Japanese Rules - Japan and the Beautiful Game (Paperback, New Ed)


Who needs football? A little over 10 years ago the Japanese decided they did. After treating it as an irrelevant sport for over 100 years they launched a national project aimed at enrolling themselves as one of the world's footballing powers. Money was no problem. When the professional J. League was set up in 1993, it was hyped and financed by some of the country's richest organisations and attracted high-profile members of the world's footballing aristocracy such as Zico, Gary Lineker, Arsene Wenger and Ossie Ardilles. The Japanese players were dedicated to the cause and even the fans studied, scrutinising the crowds in satellite TV broadcasts to learn the best way to support their teams. Football did indeed become more than a genuine game for Japan. It was going to help the country change, to make it more like the rest of the world. It would make the Japanese more internationally-minded, creative, expressive - everything they were not, but felt they needed to be. It was, according to J. league founder Saburo Kawabuchi, 'an attempt at social revolution'. In the year following their successful hosting of a spectacular World Cup, Japanese Rules shows what worked, what didn't and why.

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Product Description

Who needs football? A little over 10 years ago the Japanese decided they did. After treating it as an irrelevant sport for over 100 years they launched a national project aimed at enrolling themselves as one of the world's footballing powers. Money was no problem. When the professional J. League was set up in 1993, it was hyped and financed by some of the country's richest organisations and attracted high-profile members of the world's footballing aristocracy such as Zico, Gary Lineker, Arsene Wenger and Ossie Ardilles. The Japanese players were dedicated to the cause and even the fans studied, scrutinising the crowds in satellite TV broadcasts to learn the best way to support their teams. Football did indeed become more than a genuine game for Japan. It was going to help the country change, to make it more like the rest of the world. It would make the Japanese more internationally-minded, creative, expressive - everything they were not, but felt they needed to be. It was, according to J. league founder Saburo Kawabuchi, 'an attempt at social revolution'. In the year following their successful hosting of a spectacular World Cup, Japanese Rules shows what worked, what didn't and why.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Yellow Jersey Press

Country of origin

United Kingdom

Release date

May 2003

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

May 2003

Authors

Dimensions

1 x 1 x 1mm (L x W x H)

Format

Paperback - B-format

Pages

224

Edition

New Ed

ISBN-13

978-0-224-06206-0

Barcode

9780224062060

Categories

LSN

0-224-06206-9



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