Shimizu S-Pulse in cracking Nabisco Qq OnlineCup form
They may be struggling in the league, but Shimizu S-Pulse are on course to book a place in the quarter-finals of the Nabisco League Cup following their most recent 4-2 victory over local rivals Jubilo Iwata on May 25.
Playmaker Jungo Fujimoto
scored twice for the Shizuoka side, but it was 23-year-old striker Kazuki Hara
who stole the show, turning in an eye-catching performance as he looks to press
claims for a regular starting position in Kenta Hasegawa's side.
JEF United remained unbeaten
under new coach satta king Alex Miller
after they beat Consadole Sapporo 2-1 away in Hakodate, with ex-Vegalta Sendai
striker Tatsunori Arai scoring twice.
The largest crowd of the
day turned out at Toyota Stadium, where hosts Nagoya Grampus thumped Urawa Reds
4-2 to all but end Urawa's hopes of progressing to the last eight of the
competition. The Saitama giants have picked up just two points from their four
matches played so far.
Another full round of
Nabisco League Cup fixtures takes place on May 31, with the pick of the action
seeing Kyoto Sanga FC hoping to keep their quarter-final hopes alive when they
host Nagoya Grampus, FC Tokyo take on Shimizu S-Pulse in the unusual surrounds
of Matsumoto Stadium in Nagano, Kashiwa Reysol and JEF United face off in the
Chiba derby at Kashiwanoha Stadium and Oita Trinita welcome Yokohama F. Marinos
to the Kyushu Oil Dome, with both teams locked in a tense battle for supremacy
in Group D.
J. League issues apology
The J. League has issued
an apology to Kawasaki Frontale striker Kazuki Ganaha, who saw his appeal
against a J. League-imposed doping ban upheld by the Court of Arbitration for
Sport in Geneva.
Ganaha was handed a
six-match ban by the J. League in 2007 after he was issued an intravenous drip
by his club in an attempt to overcome the effects of a cold. Although Ganaha's
injection contained little more than a garlic infusion he was subsequently
banned by the J. League, who claimed that his treatment contravened their
strict anti-doping regulations.
The Court of Arbitration
for Sport found that Ganaha was not at fault for the breach and overturned the
J. League's decision, as well as ordering the J. League to contribute to the
cost of Ganaha's appeal.
Urawa Reds and Gamba Osaka
look set to escape punishment
Urawa Reds and Gamba Osaka
look set to escape official sanctions following the serious crowd disturbances
that marred Gamba's 3-2 victory over the Reds at Saitama Stadium on May 17.
Both clubs were forced to
apologise to J. League chairman Kenji Onitake in the aftermath of the
tumultuous scenes, while Gamba Osaka took it upon themselves to disband one of
their main supporter groups.
Nearly two weeks after the
match the J. League is yet to hand down official sanctions, suggesting that two
of Japan's most powerful clubs will go unpunished for their roles in some of
the worst fan violence to have hit the league.
Japan National Teams
Japan may have won the
Kirin Cup, but Takeshi Okada's team failed to impress too many fans when they
followed up a 1-0 win over Cote D'Ivoire on May 24 with an insipid display in a
0-0 draw with Paraguay just three days later.
It wasn't just the turgid
football that will have alarming bells ringing in JFA headquarters, with a
respectable 40,710 crowd at Toyota Stadium followed three days later by a
turn-out of just 27,988 that left more than half of Saitama Stadium empty.
Coach Okada dropped
goalkeeper Yoshikatsu Kawaguchi and Urawa Reds striker Naohiro Takahara from
his starting eleven, and it was Takahara's replacement Keiji Tamada who scored
the winner over the Cote D'Ivoire.
After starting both
matches, Tamada's Nagoya Grampus team-mate Seigo Narazaki will almost certainly
take the gloves for Japan's upcoming World Cup qualifier with Oman at Nissan
Stadium in Yokohama.
Meanwhile Yasuharu
Sorimachi's Olympic team lost out in the semi-finals of the 2008 Toulon
Tournament to Italy, going down 5-4 on penalties after a scoreless draw, with
Celtic's Koki Mizuno missing the crucial spot-kick.
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