Going to America, 32 Years Later

The Dream That Stopped in Doha

On October 28, 1993, Japan stood only minutes away from history.

A victory against Iraq would have sent the nation to its first FIFA World Cup.

Instead, a late equalizer arrived from a short corner.

2–2.

The final whistle followed.

And a dream disappeared.

Japanese football remembers that night simply as “The Agony of Doha.”

For those who watched it, the memory never really left.


One More Step

Football history is often measured in goals.

But sometimes it is measured in centimeters.

In Doha, there were moments that came down to one final step.

One final touch.

One final clearance.

Among the players desperately trying to close down the cross was a young midfielder named Hajime Moriyasu.

Nearby was Japan’s star forward, Kazuyoshi Miura — KAZU — the face of Japanese football.

Both were close.

Not close enough.

History rarely explains how painful “almost” can be.


Before World Cups Became Normal

Today, Japan has qualified for eight consecutive World Cups.

For younger supporters, qualification can almost feel expected.

In 1993, it was the opposite.

Japan had never appeared on football’s biggest stage.

The J.League had only recently begun.

Captain Tsubasa had taught an entire generation to dream about the World Cup.

But dreams remained dreams.

The tournament existed somewhere far away, on television screens and magazine pages.

America felt unimaginably distant.


The Heroes Who Never Went

That Doha squad contained many of the defining figures of Japanese football.

Masami Ihara.
Tetsuji Hashiratani.
Shigetatsu Matsunaga.
Kenta Hasegawa.
Masashi Nakayama.
Ramos Ruy.
Kazu.

Some became legends.

Some became coaches.

Some became memories.

Yet none of them reached the World Cup that year.

Their generation built the foundation of Japanese football without receiving the reward they had spent their careers chasing.

That may be one of the cruelest truths in sport.


The Quiet Player Who Stayed

Among those stars stood Moriyasu.

He was not the most famous player.

Not the most marketable.

Not the headline.

Few people in 1993 would have predicted that he would become the most influential figure from that generation.

Yet history often favors patience.

Thirty-two years later, it is Moriyasu who leads Japan back toward America.

Not as a player.

As the manager of the national team.


Football’s Long Memory

Sport moves quickly.

Football remembers slowly.

The players on Japan’s 2026 squad were not even born when Doha happened.

Many grew up watching entirely different generations.

Yet football cultures carry memories across decades.

The lessons.

The scars.

The ambitions.

The unfinished journeys.

In that sense, every World Cup team carries more people than the twenty-six names listed on the squad sheet.


Going to America

There is something poetic about the destination.

America.

The World Cup Japan nearly reached in 1993.

The World Cup KAZU dreamed of.

The World Cup that slipped away.

And now, after thirty-two years, Japan returns.

This time as one of the strongest teams in Asia.

This time with genuine ambitions.

This time led by a man who knows exactly how quickly dreams can disappear.

No one understands complacency less than Hajime Moriyasu.

He has already lived the consequences.


More Than a Tournament

For some supporters, this World Cup is not simply another competition.

It is a continuation.

A journey paused in Doha and resumed three decades later.

Some will travel to the United States wearing modern shirts.

Others may wear old ones.

Perhaps even the number 11.

Not because football can rewrite history.

But because football allows history to travel with us.

And somewhere between Doha and America, between 1993 and 2026, between KAZU and the next generation, a dream continues moving forward.

Thirty-two years later.

America is finally waiting.


With old No.11

This summer, I will travel to America wearing an old No.11 shirt.

Not because football owes us anything.

But because some journeys deserve to be completed.

Leave a comment