1998 Japan women's national football team
This page records the details of the Japan women's national football team in 1998.
Results
1998.05.17 | Japan | 1–2 | United States | Tokyo, Japan |
Otake |
? ? |
Stadium: National Stadium |
1998.05.21 | Japan | 0–2 | United States | Hyogo, Japan |
? ? |
Stadium: Kobe Universiade Memorial Stadium |
1998.05.24 | Japan | 0–3 | United States | Kanagawa, Japan |
? ? ? |
Stadium: International Stadium Yokohama |
1998.10.24 | Japan | 1–1 | South Korea | South Korea |
Otake |
? |
1998.10.26 | Japan | 1–1 | South Korea | South Korea |
Sugawara |
? |
1998.12.10 | Japan | 2–3 | North Korea | Thailand |
Otake Isaka |
? ? ? |
1998.12.17 | Japan | 2–1 | Chinese Taipei | Thailand |
Yamaki Otake |
? |
Players statistics
Player | −1997 | 05.17 | 05.21 | 05.24 | 10.24 | 10.26 | 12.08 | 12.10 | 12.12 | 12.15 | 12.17 | 1998 | Total |
Rie Yamaki | 37(2) | O | O | O | - | - | O | O | O | O | O(1) | 8(1) | 45(3) |
Homare Sawa | 35(21) | O | O | O | O | O | O(1) | O | O(3) | O | O | 10(4) | 45(25) |
Tamaki Uchiyama | 34(20) | O | O | O | O | O | O(2) | O | O | O | O | 10(2) | 44(22) |
Yumi Tomei | 31(6) | O | - | - | O | O | - | - | O | O | O | 6(0) | 37(6) |
Nami Otake | 27(13) | O(1) | O | O | O(1) | - | O(1) | O(1) | O | O | O(1) | 9(5) | 36(18) |
Yumi Obe | 27(2) | - | - | - | O | O | O | O | - | O | - | 5(0) | 32(2) |
Kae Nishina | 26(1) | O | O | O | O | O | O | O | O | O | O | 10(0) | 36(1) |
Yuko Morimoto | 8(2) | - | O | O | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 2(0) | 10(2) |
Shiho Onodera | 8(0) | - | - | - | - | O | - | - | O | - | - | 2(0) | 10(0) |
Tomoe Sakai | 7(0) | O | O | O | O | O | O | O | - | O | O | 9(0) | 16(0) |
Tomomi Mitsui | 6(2) | O | O | O | O | O | O(1) | O | O | O | O | 10(1) | 16(3) |
Mayumi Omatsu | 6(1) | O | O | O | O | O | - | - | - | - | - | 5(0) | 11(1) |
Hiromi Isozaki | 6(0) | O | O | O | - | O | O | O | O | O | O | 9(0) | 15(0) |
Nozomi Yamago | 6(0) | O | O | O | O | - | O | O | - | O | O | 8(0) | 14(0) |
Yumi Umeoka | 3(0) | - | O | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1(0) | 4(0) |
Mai Nakachi | 2(0) | - | O | O | O | - | - | - | O | O | - | 5(0) | 7(0) |
Mito Isaka | 1(0) | - | - | - | O | - | O(1) | O(1) | O(1) | O | O | 6(3) | 7(3) |
Miki Sugawara | 0(0) | O | O | O | - | O(1) | O | O | O(1) | - | - | 7(2) | 7(2) |
Kazumi Kishi | 0(0) | - | O | O | - | O | O | - | O(2) | - | - | 5(2) | 5(2) |
Yasuyo Yamagishi | 0(0) | - | - | - | - | - | O | - | O(1) | O | O | 4(1) | 4(1) |
Ayumi Hara | 0(0) | O | O | O | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 3(0) | 3(0) |
gollark: Because it became a political issue currently.
gollark: That still doesn't fix the data apparently being bad and open-submission.
gollark: And you shouldn't just go for the worst-case scenario (conveniently one making your preferred point best) when assuming things; you should find the most realistic one, and/or provide a range.
gollark: The US government has frequently been useless and incompetent at pandemic handling (halting the J&J vaccine and initially claiming masks didn't work are the two obvious things I can think of), but that doesn't mean that everything they say is wrong, or that belief in things that the government says is necessarily just because the government says it.
gollark: And apparently it's generally much more useful for seeing what might be an effect rather than collecting data on frequency of things.
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