The Melancholy of Hiroki Iikura

The Melancholy of Hiroki Iikura

April 2019, Nissan Stadium in Yokohama. Marinos are hosting Nagoya Grampus for one of the two J1 matches featuring in a Saturday night (better than Cerezo v Consadole, surely). The games will be one of the best of the season so far, but what strikes the most is the change in goal. Since Park Iru-gyu has been named as a started, things have improved for Marinos, but not for one player in particular.

In the preview for this season, I thought how Marinos might be in the Top 6 at the end of the season, but they were still short of a couple of players to actually fight for the title. The indictment of Park Iru-gyu may have shortened the wait, but I still believe they’re missing depth for 34 games and a good center-back alongside Hatanaka (sorry, but I’m not at all sold on Thiago Martins).

Celebrating this renewed and updated version of Marinos may though bring us away from a deep dive into one of the strangest careers of all: after a lot of effort to apprehend Postecoglou’s way, Hiroki Iikura is now on bench. And it doesn’t seem this is going to change.

First match of 2019 J1 League, first five minutes: Thiago Martins doesn’t know the value of passing, Iikura is out of position and in the end Onose scores. Marinos will somehow win 3-2 in Osaka.

A long-time kid from Marinos

Coming from Aomori, the career of Iikura hasn’t been so stable, despite staying with the same club for over a decade. Raised by Marinos and their youth ranks, the goalkeeper had to wait two seasons to debut in J1, while playing though for back then-Rosso Kumamoto in the JFL. When he came back to Yokohama, he debuted with Marinos in J1 against Shimizu S-Pulse, in a home defeat for 2-0 of August 2007.

Unfortunately, for two full seasons, Iikura remains on the bench (alongside another J1 starter on this day and age, 19 years-old Yota Akimoto). He’s young and Marinos can still count on Tetsuya Enomoto, preferred to the two young keepers. Something is about to change though, because if Kokichi Kimura is the first manager to let him play more, Kazushi Kimura confirms him between the posts.

He might be growing as a player, but he doesn’t pass unnoticed on the field. Take for example the episode of 2009, when he pushed blatantly Juninho during a J. League Cup semi-final against Kawasaki Frontale. The striker tried to kick the ball after a whistle from the referee, but Iikura didn’t take it well and got ejected. Despite this, the competition with Enomoto kept going.

This until the arrival of Yasuhiro Higuchi, who’s currently living a renaissance between the work at YSCC and the start at Ryukyu, but no one has forgotten the massive failure at Marinos. Yokohama almost celebrated a title in 2013, only to squander it with two losses (at home against Albirex and away at Kawasaki) to Sanfrecce Hiroshima.

In that squad, Iikura had no place. The keeper was the starter in 2012, but featured in zero league games in the two seasons after that one. Even a young Yuji Rokutan – so many today’s starters began to face pro-football at Marinos, didn’t they? – got more caps than Iikura in those years.

With Higuchi leaving and Erick Mombaerts coming in, things shifted again. Iikura regained his starter spot (featuring in all J1 games of 2017 and 2018), Enomoto moved to Urawa Red Diamonds and Iikura improved a lot. Under the French manager, he was probably one of the best keepers in the top tier of Japanese football. In my mind, I would have put him in the contention to be the third goalkeeper for the 2018 FIFA World Cup.

Then, a massive change materialized in Yokohama and changed his career.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2a411KvQ5yw
December 2017, Yokohama F. Marinos see their keeper as one of their main players.

The failed match-up

When Ange Postecoglou left the Australia NT job to come to Yokohama, Scott McIntyre – a good voice to hear when you’re talking about Asian and Japanese football – pointed out how his way of playing would have put J. League through a revolution. This has partially happened: the 2018 version of Marinos was entertaining, but confused. Spectacular, but massively flawed. This resulted in a relegation escaped just at the last breath.

One of the reasons might be found in the never blossomed-love between Hiroki Iikura and his manager. Or, more precisely, the style of football Postecoglou imposed in Yokohama. Mombearts was a manager with a clear and simple plan, way more stable than the proposal by the Australian head coach. You have to say though Marinos haven’t been that entertaining from a long time.

With that style of playing – long build-up plays, continuous possession of the ball, a lot of passes to avoid pressure from opponents and find spaces behind the defense –, Iikura had several troubles. Unfortunately, Marinos didn’t look out for a different player, so Postecoglou opted to work on Iikura’s skills. A project that didn’t work as Ange probably supposed.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNAMuezRR4M
Here you can find some silver lininings from a messy playbook.

Marinos conceded an average of 0,93 goals per game in the three seasons under Mombaerts, ending seventh, tenth and fifth in his three years. There was room for improvement, especially under the renewal the squad faced in these last times. But in goal Iikura was one of the few key-players established; instead, the Postecoglou-treatment put him and his skills under consideration.

Whoever could have tried a half-line goal… has done it. His name could be Kikuchi, Fujimoto or Patric, but they often succeed. Iikura wasn’t set to play as a sweeper-keeper and it took him a lot of time to adapt. In the last games of the 2018, he seemed to have found a minimum stability, but he needed more time to improve. Instead, everything worsened last Winter.

Marinos bought Park Iru-gyu from FC Ryukyu, a veteran from J3 League defending champions and a man in the Top 5 for games played in the third tier. It seemed a back-up for Iikura, but the reality is that Park is way more suited to play in Postecoglou’s system. The Australian manager realized that during J. League Cup games and he switched the goalkeepers, with the former FC Ryukyu captain now starting and doing pretty well.

Iikura, instead, is warming the bench.

Marinos v Shonan, 4-4. But this doesn’t look good.

Is there a future from here?

I think it’s a question Iikura may have asked himself, despite the change at no. 1 is recent. And I’m sure his career is far from over, despite being benched at almost 33 years old doesn’t exactly sound wonderful. But I think this: it’s not like Iikura isn’t a good keeper for J. League standards, but he isn’t fit to play in such system. And that would open many hypotheses.

We’re still talking of a man who played more than 200 league games with Marinos, being almost in the Top 10 of most present players with this shirt. But it maybe the time to look for another destination; the Postecoglou system will get better and better, maybe even bringing back a title next year (I think J1 2020 season might be the right chance to snatch it all).

Instead, Iikura could be really useful for many other teams in J1. What if Sagan Tosu, Cerezo Osaka or Vissel Kobe could feature someone like him, with experience and solid skills, despite some mistakes from time to time? They could improve chances to reach their goals for 2019 season. So he doesn’t have to lose hope, despite his starting spot in Yokohama might be gone for good.

Let’s not forget his skills.

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