Dernière minute
VNHải Phòng tích hợp trợ lý ảo, AI vào xử lý văn bản, rút ngắn thủ tục hành chínhINMeta Rejects Claims of Deliberately Targeting Child Abuse Ads in IndiaFRFinances publiques : « Tous les signaux sont au rouge »ARمهرجان سان فيرمين في بامبلونا يتحول إلى منصة للتضامن مع فلسطينFRLes ventes de maillots de l'équipe de France explosent après la victoire contre le ParaguayFRAttaque à la bombe à Monaco : un agent de renseignement ukrainien arrêté pour le meurtre de la principale suspectePLNoah Krieger, znany jako Murad Dadajew, w rosyjskim mundurze na UkrainieESFeijóo califica el aumento de las bajas laborales como un "cáncer" y propone reformar la normativaKRIOC, 3년 만에 러시아올림픽위원회 자격정지 잠정 해제FRProcès de Rima Hassan pour apologie du terrorisme renvoyé en octobreVNHải Phòng tích hợp trợ lý ảo, AI vào xử lý văn bản, rút ngắn thủ tục hành chínhINMeta Rejects Claims of Deliberately Targeting Child Abuse Ads in IndiaFRFinances publiques : « Tous les signaux sont au rouge »ARمهرجان سان فيرمين في بامبلونا يتحول إلى منصة للتضامن مع فلسطينFRLes ventes de maillots de l'équipe de France explosent après la victoire contre le ParaguayFRAttaque à la bombe à Monaco : un agent de renseignement ukrainien arrêté pour le meurtre de la principale suspectePLNoah Krieger, znany jako Murad Dadajew, w rosyjskim mundurze na UkrainieESFeijóo califica el aumento de las bajas laborales como un "cáncer" y propone reformar la normativaKRIOC, 3년 만에 러시아올림픽위원회 자격정지 잠정 해제FRProcès de Rima Hassan pour apologie du terrorisme renvoyé en octobre
Newsgather
BackNetherlands and Japan Draw 2-2 in Thrilling World Cup Opener
Netherlands and Japan Draw 2-2 in Thrilling World Cup Opener
En développement
Guardian Sport14.06.2026Sport4 dk okuma

Netherlands and Japan Draw 2-2 in Thrilling World Cup Opener

L'essentiel

  • The Netherlands and Japan played a thrilling 2-2 draw in their opening Group F World Cup match in Arlington, Texas.
  • Daichi Kamada scored an 88th-minute equalizer for Japan after the Netherlands had taken a 2-1 lead in the second half.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

The Netherlands and Japan played their opening Group F game of the World Cup in Arlington, Texas, a match that ended in a 2-2 draw.

Taille de police

The World Cup continued to produce the unexpected in Arlington. On a throbbingly hot afternoon in the low flat plains outside Dallas the Netherlands and Japan played out an episodically thrilling opening Group F game, Daichi Kamada scoring an 88th-minute equaliser to make it 2-2 just as the Dutch looked like taking an early hold on one of the tougher groups.

Sport does like to spring surprises. As the entire bib-clad Japanese bench emptied on to the pitch to celebrate Kamada’s deflected goal from a corner, it was tempting to wonder if perhaps the unthinkable is happening here.

There has been so much talk of tired players, format failure and empty seats (the stadium was full here), talk so feverishly committed you wondered at times if it was necessary to play the games at all. But it does feel as though something else has been taking place in the opening games. Maybe – whisper it – the World Cup is actually good.

This was a lovely spectacle from the start. The Dallas stadium is a vast concrete spaceship dumped down off the freeway intersection beyond the city limits. Inside it feels like entering an outsized Victorian railway station, the vast glass roof sealed with panelled inserts at both ends, giving it the feel of a vast and humid agricultural shed, the kind of place a giant would grow his tomatoes.

The base colours here were beautiful, warm royal blue versus deep zingy classic orange. Whatever the state of the team the Netherlands always provide the same irresistible mnemonic, the sounds and colours that send you spiralling back down the tournament time tunnel. Ronald Koeman had hinted that Memphis Depay might be fit. In the event Donyell Malen started in the centre of attack.

Japan have been a very good World Cup team in recent times. Their coach Hajime Moriyasu isn’t mucking about either. Their goal is to win the whole thing this time. Here they set up with attacking midfielders in the wing-back spots and the back three Moriyasu has tended to use, a note of evolution since Qatar.

Netherlands took the ball away early on. They really should have scored on three minutes after a fine zipping run from Malen, a grappling turn, and a powerful shot that was palmed away by Zion Suzuki. After that the game became a series of wary thrusts in between a steady holding pattern of carefully metered Dutch possession.

Japan had some neat, high pressing flurries. Frenkie de Jong was measured and stately on the ball, a footballer who always seems to be playing inside his own perfectly still pocket of space.

The hydration break brought a kind of deathly drift off to the fringes from both sides, enlivened by the sudden appearance of the Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders on the world’s largest HD screen above the pitch, literally a 150 foot woman dancing with a pompon, the kind of spectacle the human brain struggles to process.

Group F is a tricky looking thing by the standards of this World Cup, with Tunisia and Sweden to come. Hence perhaps the caution of both teams here early on. There was little in the way of overloads or midfielders committing to forward runs.

With 34 minutes gone Malan had another good chance, a close in header direct from a corner that Suzuki batted away low down. At that stage the Dutch were on 67 per cent possession, twice as many passes, and controlling the tempo and geometry of the game. Just not in a way that threatened much incision.

Japan had their best chance just before half-time, a nice little combination down the right flank leading to a cross and shot just wide from Keito Nakamura. Moments later a beautifully weighted pass straight down the centre between the Dutch centre-backs put Ayase Ueda in for a shot into the side-netting that had the blue shirted parts of the stadium gasping and cooing with goal parallax error.

But it was Holland who took the lead five minutes into the second half, Virgil van Dijk steering in a header that trickled in off the far post. Tsuyoshi Watanabe protested that he had been pushed out of the way by Van Dijk, but it looked very soft. Van Dijk pirouetted in front of the Dutch fans, pointing to the name on the back of his shirt.

And at that stage Japan looked utterly flat, unable to sustain possession, trapped in their own half. But there was an immediate injection of urgency on the left flank, and it was from there that they equalised seven minutes later, a really nice little fizzed combination of passes ending with Nakamura finding just enough space to whip a right-foot shot into the corner via a fine deflection off Jan Paul van Hecke.

Suddenly the game had begun to throb with life, avenues of space opening up at both ends. Crysencio Summervillemade it 2-1 on 64 minutes, taking the ball from Ryan Gravenberch, gliding inside and curling a lovely left-footed shot into the far corner. Japan responded as they had to the first goal, by forming a discussion circle in their own half even as the Dutch players were still celebrating, then surging forward again.

The end was high drama. Group F looks wide open now, designed for some kind of as-things-stand late drama. Dallas has now passed its first test as a soccer stadium. For those who prefer their World Cup a little more sullen and sedate: England are here next.

Questions ouvertes

  • Will the Netherlands or Japan advance from Group F?
  • How will this result impact the other teams in Group F?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by Guardian Sport.

Articles liés

Donald Trump's 'Reverse Midas Touch' Blamed for US World Cup Loss and Other Failures
En développement·16 dk önce

Donald Trump's 'Reverse Midas Touch' Blamed for US World Cup Loss and Other Failures

The US World Cup team's 4-1 loss to Belgium is attributed to Donald Trump's 'reverse Midas touch,' a pattern of turning manageable situations into catastrophes. His intervention in a player's red card led to international backlash, transforming the US from underdogs to villains. The article cites numerous other examples of this alleged destructive pattern in business, politics, and sports.

The Independent World
IOC Lifts Suspension on Russia, Paving Way for LA Olympics
En développement·1 sa önce

IOC Lifts Suspension on Russia, Paving Way for LA Olympics

The International Olympic Committee has lifted its suspension on Russia, allowing Russian athletes to potentially compete at the Los Angeles Olympics. The ban, imposed after the invasion of Ukraine, was lifted after the Russian Olympic Committee removed Ukrainian territories from its jurisdiction. However, decisions on Russian flags and anthems, and hosting events in Russia, remain with international federations.

Guardian Sport
Plus sur ce sujetWorld Cup