BSP-03 Montenegro a stepping stone for Japanese football dreamers

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Montenegro a stepping stone for Japanese football dreamers

PODGORICA, Montenegro, Dec 23, 2017 (BSS/AFP) – Montenegro is an unlikely
magnet for Japanese footballers hoping to catch the eye of the major European
leagues.

Some 40 Japanese are playing in 22 professional clubs in the Balkan
country with a population of just over 600,000 amd around 140 have so far
played in the former Yugoslav republic.

The club badge of the newly formed FK Adrija features the mouth of the
picturesque Kotor bay at the bottom and Sukarajima volcano at the top —
almost Japanese in design.

“I’ve always dreamed of playing in Europe,” said Kino Seiya, a 21-year-old
student from Tokyo, who has joined FK Adrija.

“Looking at the information that I gathered about the best place for
acclimatizing to European football, Montenegro appeared a good first step
towards a professional career,” he said.

While economic and cultural exchanges between the two countries are fairly
rare, links through football are booming.

The greatest player in Montenegro’s history, Dejan Savicevic, who heads
the country’s football federation, won the then-European Cup with Red Star
Belgrade in 1991 and then again with AC Milan three years later.

The tradition of Yugoslav coaches working abroad led many of them to
Japan, such as the well-travelled Vahid Halilhodzic who has guided Japan to
qualification for the 2018 World Cup.

Others are Ivica Osim — who in 2006 and 2007 coached Japan — and Dragan
‘Piksi’ Stojkovic, a former player and then coach of Nagoya Grampus Eight.

However, it is a lesser-known figure who since 2013 has been responsible
for the Japanese enthusiasm for the mountainous nation bordering the
Adriatic, whose clubs are struggling with decrepit infrastructure — a far
cry from Japan.

After playing in the lower divisions in Japan and training young players,
Pedja Stevovic brought the Japanese to his homeland.

This year he founded FK Adrija in the capital Podgorica and the club
aspires to compete in Montenegro’s higher divisions.

“Montenegrins are characterised by individual qualities, while discipline
and responsibility are the strengths of the Japanese,” said 46-year-old
Stevovic.

“Their interaction could make us progress enormously, both collectively
and individually.”

– A springboard ? –

“Japan ‘produces’ between 7,000 and 10,000 players a year. They can’t all
find a place in the competitions,” he said.

“The Japanese first division has only 1,500 players. Those who do not make
it either give up football or try their luck abroad.”

In Montenegro, these players, who often come from the university system,
will earn between 8,000 and 17,000 euros ($9,400 and $20,000) annually.

Stevovic is the club’s president and there several Japanese on its
management board as well as three players on the pitch and one Japanese
assistant coach.

Hayashi Yuske, a 25-year-old nutritionist by trade who has been playing
for the last two years in Montenegro, said he wanted to learn “a form of
sports egoism” — in Japan, he explained, “everything is subordinated to the
collective”.

“What is striking here is this hunger for individual success even at the
expense of the collective,” he said. “In Japan it’s unimaginable.”

Yuske dreams of attracting the attention of an Australian club.

The learning process goes both ways.

“The Japanese never give up. Discipline, responsibility and commitment is
what I want to learn from them,” his 19-year-old Montenegrin teammate Radoje
Vlalovic said.

But is Montenegro really a springboard?

“They come here to toughen up,” Stevovic said, and for some it is working.

After spending the 2013 season with Mladost Podgorica, Taku Ishihara made
his way to the German second division.

After two seasons with Rudar Pljeljva, Kohei Kato now plays for Bulgaria’s
Stara Zagora, after a stay in Poland.

According to Stevovic, there is a “natural route” to countries “of the
former Yugoslavia, then to Western Europe”.

Another effect is that “their price increases in Asia and they return
there.”

BSS/AFP/MRI/0850 hrs