Berliner Boersenzeitung - Drama, dreams: Japan's wildly popular school football breeds future stars

EUR -
AED 3.818872
AFN 72.995381
ALL 97.628835
AMD 412.308717
ANG 1.87262
AOA 948.217113
ARS 1071.937747
AUD 1.669898
AWG 1.871481
AZN 1.770887
BAM 1.945019
BBD 2.097971
BDT 124.171112
BGN 1.957122
BHD 0.392106
BIF 3072.667948
BMD 1.039712
BND 1.408592
BOB 7.20616
BRL 6.424271
BSD 1.039041
BTN 88.884307
BWP 14.471782
BYN 3.400352
BYR 20378.351121
BZD 2.087131
CAD 1.492688
CDF 2983.972533
CHF 0.941017
CLF 0.037352
CLP 1030.645386
CNY 7.58906
CNH 7.603615
COP 4584.08929
CRC 529.266234
CUC 1.039712
CUP 27.552362
CVE 109.656637
CZK 25.161549
DJF 184.777736
DKK 7.457728
DOP 63.269293
DZD 141.224049
EGP 52.869138
ERN 15.595677
ETB 132.719823
FJD 2.414105
FKP 0.823433
GBP 0.828557
GEL 2.921225
GGP 0.823433
GHS 15.274552
GIP 0.823433
GMD 74.859507
GNF 8981.173425
GTQ 8.011591
GYD 217.388136
HKD 8.072525
HNL 26.399664
HRK 7.457755
HTG 135.777375
HUF 411.341269
IDR 16829.814775
ILS 3.799393
IMP 0.823433
INR 88.874616
IQD 1361.155006
IRR 43758.871281
ISK 143.907034
JEP 0.823433
JMD 161.732724
JOD 0.737362
JPY 163.33404
KES 134.299226
KGS 90.455214
KHR 4180.885326
KMF 484.635682
KPW 935.740031
KRW 1531.724433
KWD 0.320252
KYD 0.865913
KZT 545.257592
LAK 22712.104931
LBP 93051.351154
LKR 303.915372
LRD 190.146005
LSL 19.490264
LTL 3.069998
LVL 0.628911
LYD 5.105674
MAD 10.490003
MDL 19.118302
MGA 4852.104386
MKD 61.573075
MMK 3376.943343
MNT 3532.940534
MOP 8.30578
MRU 41.394349
MUR 48.856002
MVR 16.009192
MWK 1801.712957
MXN 21.428231
MYR 4.642303
MZN 66.441461
NAD 19.490264
NGN 1604.576577
NIO 38.238043
NOK 11.790196
NPR 142.214692
NZD 1.84253
OMR 0.400315
PAB 1.039041
PEN 3.894313
PGK 4.220585
PHP 60.155123
PKR 289.346827
PLN 4.276433
PYG 8120.984713
QAR 3.789476
RON 4.975231
RSD 116.977622
RUB 114.889923
RWF 1441.687806
SAR 3.905851
SBD 8.716481
SCR 14.817878
SDG 625.387071
SEK 11.460431
SGD 1.414325
SHP 0.823433
SLE 23.70315
SLL 21802.239569
SOS 593.808471
SRD 36.674813
STD 21519.934922
SVC 9.091561
SYP 2612.307321
SZL 19.475048
THB 35.583617
TJS 11.325359
TMT 3.649388
TND 3.299908
TOP 2.435114
TRY 36.737951
TTD 7.061856
TWD 34.057322
TZS 2542.094918
UAH 43.727007
UGX 3816.842925
USD 1.039712
UYU 45.577143
UZS 13408.610485
VES 53.921264
VND 26497.055016
VUV 123.436666
WST 2.872503
XAF 652.34102
XAG 0.035866
XAU 0.000399
XCD 2.809873
XDR 0.796684
XOF 652.3379
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.317869
ZAR 19.576915
ZMK 9358.657373
ZMW 28.937597
ZWL 334.786773
  • RBGPF

    -0.6600

    59.84

    -1.1%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0900

    7.17

    -1.26%

  • CMSC

    -0.0650

    23.395

    -0.28%

  • GSK

    -0.3850

    33.695

    -1.14%

  • AZN

    -0.5200

    65.74

    -0.79%

  • RIO

    -0.3400

    58.67

    -0.58%

  • BP

    0.1450

    29.105

    +0.5%

  • RELX

    -0.0800

    45.5

    -0.18%

  • NGG

    -0.1070

    59.203

    -0.18%

  • BTI

    -0.2850

    36.025

    -0.79%

  • VOD

    -0.0150

    8.415

    -0.18%

  • SCS

    -0.1750

    11.695

    -1.5%

  • BCC

    -1.0350

    119.595

    -0.87%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    12.07

    -0.66%

  • CMSD

    -0.0740

    23.246

    -0.32%

  • BCE

    -0.1250

    22.535

    -0.55%

Drama, dreams: Japan's wildly popular school football breeds future stars
Drama, dreams: Japan's wildly popular school football breeds future stars / Photo: Philip FONG - AFP

Drama, dreams: Japan's wildly popular school football breeds future stars

Japan's national high school football tournament is thriving after more than 100 years, attracting huge crowds, millions watching on TV and breeding future stars, despite professional clubs trying to lure away young talent.

Text size:

The annual tournament kicked off on Saturday and is still regarded as the pinnacle of amateur football with young players dreaming of playing in the final in front of tens of thousands at the National Stadium in Tokyo.

Matches are a massive occasion for the whole school as student cheering squads wave flags, bang drums and roar on their teams in a spectacle of noise and colour.

"All the teams are at a similar level of technical ability so it's about who wants to win the most," 18-year-old Junpei Fukuda, the leader of Ryutsukeizai University Kashiwa High School's cheering squad, told AFP.

"We want our voices to be the loudest."

Unlike in Europe, where young players are snapped up by professional club academies, high school football in Japan still attracts elite talent.

Many go on to the professional game and play for their country with current Japan stars such as Daizen Maeda and Reo Hatate of Celtic and Crystal Palace's Daichi Kamada all having played high school football.

The landscape has begun to change in recent years, with more top young players turning their backs on the high school game and joining the youth teams of top-flight J. League clubs instead.

The school tournament's quality has taken a hit as a result, but its magic endures for many.

Ryutsukeizai Kashiwa midfielder Kanaru Matsumoto, who will turn professional with the J. League's Shonan Bellmare next year, said the tournament was "the stage I've aspired to play on ever since I was little".

"The main reason I came to this school was because I thought I could play at the national high school tournament here," the 17-year-old said.

- Millions tune in -

The national high school tournament was first played in 1917, long before professional football came to Japan with the J. League in 1993.

Teams from each of Japan's 47 prefectures, with two from Tokyo, compete in a knockout competition over 18 days with matches played in and around the capital.

All games are televised locally and the semi-finals and final are broadcast to a national audience, with millions tuning in.

Last season's final in Tokyo was played in front of 55,000 fans, comfortably eclipsing most J. League attendances.

High school baseball and rugby tournaments are also popular and football journalist Masashi Tsuchiya said it was because school sports strike a chord in Japan.

"I'm from Gunma Prefecture and I always support the Gunma team, even if it isn't my old high school's team," he said.

"It's a tournament that places importance on local pride and old school ties."

Not all players who appear at the tournament have ambitions to play at the top level.

Some play on at university only, while others give up the sport after graduating from high school.

Ryutsukeizai Kashiwa manager Masahiro Enomoto said the tournament marks a transition after three years together as a team.

"It's where kids, who have worked really hard for something, become adults," he said.

- Floods of tears -

TV broadcasts of games go beyond events on the pitch, delving into the players' back stories, playing up emotional bonds and featuring scenes of beaten teams in floods of tears.

"Japanese people love that kind of drama more than they think about the quality of the football," said Enomoto, even though the standard remains undoubtedly high.

School sides still hold their own against J. League youth teams, who are increasingly regarded as a better route to the professional game.

The nationwide Prince Takamado Under-18 Premier League features a roughly even split of high school and J. League youth teams, and Ohzu High School were crowned this year's champions.

Tsuchiya said high school football should not be thought of only as a stepping stone to the top.

"Yes, you can watch it for the quality of football and the quality of the players," he said.

"But you can also just enjoy watching the kids give everything they've got to try to win each game."

(H.Schneide--BBZ)