be only a few games left this season against teams facing the prospect of relegation. Granted, anything could happen during the remainder of the campaign but Ryukyu haven’t defeated a bottom side since Matsumoto Yamaga on Match Day 35 last season. Ryukyu have only had one (1) season in which they had a winning record against the relegation sides and that was 2020 when there was no relegation so I had to use stats against the bottom four clubs that year. To sum this all up, Ryukyu struggle, regardless of Ryukyu’s position in the table at the time of matches, to defeat the bottom sides of J2 in what could’ve/should’ve been winnable and were must win games.
Round 19 in J2
(1) Vegalta Sendai could do all the teams currently in the relegation battle a favor, expect Tochigi of course, by defeating back-to-back winners (19) Tochigi SC. (3) Yokohama FC is in the same boat as Sendai, and looking to keep pace up top, when they host (18) Renofa Yamaguchi who are winless in their last four (4) matches. It would also be nice if (10) Zweigen Kanazawa continued their winning ways by defeating (22) Iwate Grulla Morioka. Writing those past few sentences makes me regret the loss to Omiya even more with how the schedule shakes out this week.

The top of the table clash that some neutral fans may enjoy will be the game between (2) Albirex Niigata and (4) Montedio Yamagata. Niigata have eight (8) wins in their last eleven (11), but Yamagata is undefeated in their last nine (9). It should be a good game to watch. And finally, there is the J-League International YouTube broadcast featuring (12) Tokyo Verdy at home to (20) Omiya Ardija. This is Verdy’s sixth, and final, match (at least this month) on the YouTube channel where they’ve won once (1), drawn once (1), and lost three (3) times. It will also be Omiya’s first game with their new manager Naoki Soma in charge. I am a bit conflicted here because Verdy is one of Ryukyu’s main rivals, and one that I enjoy watching lose at any point in the season, but we also need Verdy to win in the event that Ryukyu earn, or drop, points at home this round. Click>>>> J.League International YouTube Channel.

Conclusion
I just have that strange feeling that this game could end 0-0 on the heels of some lackluster offensive performances, or one team blows the other out in an unexpected (or expected) manner. Whatever the case maybe for Ryukyu on Sunday the fans need an uplifting performance out of their team as life is pretty drab around Okinawa these days with the CV-19 virus raging, rainy season pounding the island, and Ryukyu in the relegation zone. At least the Ryukyu Golden Kings are vying for another championship.

































