FIFA World Cup 2022: another massive upset, Japan stuns four-time champions Germany by 2-1
Just over 24 hours after Saudi
Arabia set the FIFA World Cup alight with a stunning
upset of Argentina, Japan did the same, holding off
Germany’s furious attempts to salvage a point from the Group E opener for
both teams on Wednesday.
Upon receiving the ball wide
out on the right from a free-kick in his own box, Takuma Asano took Nico
Schlotterbeck out of the equation with a first touch for the ages. With the
goal in his sights, Asano kept running but the angle for a shot kept getting
tighter. Asano needed a ripper of a shot to beat Manuel Neuer.
Asano, on as a substitute just
before the hour mark, did exactly that. The connection was pure, the ball
crashed into the roof of the net and brought down the roof at the Khalifa
Stadium.
Japan was seven minutes away
from sealing a stunning victory against Germany and the hordes of their fans
behind that goal, beating their drums, were now willing to complete a
famous victory.
This, just like on Tuesday,
saw the Asian side come from a goal behind in the second half to win. Japan had
leveled matters just eight minutes before Asano’s winner. It was another
substitute who did that. Japan had been knocking and the chance came when Neuer
parried away a cross from Takumi Minamino and Ritsu Doan, who had been on the
pitch for less than four minutes, was the quickest to react to plant a shot
into the back of the net.
Following Japan’s equalizer,
Germany coach Hansi Flick threw on striker Niclas Fuellkrug and attacker Mario
Goetze, the man who scored the stunning extra-time winner for Die Mannschaft in 2014 final in Brazil, to provide a moment of inspiration and stem the
Japanese flow.
But when Asano scored, the
Germans had been well and truly floored. They heaped pressure on the Japanese
goal but the defense and goalkeeper Shuichi Gonda held on.
“I believe it’s a historical
moment, a historical victory to say the least,” said Japan coach Hajime
Moriyasu, when asked about the influence of Germany on Japanese football. “We
have seven players who feature in the Bundesliga and that has contributed to
this.”
Time was supposed to have
healed Germany. Refreshed, reinvigorated and under a new coaching setup, they
seemed to have done away with the staleness that had settled in. The infusion
of new blood with some older heads reinstated under Hansi Flick had been
revitalizing and they arrived for the World Cup in Qatar having lost just once
in their last 16 games.
But the demons of Russia don’t
seem to be going away. Then, as holders, they’d limped out of the World Cup at
the group stage; the imagery of Neuer scrambling to get back into his box as
Son Heung-Min raced away to score and seal a famous win for South Korea and
hammer the final nail in the holders’ coffin is still fresh.
Facing another East Asian side
at the 45,000-capacity venue in the heart of the Qatari capital, Germany had
started brightly but got a scare when Japan had the ball in the back of the net
in the eighth minute, only to see that being ruled off-side.
Gonda was keeping Japan in the
game, repelling shots one after the other but it was his error that saw Germany
take the lead. Just past the half-hour mark, Gonda tried to collect a ball in
the box but in doing so, he brought down David Raum.
“He fell without much
contact,” said Gonda, who was named player of the match, although he did not
have any complaints about the referee’s decision. Ilkay Gündoğan stepped up from
the spot and once they had the lead, Germany came in waves and waves at the
Japanese goal but had nothing to show.
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