Japan national team loses again in round of 16 at World Cup

Japan's Maya Yoshida, right, fights for the ball with Croatia's Bruno Petkovic, center, and Japan's Takehiro Tomiyasu, left, during the World Cup round of 16 soccer match between Japan and Croatia at the Al Janoub Stadium in Al Wakrah, Qatar, Monday, Dec. 5, 2022. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)
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AL WAKRAH, Qatar — After making it back to the round of 16, Japan is headed back to the drawing board.

The Japanese reached the knockout stage of the World Cup for the fourth time, and then lost for the fourth time. This one came in a penalty shootout against 2018 runner-up Croatia.

“Penalties. Nothing you can do,” Japan midfielder Wataru Endo said. “You can’t blame anyone. That we let it get to a shootout was the reason for the defeat. The preparation for the next one (World Cup) starts today.”

Japan scored first on Monday at Al Janoub Stadium, but Croatia got one back in the second half and sent the match to extra time. Neither was able to score in the additional 30 minutes of play.

Japan first reached the round of 16 at the World Cup as co-host in 2002. The team made it that far again in 2010 and also in 2018.

But this year was different. Drawn into a difficult group with two of the three most recent World Cup champions, Japan beat both Spain and Germany by identical 2-1 scores in Qatar to finish first in the opening round.

Japan coach Hajjme Moriyasu tried to soften the blow of another knockout loss, saying the team had entered a “new era.”

“We cannot be superheroes in one go,” Moriyasu said. “We have to improve step-by-step. But Japan is reaching a level where we can play on the world stage.

“These players can look eye-to-eye with anyone now and take confidence in who we beat.”

Moriyasu addressed his team at the center of the field after the loss. Many players slumped on the ground, others cried, and everyone consoled anyone within reach.

“Although the result was not what we expected, I told them (players) that it doesn’t negate everything they did,” Moriyasu said. “But we could not break through the round of 16 and see a new landscape.”

Croatia goalkeeper Dominik Livakovic stopped three penalty shots in the shootout. All credit to him, Moriyasu said.

“We have to accept this result,” the coach said. “But whether we succumbed to pressure, I don’t think so. I think the goalkeeper was great.”

Moriyasu preached for months that Japan’s goal was to reach the quarterfinals. Nothing less. Japan goalkeeper Shuichi Gonda addressed the failure directly.

“We came up short,” he said. “We did everything we could the last four years.”

Brazil beats South Korea 4-1 at WC

DOHA, Qatar (AP) — It was the same old Neymar out there, looking fit and scoring a goal to move closer to Pelé’s all-time record and lead Brazil into the World Cup quarterfinals.

Neymar returned from injury and converted a first-half penalty in Brazil’s 4-1 win over South Korea in the round of 16 on Monday. He reached 76 goals with the national team, one shy of the mark set by Pelé, who said he would watch the match from his hospital bed in Sao Paulo.

“I was very scared,” Neymar said. “It was very difficult after getting injured like I did. I was crying the entire night. My family knows what I had to go through. But in the end it all worked out. It was worth the effort to keep undergoing physiotherapy.”

The 82-year-old Pelé is recovering from a respiratory infection that was aggravated by COVID-19, leaving fans in Brazil and in Qatar worried about his condition. Neymar carried a banner with the soccer great’s image and “Pelé” written on it after the match, and the entire team then posed behind it near midfield.

“It’s tough to talk about Pelé with what he is going through,” Neymar said. “We wish he can get well soon. We hope we made him feel a bit more comfortable with the banner and with the victory.”

South Korea was trying to advance past the round of 16 for the first time since its historic run to the semifinals as a co-host in 2002.