Wednesday, July 24, 2013

RUGBY IN JAPAN NEWSLETTER: Vol.10, No.29

Congratulations RIJ Newsletter 10th Anniversary 2003-2013

Japan continue on their winning way with a gritty 16-13 win over Canada in the wet in Nagoya.

Ian McDonnell lives and works in Japan. He can be contacted at ianmcdo@apost.plala.or.jp

CONTENTS

  • IRB Rugby World Cup Sevens

2013-rugby-world-cup-sevens

28-30 June 2013

Moscow, Russia

The 6th IRB Rugby World Cup Sevens 2013:

The IRB Rugby World Cup Sevens 2013 was held at The Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow in Russia from Friday 28 to Sunday 30 June 2013.

Twenty-four nations took part in the men’s RWC which was the sixth world tournament since its inception in 1993. Meanwhile, 16 nations competed in the second women’s RWC.

In the final, New Zealand defeated England 30-0 to take out the sixth IRB Rugby World Cup Sevens 2013 title.

For Japan it was not such a happy ending with losses to South Africa and Scotland and a draw with hosts Russia in their Pool B games. Japan went down 19-17 to Scotland on the opening day and then lost 33-0 to South Africa and drew 12-all with Russia on the middle day of the tournament. Japan finished third in their pool and this put them into the Bowl quarterfinals on the last day of play. Japan beat the Philippines 50-0 to progress to the semi-finals where they beat Georgia 24-21 to make it to the Bowl final to once again face Russia. After playing out a draw in their pool encounter, Russia had too much left in the tank to take the final 29-5.

Rugby World Cup Sevens Champions:

2013: New Zealand.
2009: Wales.
2005: Fiji.
2001: New Zealand.
1997: Fiji.
1993: England.

Men’s Teams:

The twenty-four participating teams were: Fiji, New Zealand, England, South Africa, Australia, France, Scotland, Argentina, Uruguay, Portugal, Wales, Georgia, Samoa, Tonga, Japan, Hong Kong, USA, Canada, Kenya, Russia, the Philippines, Spain, Zimbabwe and Tunisia.

Men’s Pools:
The twenty-four teams were divided into six pools of four teams as follows. 

A

B

C

D

E

F

Australia

South Africa

Kenya

New Zealand

Wales

England

France

Scotland

Samoa

Canada

Fiji

Argentina

Tunisia

Japan

Zimbabwe

USA

Tonga

Portugal

Spain

Russia

Philippines

Georgia

Uruguay

Hong Kong

The Japan Sevens Squad

 

Name

Club

DOB

Age

Hgt/Wgt

1

Lote TUQIRI

Hokkaido Barbarians

12/11/1987

25

188/98

2

Yusaku KUWAZURU

Coca-Cola West Red Sparks

23/10/1985

27

188/97

3

Lepuha LATUILA

Kintetsu Liners

19/01/1985

28

189/109

4

Opeti FAEAMANI

Fukuoka Sanix Blues

08/02/1989

24

182/99

5

Daisuke NATSUI

Toshiba Brave Lupus

27/10/1988

24

188/87

6

Katsuyuki SAKAI (c)

Toyota Industries Shuttles

07/09/1988

24

172/88

7

Shuetsu NARITA

Suntory Sungoliath

29/08/1984

28

169/68

8

Shohei TOYOSHIMA

Toshiba Brave Lupus

09/01/1989

24

173/85

9

Kosuke HASHINO

Canon Eagles

20/11/1987

25

176/83

10

Shota EMI

Gakushuin University

08/12/1991

21

181/94

11

Seiyu KOHARA

Tokai University

28/08/1992

20

183/87

12

Kazushi HANO

Chuo University

21/06/1991

22

183/80

Team Director: Osamu Ota.
Head Coach: Tomohiro Segawa.

Pool B Games for Japan

Day 1: Friday, 28 June 2013

(19:36) – Scotland 19 d Japan 17

Japan: 2- Yusaku Kuwazuru, 5- Daisuke Natsui, 3- Lepuha Latuila, 8- Shohei Toyoshima, 6- Katsuyuki Sakai (c), 1- Lote Tuqiri, 12- Kazushi Hano.
Reserves: 4- Opeti Faeamani, 7- Shuetsu Narita, 9- Kosuke Hashino, 10- Shota Emi, 11- Seiyu Kohara.

 Japan Scorers: Tries: Lote Tuqiri, Shota Emi and Kosuke Hashino; Conversion: Katsuyuki Sakai.

In their opening match against Scotland, Japan recovered from a 12-0 deficit at halftime that then became 19-0 inside the first minute of the latter half with tries to Lote Tuqiri, Shota Emi and Kosuke Hashino. However, captain Katsuyuki Sakai was only able to convert one of the three tries leaving the Scots to sneak home by two points on the back of the two conversions from Colin Gregor. To perfectly sum up the result, Sakai said post-match, “That’s Sevens!”

Day 2: Saturday, 29 June 2013

(12:40) – South Africa 33 d Japan 0

Japan: 2- Yusaku Kuwazuru, 10- Shota Emi, 3- Lepuha Latuila, 8- Shohei Toyoshima, 6- Katsuyuki Sakai (c), 1- Lote Tuqiri, 11- Seiyu Kohara.
Reserves: 4- Opeti Faeamani, 5- Daisuke Natsui, 7- Shuetsu Narita, 9- Kosuke Hashino, 12- Kazushi Hano.

Japan Scorers: None.

In their first match on the middle day of the tournament, Japan had to face the might of South Africa in their second Pool B game. The South Africans were in total control of proceedings from beginning to end running in five tries with Branco du Preez and Cheslin Kolbe slotting four conversion between them. Japan were unable to make any impact on the scoreboard as they suffered their second pool loss in a row.

(19:38) – Russia 12 drew with Japan 12

Japan: 2- Yusaku Kuwazuru, 5- Daisuke Natsui, 3- Lepuha Latuila, 7- Shuetsu Narita, 6- Katsuyuki Sakai (c), 1- Lote Tuqiri, 11- Seiyu Kohara.
Reserves: 4- Opeti Faeamani, 8- Shohei Toyoshima, 9- Kosuke Hashino, 10- Shota Emi, 12- Kazushi Hano.

Japan Scorers: Tries: Katsuyuki Sakai and Seiyu Kohara; Conversion: Katsuyuki Sakai.

In their third and final pool match, Japan took on tournament hosts Russia. Things were looking good as the Japanese built on a 5-0 halftime lead with Seiyu Kohara crossing the Russian whitewash with the Sakai conversion pushing out the score to 12-0. The hosts fought back though and when Alexsandr Ianiushkin failed to convert his own try late in the game it left things tied up at 12-all.

2013-japan-7s-1
Lote
Tuqiri touches down in Russia.

Bowl Knock-out Games for Japan

Day 3: Sunday, 30 June 2013

Bowl Quarterfinal (10:36) – Japan 50 d Philippines 0

Japan: 2- Yusaku Kuwazuru, 10- Shota Emi, 4- Opeti Faeamani, 9- Kosuke Hashino, 6- Katsuyuki Sakai (c), 1- Lote Tuqiri, 12- Kazushi Hano.
Reserves: 3- Lepuha Latuila, 5- Daisuke Natsui, 7- Shuetsu Narita, 8- Shohei Toyoshima, 11- Seiyu Kohara.

Japan Scorers: Tries: Lote Tuqiri 2, Kosuke Hashino, Shota Emi, Katsuyuki Sakai, Shuetsu Narita 2 and Seiyu Kohara; Conversions: Katsuyuki Sakai 3, Kosuke Hashino 2.

Japan finished third in Pool B and this put them into the Bowl tournament at the knock-out stages of RWC 2013. Their first-up opponent in the quarterfinal was the Philippines with Japan taking the spoils to the tune of 50-0. The Japanese scored 26 points in the first half and backed that up with another 24 in the latter half with Lote Tuqiri and Shuetsu Narita both bagging two each of the total of eight tries. After the match, head coach Tomohiro Segawa said, “The boys were tired, but they knew that if they could beat the Philippines we would book a place in the semi-finals against Georgia and this was all the motivation they needed.”

Bowl Semi-final (14:50) – Japan 24 d Georgia 21

Japan: 2- Yusaku Kuwazuru, 10- Shota Emi, 3- Lepuha Latuila, 9- Kosuke Hashino, 6- Katsuyuki Sakai (c), 1- Lote Tuqiri, 12- Kazushi Hano.
Reserves: 4- Opeti Faeamani, 5- Daisuke Natsui, 7- Shuetsu Narita, 8- Shohei Toyoshima, 11- Seiyu Kohara.

Japan Scorers: Tries: Lepuha Latuila, Shuetsu Narita and Seiyu Kohara; Conversions: Katsuyuki Sakai 3; Penalty: Katsuyuki Sakai.

Georgia got off to good start in their Bowl semi-final clash against Japan taking a 12-0 lead into the halftime turn around. However, discipline let the Georgians down in the second half with two sinbinnings enabling Japan to claw their way back into the game. Lepuha Latuila started the fight back with a try early in the half and this was followed by further five-pointers to Shuetsu Narita and Seiyu Kohara. However, the best was left till last and with the scores locked at 21-all captain Katsuyuki Sakai landed a late penalty to put Japan into the Bowl final. After the match, head coach Tomohiro Segawa said, “In the second half we introduced speedsters like Narita and we knew if we could speed up the pace of the game we would win.”

Bowl Final (18:55) – Russia 29 d Japan 5

Japan: 2- Yusaku Kuwazuru, 3- Lepuha Latuila, 4- Opeti Faeamani, 8- Shohei Toyoshima, 6- Katsuyuki Sakai (c), 1- Lote Tuqiri, 12- Kazushi Hano.
Reserves: 5- Daisuke Natsui, 7- Shuetsu Narita, 9- Kosuke Hashino, 10- Shota Emi, 11- Seiyu Kohara.

Japan Scorers: Try: Lepuha Latuila.

Russia and Japan played out a 12-all draw earlier in the tournament in their Pool B encounter, but in the Bowl final it was a different story. The tournament hosts scored two tries to one in the first half to lead 10-5 at the break, but things opened up in the second half with three unanswered tries blowing out the final scoreline to 29-5. Alexsandr Ianiushkin was amongst the scorers with two tries and a conversion helping to close out the game for Russia. In the lead up to the match, head coach Tomohiro Segawa said, “Russia were going to have the full backing of their local home crowd and so we knew we had to put them under pressure and get out to an early lead.” Unfortunately though, the Russians were not to be beaten on their home turf and so Japan had to settle for runner-up status in the Bowl final.

 2013-japan-7s-2
Japan celebrate victory over Georgia in the Bowl semi-final.

 

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

RUGBY IN JAPAN NEWSLETTER: Vol.10, No.28

Congratulations RIJ Newsletter 10th Anniversary 2003-2013

Japan continue on their winning way with a gritty 16-13 win over Canada in the wet in Nagoya.

Ian McDonnell lives and works in Japan. He can be contacted at ianmcdo@apost.plala.or.jp

CONTENTS

  • IRB Pacific Nations Cup 2013-Wrap

2013-pacific-nations-cup

Winners

2013: Fiji. Fiji etched their name on the PNC trophy for the first time in 2013 finishing on top of the table with 16 points from three wins from their four matches. Canada led the way early in the tournament but the loss to Japan in Nagoya in their final game opened the door for either Fiji or Tonga to leapfrog the Canucks into first place for the title. In a winner-take-all clash between the two island sides in Tokyo, Fiji came out on top with a bonus point 34-21 win to scoop the prize. Canada finished second on 13 points from Tonga on 10 points. Japan lost their opening two games to Tonga and Fiji but then finished strongly with home wins over Canada and the USA to finish fourth on 9 points. The USA collected the wooden spoon with one point from four straight losses.

2012: Samoa. Samoa took out the title for the second time in 2012 with three straight wins in the tournament held in Japan. Although Samoa could not manage any bonus points, 12 points from their three wins gave them the title ahead of Fiji on 10 points in second place with just the one loss to Samoa. Tonga finished third on 5 points from one win over Japan while Japan as the hosts finished last on four points with three losses on the trot in front of their home fans. It was not all doom and gloom for Japan as they gained a losing bonus point in all three games and had a few things gone differently for the new look side under new head coach Eddie Jones they could have won all three tests.

2011: Japan. After the New Zealand representative sides had won all four previous titles, Samoa etched their name on the trophy for the first time last year, but in 2011 a new name was engraved on the Cup with Japan taking the title for the first time. Japan left it till deep in injury time in the last game against Fiji to win the crown when they won 24-13 with a bonus point to deny Tonga in the process. Both Japan and Tonga finished on ten points but Japan took the title as they beat Tonga in their round match. Fiji finished third on 5 points while Samoa finished last on the same five points.

2010: Samoa. After the New Zealand representative sides had won all four previous titles, Samoa etched their name on the trophy for the first time. Samoa left it till the last game against Fiji to win the crown when they won 31-9 with a bonus point while denying Fiji any form of bonus point in the process. Both sides finished on nine points but Samoa took the title on a better points differential. Japan finished third on 8 points after picking up two wins for the first time while Tonga finished last on four points with three losses.

2009: The Junior All Blacks. The JAB again took the PNC title undefeated on 19 points. Fiji were runner-up on 14 points followed by Samoa on 12 points, while Japan finished fourth on 6 points with one win and three losses. Tonga took the wooden spoon on one point.

2008: The New Zealand Maori. The Maori took the PNC title undefeated with 21 points when they beat Australia A 21-18 in the final game in Sydney. Australia A finished runner-up on 20 points. Japan finished fifth on 7 points with one win and four losses.

2007: The Junior All Blacks. The JAB took the PNC title undefeated with 25 points garnering maximum points in each game. Australia A finished a distant runner-up on 16 points after they lost to the JAB and drew with Fiji. Japan finished last on 4 points with one win and four losses.

2006: The Junior All Blacks. The JAB took the P5N title undefeated with 20 points with maximum points in each game. Japan finished last on 0 points with four losses.

IRB Pacific Nations Cup 2013 Results

Date

Team

Score

Team

Kick-off

Venue

Referee

Saturday 25 May 2013

Japan

17-27

Tonga

14:10

Nippatsu Mitsuzawa Stadium, Yokohama

Angus Gardner (AUS)

 

Canada

16-9

USA

14:10

Ellerslie Rugby Park, Edmonton

Francisco Pastrana (ARG)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday 01 June 2013

Fiji

22-8

Japan

15:40

Churchill Park, Lautoka

Garratt Williamson (NZL)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday 05 June 2013

Canada

20-18

Fiji

18:40

Twin Elms Rugby Park, Nepean

JP Doyle (ENG)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday 08 June 2013

Canada

36-27

Tonga

14:10

Richardson Stadium, Kingston

JP Doyle (ENG)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Friday 14 June 2013

USA

9-18

Tonga

19:30

Home Depot Centre, Carson, California

Francisco Pastrana (ARG)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday 19 June 2013

Fiji

35-10

USA

17:10

Mizuho Park Rugby Ground, Nagoya

Greg Garner (ENG)

 

Japan

16-13

Canada

19:10

Mizuho Park Rugby Ground, Nagoya

Jonathon White (NZL)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sunday 23 June 2013

Tonga

21-34

Fiji

12:10

Chichibu, Tokyo

Jonathon White (NZL)

 

Japan

38-20

USA

14:10

Chichibu, Tokyo

Greg Garner (ENG)

IRB Pacific Nations Cup 2013 Table

Pos.

Team

P

W

D

L

F

A

+/-

BP1

BP2

Pts

1

Fiji

4

3

0

1

109

59

50

3

1

16

2

Canada

4

3

0

1

85

70

15

0

1

13

3

Tonga

4

2

0

2

93

96

-3

1

1

10

4

Japan

4

2

0

2

79

82

-3

1

0

9

5

USA

4

0

0

4

48

110

-62

0

1

1

Four points for win, two points for draw, one bonus point for scoring four tries or more (BP1) and one for losing by seven points or less (BP2).

Games Played By Japan

Game 1

Tonga 27 d Japan 17

Competition: IRB Pacific Nations Cup 2013.
Date: Saturday 25 May 2013.
Venue: Nippatsu Mitsuzawa Stadium, Yokohama.
Japan Test Number: 287.
Japan Game Number: TBC.

Kick-off: 14:10 local time (05:10 GMT/UTC).

Referee: Angus Gardner (Australia) (3rd test). Assistant Referees: Taizo Hirabayashi (Japan) and James Leckie (Australia).

Conditions: Fine and sunny with forecast maximum for Yokohama 20 degrees Celsius. Surface firm, fast and well grassed.
Attendance: 5,598.
Halftime: Japan 5 – Tonga 22.
Yellow Card: Paula Kaho (Tonga No.8, 30 min 1H, repeated team infringements in collapsing a five metre lineout maul).
Match Points: Tonga 5, Japan 0.

Man of the Match: Nili Latu, Tonga No.7.

Tonga 27 – Tries: Fetu’u Vainikolo 2, Will Helu and Eddie Aholelei; Conversions: Fangatapu Apikotoa 2; Penalty: Fangatapu Apikotoa d.

Japan 17 – Tries: Takeshi Kizu, Male Sau and Hendrik Tui; Conversion: Ayumu Goromaru.

Although Tonga only had a few days together as a squad to prepare for this test, captain Nili Latu who plays his rugby with the NEC club in Japan led from the front to inspire his charges to a bonus point 27-17 win over Japan in the opening game of the IRB Pacific Nations Cup 2013 at the Nippatsu Mitsuzawa Stadium in Yokohama on Saturday 25 May 2013. The Tongans hustled and bustled a somewhat out of sorts Japan side that just did not cope with the extra physicality the islanders brought to the game. On the ground after the match, Japan stand-in captain Takashi Kikutani said, “We were slow in the first half and gave away some easy tries, but now we have to look ahead to Fiji.” Tongan captain Nili Latu said, “We only had two days to prepare for Japan but a great win and a great start. Our aim is to win this tournament.”

Game 2

Fiji 22 d Japan 8

Competition: IRB Pacific Nations Cup 2013.
Date: Saturday 01 June 2013.
Venue: Churchill Park, Lautoka.
Japan Test Number: 288.
Japan Game Number: TBC.
Kick-off: 15:40 local time (03:40 GMT/UTC).
Referee: Garratt Williamson (New Zealand) (2nd Test). Assistant Referees: Sam Tuidraki (Fiji) and Mikea Rokodrakia (Fiji).

Conditions: Maximum forecast for Lautoka 30 degrees Celsius, thunderstorms. Surface very heavy and water-logged.
Attendance: 3,500.
Halftime: Fiji 5 – Japan 0.
Match Points: Fiji 5, Japan 0.

Fiji 22 – Tries: Sireli Bobo, Api Naikatini, Aisea Natoga and Nemani Nadolo; Conversion: Setareki Koroilagilagi d.

Japan 8 – Try: Kenki Fukuoka; Penalty: Ayumu Goromaru.

In wet and atrocious conditions at Churchill Park in Lautoka Fiji hosted Japan in their IRB Pacific Nations Cup 2013 encounter on Saturday 01 June 2013. After the match, Japan head coach Eddie Jones made the following comments, “The result is an you saw it. We were never in a position to win. We were well beaten at lineout, scrum and breakdown and there are no positives to take from this game. We have Wales next week and if we play like this we will lose by 80 points. We cannot use the atrocious weather conditions as an excuse either as that is test match rugby. The players did their best and I take full responsibility as coach.” On becoming the most-capped player for Japan, wing Hirotoki Onozawa said. “The record doesn’t mean anything as the result is everything. When we had to up the ante in this test we were unable to do so. We wanted to take control of the game and speed things up but we couldn’t. we didn’t do what we had to do.”

 2013-Hirotoki-Onozawa
Wing Hirotoki Onozawa becomes the most-capped Japan player in his eightieth test. (Photo Kenji Demura)

Game 3

Japan 16 d Canada 13
Competition: IRB Pacific Nations Cup 2013.
Date: Wednesday 19 June 2013.
Venue: Mizuho Park Rugby Ground, Nagoya.
Japan Test Number: 291.
Japan Game Number: TBC.

Kick-off: 19:10 local time (10:10 GMT/UTC).
Referee: Jonathon White (New Zealand) (1st test). Assistant Referees: Richard Kelly (New Zealand) and Taku Otsuki (Japan).
Conditions: Daily forecast for Nagoya 24-28 degrees Celsius, steady rain and high humidity, no breeze. Surface well grassed but wet and slippery.

Attendance: 4,456.

Halftime: Canada 3 – Japan 0.

Japan 16 – Tries: Ayumu Goromaru; Conversions: Ayumu Goromaru; Penalties: Ayumu Goromaru 3 d.

Canada 13 – Try: Ciaran Hearn; Conversion: James Pritchard; Penalty: James Pritchard 2.

In a gritty, hard-fought encounter in the rain in the second game at Nagoya, it took a late penalty from fullback Ayumu Goromaru to get Japan across the line 16-13 to put a spanner in the works for Canada. A win for the Canucks would have virtually sealed the deal in taking the IRB Pacific Nations Cup 2013 title but as it now stands they will have to sit back and see what pans out in the game between Tonga and Fiji on Sunday. It may well be a fruitless wait, however, as Canada sit on 13 points ahead of Fiji on 11 and Tonga on 10 so in all likelihood the title will head to the South Pacific again this year. There was never more than a few points separating Japan and Canada and with both teams scoring one try apiece the result came down to goal kicking. In fact, Goromaru scored all the points for Japan through a try, a conversion and three penalties.

Game 4

Japan 38 d USA 20

Competition: IRB Pacific Nations Cup 2013.
Date: Sunday 23 June 2013.
Venue: Prince Chichibu Memorial Rugby Ground, Tokyo.
Japan Test Number: 292.
Japan Game Number: TBC.

Kick-off: 14:10 local time (05:10 GMT/UTC).
Referee: Greg Garner (England) (9th test). Assistant Referees: Richard Kelly (New Zealand) and Taku Otsuki (Japan).
Conditions: Daily forecast for Tokyo 21 to 28 degrees Celsius, light cloud, slight breeze. Surface well grassed, firm and fast.

Attendance: 9,467.
Halftime: Japan 19 – USA 15.
Yellow Card: Eric Fry (USA No.3, 9 min 2H, repeated scrum collapses).

Japan 38 – Tries: Yoshikazu Fujita, Male Sau, Hendrik Tui, Toshiaki Hirose, penalty try and Fumiaki Tanaka; Conversions: Ayumu Goromaru 4 d.

USA 20 – Tries: Chris Wyles, Eric Fry and Luke Hume; Conversion: Chris Wyles; Penalty: Chris Wyles.

Japan scored three tries in either half to outscore the USA six tries to three in their 38-20 win in the second game in Tokyo on Sunday 23 June to bring the curtain down on the IRB Pacific Nations Cup 2013 tournament. The Eagles came out firing in the first forty minutes to trail 19-14 at the break but the Japan scrum dominated their rivals in the second half drawing a penalty try early in the half and from there the Japanese never looked back against a weary looking American outfit. The hosts collected their second win of the tournament but it meant the fourth straight loss for the Americans who finished bottom of the PNC table in 2013.

Name (Test Player Number)
Club Age Caps   TON FIJ WAL1 WAL2 CAN USA Caps
Masataka MIKAMI (TBC) Toshiba Brave Lupus 24 3   1 1 1 1 17 1 9
Takuma ASAHARA (TBC) Toshiba Brave Lupus 25 4   -17 17 - - - - 5
Yusuke NAGAE (551) Ricoh Black Rams 27 9   - - 17 17 1 17 13
Hiroki YUHARA (537) Toshiba Brave Lupus 29 11   - - - - - - 11
Takeshi KIZU (534) Kobe Steel Kobelco Steelers 24 16   2 16 16 16 16 16 22
Yusuke AOKI (490) Suntory Sungoliath 29 26   16 2 - - - - 28
Shota HORIE (530) Panasonic Wild Knights 27 19   - - 2 2 2 2 23
Hiroshi YAMASHITA (523) Kobe Steel Kobelco Steelers 27 19   3 18 3 3 18 3 25
Kensuke HATAKEYAMA (515) Suntory Sungoliath 27 40   18 3 18 18 3 18 46
Hitoshi ONO (445) Toshiba Brave Lupus 35 67   4 4 4 4 19 4 73
Shinya MAKABE (533) Suntory Sungoliath 26 13   5 - - 19 5 19 17
Shoji ITO (553) Kobe Steel Kobelco Steelers 31 11   19 20 5 5 20 5 17
Justin IVES (544) Canon Eagles 29 11   - - - 20 4 20 14
Toshizumi KITAGAWA (473) Toyota Verblitz 32 41   - 19 19 - - - 43
Hendrik TUI (565) Suntory Sungoliath 25 8   6 7 6 6 6 6 14
Michael LEITCH (518) Toshiba Brave Lupus 24 28   - 6 - - - - 29
Michael BROADHURST (566) Ricoh Black Rams 26 6   7 5 7 7 7 7 12
Takashi KIKUTANI (474) (v-c) Toyota Verblitz 33 57   8 (c) 8 (c) 8 (c) 8 8 8 63
Ryuta YASUI (TBC) Kobe Steel Kobelco Steelers 23 1   -20 - 20 - - - 2
Ryu Koliniasi HOLANI (512) Panasonic Wild Knights 31 25   - - - - - - 25
                       
Atsushi HIWASA (545) Suntory Sungoliath 26 21   9 9 21 21 21 21 27
Keisuke UCHIDA (558) Tsukuba University 21 3   -21 21 - - - - 4
Fumiaki TANAKA (510) Panasonic Wild Knights 28 33   - - 9 9 9 9 37
Kosei ONO (492) Suntory Sungoliath 26 17   10 - - - - - 18
Yu TAMURA (555) NEC Green Rockets 24 7   22 10 22 22 12 22 13
Ryoto NAKAMURA (TBC) Teikyo University 21 1   - - - - - - 1
Harumichi TATEKAWA (557) Kubota Spears 23 13   12 12 10 10 10 10 19
Craig WING (TBC) Kobe Steel Kobelco Steelers 33 1   - 22 12 12 - 12 5
Male SAU (TBC) Yamaha Jubilo 25 3   13 13 13 13 13 13 9
Seiichi SHIMOMURA (454) Panasonic Wild Knights 31 4   - - - - -22 - 4
Yuta IMAMURA (480) Kobe Steel Kobelco Steelers 28 36   - 14 - - - 23 38
Kenki FUKUOKA (TBC) Tsukuba University 20 2   23 23 11 11 11 - 7
Hirotoki ONOZAWA (416) Suntory Sungoliath 35 78   11 11 23 - - - 81
Yoshikazu FUJITA (562) Waseda University 19 4   14 - 14 23 23 11 9
Toshiaki HIROSE (c) (495) Toshiba Brave Lupus 31 12   - - - 14 (c) 14 (c) 14 (c) 15
Ayumu GOROMARU (467) (v-c) Yamaha Jubilo 27 23   15 15 15 15 15 15 29

Staff
Eddie Jones, head coach, JRFU.
Scott Wisemantel, technical adviser, JRFU.
John Pryor, strength and conditioning coordinator, JRFU.
Takahiro Murakami, strength and conditioning coach, Vital Strength Co., Ltd.
Yuji Takazawa, team doctor, Juntendo University.
Hidenori Izawa, physiotherapist, Dome Co., Ltd.
Junnosuke Aono, physiotherapist, JRFU.
Shota Nakajima, analyst, JRFU.
Takenori Omura, team manager, JRFU.
Julia Nakazawa, translator, Field of Dreams.
Mayuko Watanabe, media manager, JRFU.

Japan Point Scorers in the IRB Pacific Nations Cup 2013

Below is a list of the point scorers for Japan in the four tests played during the IRB PNC 2013.

Fullback Ayumu Goromaru with 29 points from one try, 6 conversions and 4 penalties was the leading point scorer for Japan in the PNC 2013.

Centre Male Sau and backrower Hendrik Tui were the leading try scorers for Japan with two 5-pointers each.

A total of 11 tries were scored across the four tests, including one penalty try, 6 of which were converted by the goal kicker Goromaru.

Name

T

C

P

Total

Ayumu Goromaru

1

6

4

29

Male Sau

2

0

0

10

Hendrik Tui

2

0

0

10

Kenki Fukuoka

1

0

0

5

Yoshikazu Fujita

1

0

0

5

Toshiaki Hirose

1

0

0

5

Takeshi Kizu

1

0

0

5

Fumiaki Tanaka

1

0

0

5

Penalty try

1

0

0

5

TOTALS

11

6

4

79

Cards
In the four tests of the IRB PNC 2013, Japan did not receive any cards.

Milestones

At the completion of the IRB PNC 2013, Hirotoki Onozawa finished the series with 81 caps to become the most-capped player for Japan surpassing former centre Yukio Motoki (79). Furthermore, lock Hitoshi Ono has earned 73 caps, with only Onozawa and Motoki ahead of him on the all time list of appearances for Japan.

Tighthead prop Kensuke Hatakeyama finished the series with 46 caps, becoming the most-capped prop overtaking Shin Hasegawa (40).

Backrower Takashi Kikutani finished the series with 63 caps, becoming the most-capped backrower (flanker and No8) for Japan overtaking Takeomi Ito (62).

Halfback Fumiaki Tanaka finished the series with 37 caps, the second most-capped halfback for Japan behind Wataru Murata (41).

The 29 points fullback Ayumu Goromaru scored in the series took his total to 295 international points, fourth on the leading points scorers list for Japan behind Daisuke Ohata (345), Toru Kurihara (347) and Keiji Hirose (413).