NUREMBERG - Japan coach Zico has added two
attack-minded players to his line-up in a bid to get the goals he needs to keep
the Asian champions's World Cup hopes alive in their second game against Croatia
here on Sunday.
Mitsuo Ogasawara adds a shooting and passing flair to midfield and Zico's
first-choice right winger Akira Kaji, who missed Japan's 3-1 defeat by Australia
in their opener, is back from injury to sharpen up the wing play.
"I have always worked on my long-range shooting and I must try that out in
this game," said Ogasawara, who sat on the bench in the Australia game, as he
prepared to start in a World Cup match for the first time.
"It is frustrating to watch a match from the sidelines. I'm glad that I can
play," said the J-League Kashima Antlers captain, 27, who played six minutes in
his 2002 debut on the World Cup finals on home turf.
"I think I need play as I usually do," he added.
Against the more physical Croatia, who lost their opener 1-0 to five-time
champions Brazil, Zico plans to employ a four-man last line which can free up
two side backs to join four midfielders in pressing forward.
In the Australia game, his cautious three-back defence, joined by two
wingers, had kept the Asian champions deep in the field inviting the three-goal
onslaught that submerged them in the last nine minutes of the match.
Ogasawara had no place in the 3-5-2 system which featured three midfielders
-- including Celtic playmaker Shunsuke Nakamura and Bolton's Hidetoshi Nakata --
and two flankers who are usually positioned as full backs in 4-4-2.
"It's going to be my personal World Cup opener," said Kaji, a J-League
defender with Gamba Osaka, who injured his right ankle in the 2-2 warm-up draw
against hosts Germany on May 30.
"My ankle feels fine now," he said. "My plan is to run hard down the wings
and help open up spaces in the centre, allowing our midfielders to shoot at
goal."
Kaji, who steers Japan's wing attacks with Brazilian-born left-winger
Alessandro "Alex" Santos, scored his only goal in 42 international matches when
Japan beat Iran 2-1 at home in their final Asian qualifier last August.
"Kaji is raring to go and Ogasawara looks ready to have a pot at goal. I
believe everybody else will be keen to hit the target," Japan Football
Association president Saburo Kawabuchi said.
Japan and Croatia, both playing in their third World Cup finals since their
debut in 1998, need to win on Sunday to keep themselves in contention for a spot
in the second round -- their basic goal at Germany 2006.
Croatia finished third in France 1998 and coach Zlato Kranjcar said they
would "demonstrate attacking football," a promise taken by Zico as a bluff by
the often defensive Balkan side.
"If we play at the same level as we did against Brazil, we can beat Japan
with no problem," Kranjcar told the Japanese network NHK. "My players shall
definitely score goals this time."