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WE League start brings Japan its 1st pro women's soccer competition
2021-09-12 00:00:00.0     每日新闻-最新     原网页

       

       INAC Kobe Leonessa's Maika Hamano (23) celebrates after Megumi Takase (L) scores a goal during the opening match of the WE League against Omiya Ardija Ventus on Sept. 12, 2021, at Noevir Stadium in Kobe. (Kyodo)

       KOBE (Kyodo) -- The WE League, Japan's first professional women's soccer competition, kicked off Sunday, bringing with it hopes the country's once-dominant national team will be reinvigorated and that new life will be injected into the women's game.

       Powerhouse INAC Kobe Leonessa claimed a 5-0 home win over Omiya Ardija in the opening fixture in front of 4,123 people at a COVID-19-restricted Noevir Stadium, forward Megumi Takase and her 17-year-old strike partner Maika Hamano each bagging a memorable brace.

       Starting the inaugural season with 11 clubs, the WE League supersedes the amateur Nadeshiko League as the top flight of Japanese women's soccer and requires each club to have at least 15 players on professional contracts.

       WE stands for "women empowerment" with the league hoping to play a leading role in women's social advancement. Each participating club is asked to include at least one female both on its coaching staff and club board.

       Establishing a day-care facility at each stadium team was another requirement as the league aims to support players with children and also to encourage families with small children to attend games, setting an example for other women's sports to follow.

       The national team, Nadeshiko Japan, won the 2011 World Cup and were runners-up at the 2012 London Olympics as well as the 2015 World Cup, establishing the profile of women's soccer in the domestic sporting scene.

       But Nadeshiko Japan have stagnated since, failing to qualify for the Rio de Janeiro Olympics before losing in the first round of the knockout phase both at the 2019 World Cup as well as this summer's Tokyo Olympics.

       "Hamano is a player who will lead the future Japan team. Getting the end product is huge for us as a team too," INAC manager Kei Hoshikawa said after the forward steered home from close range for INAC's second and headed in the fourth against Omiya.

       Omiya, one of the two newly-founded sides alongside Sanfrecce Hiroshima, is managed by the World Cup-winning manager Norio Sasaki but fell short in the opener.

       Five games will be played during each round of fixtures with the bye team required to take part in activities that help deliver on the vision of the WE League.

       Unlike the men's J-League, the WE League runs in parallel with the European calendar with the season scheduled to end in May.

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标签:综合
关键词: League     women's     Olympics     Nadeshiko     Omiya Ardija Ventus     Leonessa's Maika Hamano     INAC Kobe    
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