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Team Index Albirex Niigata Kashima Antlers Omiya Ardija Avispa Fukuoka Shonan Bellmare Cerezo Osaka Consadole Sapporo Ehime FC Kawasaki Frontale Gamba Osaka Nagoya Grampus Gifu FC Mito Hollyhock JEF United Jubilo Iwata Yokohama Marinos Montedio Yamagata Urawa Reds Kashiwa Reysol Roasso Kumamoto Sagan Tosu Sanfrecce Hiroshima Kyoto Sanga Shimizu S-Pulse Thespa Kusatsu FC Tokyo Oita Trinita Vegalta Sendai Ventforet Kofu Tokyo Verdy Vissel Kobe Tokushima Vortis Yokohama FC |
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The story of Masakiyo Maezono is perhaps the greatest melodrama in the history of the J.League. He entered professional football a year before the J.League started, and was one of the league's most promising young players in its first two or three years, as a member of the Yokohama Flugels. Christened the "golden boy" of Japanese sport in 1996, after leading Japan's Olympic team to victory over Brazil in Atlanta, Maezono came home to a hero's welcome. His face seemed to be everywhere, on commercials, licensed goods, and every sports newspaper in the country. He won a big raise and a high-profitle transfer to Verdy Kawasaki at the end of the 1996 season, and it looked like he was a big star in the making. Maezono was brought into the national team, and during 1996 and 97, when the team was fighting for qualification the 1998 World Cup, he received 22 caps and scored four goals for Japan. As the World Cup year began, the golden boy still seemed to retain his lustre . . . No one is quite sure what happened next.
Some might view Maezono as an odd choice for inclusion in a "Hall of Fame", since today he is remembered more for his spectacular failure than for any success. But that take on his career is an unfair one, in our view. Maezono certainly will go down as a monument to self-destructive behaviour -- a fallen hero who squandered a tremendous natural gift and left fans wondering what might have been, if he could have conquered his personal demons. But his career statistics, even including the numbers compiled after he had pickled himself in shochu, are still quite impressive. His contributions as captain of the Olympic Team in Atlanta, alone, earned him a place in the pantheon of Japan's football heroes, while his sparkling contributions to the Yokohama Flugels were one of the things that still make that team memorable, years after it has ceased to exist. Masakiyo Maezono will always be remembered as a tragic, deeply flawed and fallen hero. . . . . . . . . But a hero, all the same.
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