Written by Yuki Nagasawa / Yomiuri Shimbun Staff Writer The Japan News
Joel Chima Fujita, captain of the Japan men’s soccer team at the Olympics 2024 in Paris, France.
Born in Machida, Tokyo, Fujita has a Igbo Nigerian father and a Japanese mother. When he was in kindergarten, he joined a local soccer team, the Machida Ohkura Football Club. He was team captain, and even on days when there was no practice, he gathered his teammates to play soccer.
When he was in elementary school, his coach, Yuta Ichikawa taught him the importance of speaking up. “If you don’t look around you and understand what’s going on, you can’t speak up properly,” Ichikawa told him.
According to Ichikawa, Fujita’s physical strength and ball-control skills did not let him down in competition, but he did not have the overwhelming speed needed to change a game on his own.
He did, however, learn how to control the game, how to watch the positions and movements of opposing players and call out to his teammates to “move forward more” or “press them harder,” allowing his team to attack and defend effectively.
“He has a great ability to move the team. Even when he was out of form, he was able to pick up the pace by speaking up,” Ichikawa said.
On Tokyo Verdy’s youth team which Fujita belonged to as a high school student, he was unable to play in as many matches as he would have liked, but even in games with only reserve players, he was more vocal than anyone else and around the ball, Ichikawa said.
After gaining experience in the J.League, Fujita was selected for the national team for the first time in 2022.
“You are my best coach,” Fujita wrote on a blue pennant with the team’s three-legged crow emblem, which he gave to Ichikawa. Players selected for the national team for the first time customarily present the pennant to their mentor.
In 2023, Fujita moved to a Belgian team. “After moving overseas, I’m more determined not to lose to the opponent in front of me,” he said.
“I just have to be myself and do my best to help the team get better,” he added.
Japan is fighting for its first soccer medal since the 1968 Mexico Olympics.
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