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Japan v Iraq (1994 FIFA World Cup qualification)

In the final round of matches of the final round of Asian qualification for the 1994 FIFA World Cup, Japan and Iraq drew 2–2 in Doha, Qatar. If Japan had won the match, they would have qualified for the World Cup for the first time. Instead, Japan finished third in their group, allowing their arch-rivals South Korea to qualify instead. The Japanese refer to the match as the "Agony of Doha" (Japanese: ドーハの悲劇, romanizedDōha no higeki),[note 1] whereas South Koreans, because the country's national football team only qualified in the final minutes of this match, refers to it as the "Miracle of Doha" (Korean: 도하의 기적, romanizedDoha-ui gijeok).

Japan v Iraq (1993)
Agony of Doha (ドーハの悲劇)
Miracle of Doha (도하의 기적)
Event1994 FIFA World Cup Asian qualifiers
Matchday 5
Japan and Iraq failed to qualify for the 1994 FIFA World Cup, allowing South Korea to qualify instead.
Date28 October 1993; 30 years ago (1993-10-28)
VenueAl-Ahli Stadium, Doha
RefereeSerge Muhmenthaler (Switzerland)
Attendance4,000

The failure to qualify for the World Cup, and the dramatic way in which it happened, caused great disappointment for Japanese fans. Football had become very popular in Japan with the launch of the professional J.League earlier that year and the team had never been that close to qualifying for the World Cup. Although Japan has since qualified for seven consecutive World Cup finals (even co-hosting one), team members from this match are still known as the "Class of Doha" (ドーハ組, Dōha gumi) and the phrase "Never forget Doha" (ドーハを忘れるな, Dōha o wasureruna) remains a rallying cry for fans.

Before the match edit

Six nations (Japan, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Iran, and North Korea) competed in the final round of Asian qualification for two places at the 1994 World Cup in the United States. The six finalists played each other in Doha, Qatar in a round robin format of matches that were held between 15 and 28 October 1993. After four rounds of matches and with two points for a victory (instead of three) for each team, the standings were as follows:

Team Pts Pld W D L GF GA GD
  Japan 5 4 2 1 1 5 2 3
  Saudi Arabia 5 4 1 3 0 4 3 1
  South Korea 4 4 1 2 1 6 4 2
  Iraq 4 4 1 2 1 7 7 0
  Iran 4 4 2 0 2 5 7 –2
  North Korea 2 4 1 0 3 5 9 –4

(Win = 2 points, draw = 1 point, loss = 0 points; tie broken by goal difference)

In the 4th round of matches, Japan defeated South Korea 1–0 taking first place in the standings going into the final match. Although just one point separated the 1st and 5th spots and only North Korea had been eliminated, Japan would have qualified for the finals with a win regardless of any other results. Japan still would have qualified with a draw as long as either South Korea or Saudi Arabia failed to win its last match and Iran did not defeat Saudi Arabia by more than four goals.

Match edit

Summary edit

The match was held on 28 October 1993, simultaneously with the rest of the fifth round of matches, South Korea vs North Korea and Saudi Arabia vs Iran, held in other venues in Doha.

Japan opened the scoring from a first-half goal by Kazuyoshi Miura, but Iraq's Ahmed Radhi scored the equaliser just prior to half-time. Japan again took the lead with a goal from Masashi Nakayama. The 2–1 score stood as the match approached the 90th minute.

The matches at the other venues had ended earlier, with South Korea beating North Korea 3–0 and Saudi Arabia beating Iran 4–3. This meant Japan would have to hold onto the score in order to qualify for the World Cup, with the combination of results eliminating South Korea.

However, Japan gave the ball up to Iraq, and just after the match entered stoppage time, Jaffar Omran scored a goal through a corner kick, tying the score at 2–2. The referee blew the final whistle and finished the match moments after this, eliminating both teams.

Details edit

Japan  2–2  Iraq
Miura   5'
Nakayama   69'
Radhi   55'
Omran   90+1'
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Japan
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Iraq
GK 1 Shigetatsu Matsunaga   84'
RB 4 Takumi Horiike
CB 7 Masami Ihara
CB 3 Toshinobu Katsuya   10'
LB 5 Tetsuji Hashiratani (c)
CM 17 Hajime Moriyasu
CM 15 Mitsunori Yoshida
RW 16 Masashi Nakayama   81'
AM 10 Ruy Ramos
LW 12 Kenta Hasegawa   59'
CF 11 Kazuyoshi Miura
Substitutes:
FW 8 Masahiro Fukuda   59'
FW 9 Nobuhiro Takeda   81'
Manager:
  Hans Ooft
GK 21 Ibrahim Salim Saad
RB 2 Samir Kadhim
CB 4 Radhi Shenaishil   23'
CB 14 Salim Hussein
LB 3 Saad Abdul-Hameed   80'
MF 12 Mohamed Jassim Mahdi   46'
MF 17 Laith Hussein
MF 18 Munthir Khalaf
MF 22 Bassam Raouf   71'
SS 9 Alaa Kadhim
CF 8 Ahmed Radhi (c)
Substitutes:
FW 16 Jaffar Omran   46'
DF 5 Jabbar Hashim   71'
Manager:
Ammo Baba

Results edit

After the final round of matches, the standings looked as follows:

Team Pts Pld W D L GF GA GD
  Saudi Arabia 7 5 2 3 0 8 6 2
  South Korea 6 5 2 2 1 9 4 5
  Japan 6 5 2 2 1 7 4 3
  Iraq 5 5 1 3 1 9 9 0
  Iran 4 5 2 0 3 8 11 –3
  North Korea 2 5 1 0 4 5 12 –7

Saudi Arabia took first place with their 4–3 victory over Iran. Japan and South Korea were even on points, but South Korea held the goal difference advantage after the three-goal victory over North Korea, winning the tie-breaker.

South Korea would tie in subsequent matches against Iraq (2–2) and Saudi Arabia (1–1) and lost a match against Japan (0–1). Had Japan won this match against Iraq, South Korea would have been eliminated even if they won the match against North Korea held on the same day. But as Japan and Iraq tied in the last minute, South Korea qualified and the match was dubbed a "miracle" by South Korean media.

Dutch coach Hans Ooft was sacked weeks after the match and the elimination effectively ended World Cup aspirations for the majority of the team, most notably Ruy Ramos and Miura, Japan's top scorer in the campaign. Only two Japanese players who appeared in the match, Nakayama and Masami Ihara, would go on to appear in Japan's 1998 FIFA World Cup squad.

However, the Agony of Doha would serve as an inspiration for future World Cup qualification campaigns to this day.

Aftermath edit

After missing the 1994 edition, Japan eventually qualified for the 1998 FIFA World Cup, before hosting the 2002 FIFA World Cup along with their rival South Korea. The South Koreans dramatically beat Portugal, Italy, and Spain and ended in 4th place while Japan was eliminated in the Round of 16. Both teams lost to Turkey. It was the first time for both teams to reach the knockout phase.

They also qualified for every single FIFA World Cup edition since then, reaching the Round of 16 in three editions: in 2010, 2018 and 2022. However, in each of these occasions, Japan got eliminated in dramatic fashion. They first lost to Paraguay in 2010 in a penalty shoot-out, and then lost to Belgium in 2018 by 3-2 after conceding in the fourth minute of stoppage time after a Belgian counter-attack following a Japanese corner kick; the Japanese were leading 2–0 until the 69th minute. In 2022, Japan got knocked out again in the Round of 16, this time taking the lead against Croatia but falling in another penalty shoot-out that ensued after a 1–1 draw.[1][2][3]

For Iraq, this failure is just one part of the much larger World Cup drought. In comparison to increasing success of the Japanese side, Iraq has repeatedly missed the opportunity to qualify for every World Cup. Iraq has only qualified for the 1986 edition. In addition, sectarian conflicts and internal turmoil have prevented Iraq from achieving a greater status in Asian football. Since this game as well, Iraq has not beaten Japan in a competitive match until 2024, when Iraq beat Japan 2-1 at the 2023 AFC Asian Cup.[4] Iraq also suffered a losing streak to Japan since this game, starting with a 1–4 defeat at the 2000 AFC Asian Cup (which was Japan's first win over Iraq), until 2017 when Iraq drew Japan 1–1 to end the country's losing streak.[5]

Japan in neutral site qualifiers edit

Beginning with qualifiers for the 1998 World Cup, AFC has used home-and-away round robin format for its final qualifying round, instead of the single-venue format used in 1993. However, in two of the subsequent World Cup qualifying campaigns, Japan have determined its World Cup fate in neutral site matches.

In 1997, Japan and Iran finished second in their respective qualifying groups for the 1998 World Cup and met in the third-place match on 16 November 1997 in Johor Bahru, Malaysia. The match would decide the third and last automatic qualifying spot for Asian teams and the loser would face Oceania's representative Australia in a two-legged play-off. Unlike the match four years before, Japan fell behind in the second half, but scored a late equaliser and eventually won 3–2 through a golden goal in extra time, earning the nation its ticket to France. This match was known as the "Joy of Johor Bahru" (ジョホール・バルの歓喜, Johōru Baru no kanki) in reference to the Agony of Doha.

On 8 June 2005, Japan defeated North Korea 2–0 to qualify for the 2006 World Cup in Germany. Although this match was scheduled as a home match for North Korea, it was moved to Bangkok, Thailand and held behind closed doors as punishment for crowd violence in a previous match held in Pyongyang.[6]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The word-for-word translation of Dōha no higeki would be "Tragedy of Doha", but the "agony" translation is used more commonly in English-language commentary.

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 June 2018.
  2. ^ "Croatia beat Japan on penalties to reach World Cup quarter-finals". Reuters. 5 December 2022. Retrieved 10 December 2022.
  3. ^ Hafez, Shamoon (5 December 2022). "World Cup 2022: Japan 1-1 Croatia (1-3 on pens): Dominik Livakovic saves three penalties". BBC Sport. Retrieved 10 December 2022.
  4. ^ "Shock Iraq defeat exposes Japan frailties at Asian Cup". 20 January 2024.
  5. ^ "Iraq national football team: Record v Japan".
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 February 2012. Retrieved 30 May 2006.

External links edit

  • Iraqi Football Website
  • History of Iraq National Team
  • on FIFA.com
  • The Rising Sun Soccer News: Japanese National Team History: The Oft Era 16 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine

25°15′06″N 51°32′07″E / 25.25167°N 51.53528°E / 25.25167; 51.53528

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In the final round of matches of the final round of Asian qualification for the 1994 FIFA World Cup Japan and Iraq drew 2 2 in Doha Qatar If Japan had won the match they would have qualified for the World Cup for the first time Instead Japan finished third in their group allowing their arch rivals South Korea to qualify instead The Japanese refer to the match as the Agony of Doha Japanese ドーハの悲劇 romanized Dōha no higeki note 1 whereas South Koreans because the country s national football team only qualified in the final minutes of this match refers to it as the Miracle of Doha Korean 도하의 기적 romanized Doha ui gijeok Japan v Iraq 1993 Agony of Doha ドーハの悲劇 Miracle of Doha 도하의 기적 Event1994 FIFA World Cup Asian qualifiers Matchday 5Japan Iraq2 2Japan and Iraq failed to qualify for the 1994 FIFA World Cup allowing South Korea to qualify instead Date28 October 1993 30 years ago 1993 10 28 VenueAl Ahli Stadium DohaRefereeSerge Muhmenthaler Switzerland Attendance4 000 The failure to qualify for the World Cup and the dramatic way in which it happened caused great disappointment for Japanese fans Football had become very popular in Japan with the launch of the professional J League earlier that year and the team had never been that close to qualifying for the World Cup Although Japan has since qualified for seven consecutive World Cup finals even co hosting one team members from this match are still known as the Class of Doha ドーハ組 Dōha gumi and the phrase Never forget Doha ドーハを忘れるな Dōha o wasureruna remains a rallying cry for fans Contents 1 Before the match 2 Match 2 1 Summary 2 2 Details 3 Results 4 Aftermath 4 1 Japan in neutral site qualifiers 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksBefore the match editSix nations Japan South Korea Saudi Arabia Iraq Iran and North Korea competed in the final round of Asian qualification for two places at the 1994 World Cup in the United States The six finalists played each other in Doha Qatar in a round robin format of matches that were held between 15 and 28 October 1993 After four rounds of matches and with two points for a victory instead of three for each team the standings were as follows Team Pts Pld W D L GF GA GD nbsp Japan 5 4 2 1 1 5 2 3 nbsp Saudi Arabia 5 4 1 3 0 4 3 1 nbsp South Korea 4 4 1 2 1 6 4 2 nbsp Iraq 4 4 1 2 1 7 7 0 nbsp Iran 4 4 2 0 2 5 7 2 nbsp North Korea 2 4 1 0 3 5 9 4 Win 2 points draw 1 point loss 0 points tie broken by goal difference In the 4th round of matches Japan defeated South Korea 1 0 taking first place in the standings going into the final match Although just one point separated the 1st and 5th spots and only North Korea had been eliminated Japan would have qualified for the finals with a win regardless of any other results Japan still would have qualified with a draw as long as either South Korea or Saudi Arabia failed to win its last match and Iran did not defeat Saudi Arabia by more than four goals Match editSummary edit The match was held on 28 October 1993 simultaneously with the rest of the fifth round of matches South Korea vs North Korea and Saudi Arabia vs Iran held in other venues in Doha Japan opened the scoring from a first half goal by Kazuyoshi Miura but Iraq s Ahmed Radhi scored the equaliser just prior to half time Japan again took the lead with a goal from Masashi Nakayama The 2 1 score stood as the match approached the 90th minute The matches at the other venues had ended earlier with South Korea beating North Korea 3 0 and Saudi Arabia beating Iran 4 3 This meant Japan would have to hold onto the score in order to qualify for the World Cup with the combination of results eliminating South Korea However Japan gave the ball up to Iraq and just after the match entered stoppage time Jaffar Omran scored a goal through a corner kick tying the score at 2 2 The referee blew the final whistle and finished the match moments after this eliminating both teams Details edit 28 October 1993 16 15 UTC 03 00Japan nbsp 2 2 nbsp IraqMiura nbsp 5 Nakayama nbsp 69 FIFA Report Radhi nbsp 55 Omran nbsp 90 1 Al Ahli Stadium DohaAttendance 4 000Referee Serge Muhmenthaler Switzerland nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Japan nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Iraq GK 1 Shigetatsu Matsunaga nbsp 84 RB 4 Takumi Horiike CB 7 Masami Ihara CB 3 Toshinobu Katsuya nbsp 10 LB 5 Tetsuji Hashiratani c CM 17 Hajime Moriyasu CM 15 Mitsunori Yoshida RW 16 Masashi Nakayama nbsp 81 AM 10 Ruy Ramos LW 12 Kenta Hasegawa nbsp 59 CF 11 Kazuyoshi Miura Substitutes FW 8 Masahiro Fukuda nbsp 59 FW 9 Nobuhiro Takeda nbsp 81 Manager nbsp Hans Ooft GK 21 Ibrahim Salim Saad RB 2 Samir Kadhim CB 4 Radhi Shenaishil nbsp 23 CB 14 Salim Hussein LB 3 Saad Abdul Hameed nbsp 80 MF 12 Mohamed Jassim Mahdi nbsp 46 MF 17 Laith Hussein MF 18 Munthir Khalaf MF 22 Bassam Raouf nbsp 71 SS 9 Alaa Kadhim CF 8 Ahmed Radhi c Substitutes FW 16 Jaffar Omran nbsp 46 DF 5 Jabbar Hashim nbsp 71 Manager Ammo BabaResults editAfter the final round of matches the standings looked as follows Team Pts Pld W D L GF GA GD nbsp Saudi Arabia 7 5 2 3 0 8 6 2 nbsp South Korea 6 5 2 2 1 9 4 5 nbsp Japan 6 5 2 2 1 7 4 3 nbsp Iraq 5 5 1 3 1 9 9 0 nbsp Iran 4 5 2 0 3 8 11 3 nbsp North Korea 2 5 1 0 4 5 12 7 Saudi Arabia took first place with their 4 3 victory over Iran Japan and South Korea were even on points but South Korea held the goal difference advantage after the three goal victory over North Korea winning the tie breaker South Korea would tie in subsequent matches against Iraq 2 2 and Saudi Arabia 1 1 and lost a match against Japan 0 1 Had Japan won this match against Iraq South Korea would have been eliminated even if they won the match against North Korea held on the same day But as Japan and Iraq tied in the last minute South Korea qualified and the match was dubbed a miracle by South Korean media Dutch coach Hans Ooft was sacked weeks after the match and the elimination effectively ended World Cup aspirations for the majority of the team most notably Ruy Ramos and Miura Japan s top scorer in the campaign Only two Japanese players who appeared in the match Nakayama and Masami Ihara would go on to appear in Japan s 1998 FIFA World Cup squad However the Agony of Doha would serve as an inspiration for future World Cup qualification campaigns to this day Aftermath editAfter missing the 1994 edition Japan eventually qualified for the 1998 FIFA World Cup before hosting the 2002 FIFA World Cup along with their rival South Korea The South Koreans dramatically beat Portugal Italy and Spain and ended in 4th place while Japan was eliminated in the Round of 16 Both teams lost to Turkey It was the first time for both teams to reach the knockout phase They also qualified for every single FIFA World Cup edition since then reaching the Round of 16 in three editions in 2010 2018 and 2022 However in each of these occasions Japan got eliminated in dramatic fashion They first lost to Paraguay in 2010 in a penalty shoot out and then lost to Belgium in 2018 by 3 2 after conceding in the fourth minute of stoppage time after a Belgian counter attack following a Japanese corner kick the Japanese were leading 2 0 until the 69th minute In 2022 Japan got knocked out again in the Round of 16 this time taking the lead against Croatia but falling in another penalty shoot out that ensued after a 1 1 draw 1 2 3 For Iraq this failure is just one part of the much larger World Cup drought In comparison to increasing success of the Japanese side Iraq has repeatedly missed the opportunity to qualify for every World Cup Iraq has only qualified for the 1986 edition In addition sectarian conflicts and internal turmoil have prevented Iraq from achieving a greater status in Asian football Since this game as well Iraq has not beaten Japan in a competitive match until 2024 when Iraq beat Japan 2 1 at the 2023 AFC Asian Cup 4 Iraq also suffered a losing streak to Japan since this game starting with a 1 4 defeat at the 2000 AFC Asian Cup which was Japan s first win over Iraq until 2017 when Iraq drew Japan 1 1 to end the country s losing streak 5 Japan in neutral site qualifiers edit Beginning with qualifiers for the 1998 World Cup AFC has used home and away round robin format for its final qualifying round instead of the single venue format used in 1993 However in two of the subsequent World Cup qualifying campaigns Japan have determined its World Cup fate in neutral site matches In 1997 Japan and Iran finished second in their respective qualifying groups for the 1998 World Cup and met in the third place match on 16 November 1997 in Johor Bahru Malaysia The match would decide the third and last automatic qualifying spot for Asian teams and the loser would face Oceania s representative Australia in a two legged play off Unlike the match four years before Japan fell behind in the second half but scored a late equaliser and eventually won 3 2 through a golden goal in extra time earning the nation its ticket to France This match was known as the Joy of Johor Bahru ジョホール バルの歓喜 Johōru Baru no kanki in reference to the Agony of Doha On 8 June 2005 Japan defeated North Korea 2 0 to qualify for the 2006 World Cup in Germany Although this match was scheduled as a home match for North Korea it was moved to Bangkok Thailand and held behind closed doors as punishment for crowd violence in a previous match held in Pyongyang 6 Notes edit The word for word translation of Dōha no higeki would be Tragedy of Doha but the agony translation is used more commonly in English language commentary References edit FIFA Archived from the original on 28 June 2018 Croatia beat Japan on penalties to reach World Cup quarter finals Reuters 5 December 2022 Retrieved 10 December 2022 Hafez Shamoon 5 December 2022 World Cup 2022 Japan 1 1 Croatia 1 3 on pens Dominik Livakovic saves three penalties BBC Sport Retrieved 10 December 2022 Shock Iraq defeat exposes Japan frailties at Asian Cup 20 January 2024 Iraq national football team Record v Japan Japan qualifies for World Cup Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 Retrieved 30 May 2006 External links editIraqi Football Website History of Iraq National Team Agony amid drama in Doha on FIFA com The Rising Sun Soccer News Japanese National Team History The Oft Era Archived 16 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine 25 15 06 N 51 32 07 E 25 25167 N 51 53528 E 25 25167 51 53528 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japan v Iraq 1994 FIFA World Cup qualification amp oldid 1222495337, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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