Japan breezed over China 1-0 in a heavyweight quarterfinal of the
Asian Games soccer tournament here on Tuesday, securing a clash
against Thailand in the semifinals.
Forward Nakayama Satoshi scored the sole goal in the 60th minute
off a cross from Mita Hikaru despite China had their dominance
almost the whole match.
"It's a tough play, but we grabbed the chance. Actually we had only
two chances during the match but we converted one," said Brazilian
Zico, who took the coaching job for the Japanese national team just
one month ago.
"China did have a good play. They created ten chances but failed to
score. There is some luck in the match, I think, we are lucky,"
added Zico.
China, who beat Japan 1-0 in a friendly in August, actually had a
dozen scoring opportunities but converted nil to their
disappointment.
"I
felt sorry that we didn't win the match. But it's only for the
Asiad as we failed to advance. I'm proud of my players because they
did wonderful job in the match," said Chinese coach Shen
Xiangfu.
"It's just one game and we cannot draw any conclusion merely from
the result. The match witnessed the progresses our team has made.
So I asked my players to keep their heads high against the defeat,"
added Shen.
After both sides played tentatively in the early first half, China
started to control the tempo after midfielder Yan Song created a
golden chance in the 15th minute but failed to score. Two minutes
later, forward Yu Tao headed home a corner off Xu Liang, which was
eventually bounced off the bar.
China stepped up their attacks after Japan opened the scoring, but
could find no way to penetrate Japan's dogged defense in the second
half.
"We had a better defense in the second half, which kept our winning
result," said Japanese coach Masakuni Yamamoto.
"Chinese players are stronger, taller and faster, especially their
captain Du Wei. We are difficult to find chances through their
defense."
Throughout the match, Japan created only a pair of clear chances,
including the first when forward Okubo Yoshito failed to convert in
the box in the 4th minute.
"It gives us more confidence, as you know we lost to China just one
month ago. It will help our players grow up," added Masakuni.
In
other quarterfinals, Thailand beat DPR Korea 1-0 and will face
Japan on Thursday.
Host South Korea, hot favorite for the title, also scored a 1-0
victory over Bahrain, but only through the penalty kick, and will
play Iran in the semifinal after the latter eliminated Kuwait
1-0.
(China
Daily October 9, 2002)