Moriyasu to remain in charge of Japan for another four-year cycle
FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 - Round of 16 - Japan v Croatia - Al Janoub Stadium, Al Wakrah, Qatar - December 5, 2022 Japan coach Hajime Moriyasu before the match REUTERS/John Sibley
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Japan coach Hajime Moriyasu will
remain in charge of the Asian team for another World Cup cycle, the country's
football association announced on Thursday, with the aim of breaking new ground
after a number of near misses.
That Moriyasu would continue in the
role came as little surprise after he led Japan to victories over former World
Cup winners Germany and Spain during the finals in Qatar en route to topping
what was considered the most difficult group at the tournament.
The 54-year-old, whose team was
beaten in the last 16 by Croatia, will be the first coach to lead the nation
into successive World Cup campaigns.
"I'm extremely honoured while
also bracing myself for the difficult mission ahead and the weight of
responsibility that comes with the job," Moriyasu told a press conference.
"I want to take on the challenge
with the belief that nothing is impossible for Japan."
The last-16 defeat in Qatar was
another instance of Moriyasu falling short at international level since taking
over as the Samurai Blue coach following the 2018 World Cup.
Despite a trophy-laden club career in
which he led Sanfrecce Hiroshima to three J-League titles in four seasons,
Moriyasu has yet to experience similar success with Japan.
Japan lost in the Asian Games gold
medal match to a South Korea side led by Son Heung-min in Jakarta weeks after
Moriyasu was appointed national team boss, setting the tone for a series of
near-misses that have followed.
Japan then failed to secure a
record-extending fifth Asian Cup title in early 2019 after Moriyasu's team lost
to Qatar in the final of the continental championship in Abu Dhabi.
More disappointment followed two
years later when Moriyasu, who doubled up as Japan's Olympic team coach, fell
short of claiming a medal at the delayed Tokyo Games in 2021.
However, Japan's results in Qatar
raised expectations that he can take the nation into unchartered territory,
with the country never having progressed beyond the last 16 at the World Cup.
"He deserves a tremendous
evaluation for producing a result that reverberated throughout society, and not
just within the Japanese football community," said JFA chairman Kozo
Tashima.
"We judged that retaining him
was the quickest way to getting.... (into) the World Cup's last eight."


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