Frontale Blitz Shimizu in Ferocious 5-3 Shootout to Keep Top Four Hopes Afloat
In the damp autumn air at Kawasaki Todoroki Stadium, there was no waiting for drama—just a sudden rush of goals and a reminder of both the promise and the flaws that define this year’s J1 League campaign. Kawasaki Frontale’s 5-3 victory over Shimizu S-pulse was a spectacle of early dominance, momentary chaos, and a finish that left both teams with lessons far starker than the scoreboard could fully convey.
Before the dew had settled on the pitch, Kawasaki unfurled a blitz that left their visitors stunned. In just 13 minutes, Yasuto Wakizaka’s crisp finish, Asahi Sasaki’s poacher’s strike, and Tatsuya Ito’s composed effort had Frontale soaring, the stands brimming with the hope that their recent inconsistencies had finally yielded to the brand of football that once made them the league’s most feared proposition.
It was not just the speed of the scoring that impressed but also the intent. Wakizaka, a lynchpin throughout the campaign, ghosted into space in the fourth minute to stroke home the opener, igniting the crowd’s early optimism. Moments later, Sasaki capitalized on a threaded pass for a quickfire second—Frontale pressing high, hunting for more. Ito added the third, a delicate finish after yet another burst through the Shimizu backline, bringing his tally to four goals across the club’s last five outings.
For Shimizu S-pulse, the start was as dispiriting as a cold October rain—a defense unraveling, an attack anonymous. Manager Tadatoshi Inoue cut a frustrated figure on the touchline, searching in vain for answers as his side teetered on the edge of collapse. When Erison powered in Frontale’s fourth goal in the 37th minute, it seemed the rout was inevitable.
Yet football’s charm lies in its refusal to conform to scripts, and Shimizu found a sudden, unlikely pulse just before halftime. Kazuki Kozuka finished deftly in the 45th minute, and their hopes flickered anew not a minute later when Toshiki Takahashi slotted home immediately after the restart. Frontale’s defense, so vigorous in the opening half hour, looked suddenly brittle. The lead—a mountain an hour earlier—felt climbable.
But unlike last month’s high-wire 4-4 draw with Kashiwa Reysol, Kawasaki did not allow the waves to overwhelm them. Instead, they wrested back control through midfield industry and timely interventions. The definitive blow came in the 69th minute: S. Kawahara, latching onto a rebounded shot, restored a two-goal cushion that finally quelled Shimizu’s resolve.
Still, the contest refused to die quietly. Even as the minutes trickled down, Shimizu manufactured danger, and Frontale’s defense, so recently suspect in a 1-4 Cup defeat at Kashiwa, again looked uneasy. In stoppage time, Koya Kitagawa buried a penalty after a clumsy challenge—an exclamation point for the visitors’ fighting spirit, if not their hope of points.
The final whistle brought more than relief; it hauled Kawasaki Frontale back into winning form in league play, their 53 points from 33 matches enough to remain in seventh but, crucially, just a hair’s breadth from the coveted top four. After a run marked by high-scoring draws and a Cup exit, this performance was less a return to vintage solidity than an assertion of attacking identity—raw, at times reckless, but undeniably effective.
For Shimizu, the defeat stings—a missed opportunity to climb the crowded middle of the table. Now 11th with 41 points, their push for the top half seems distant. The last five games tell a story of stagnation: just one win, two goals today their first in open play since September. Inoue’s side, so stubborn defensively in earlier weeks, was undone by old habits, shipping five for the first time since last spring.
Historically, these fixtures have leaned Kawasaki’s way, and tonight’s eight-goal outburst only extends that dominance. Yet the flow of the match suggested both teams are still wrestling with their own narratives: Frontale weaving between brilliance and fragility, S-pulse caught between ambition and uncertainty.
What lies ahead is a sprint toward clarity. For Kawasaki, the mission sharpens—the congested pack chasing continental football is within reach, but so too is the specter of another season stranded in mid-table if defensive lapses persist. For Shimizu, damage control becomes paramount; with fixtures dwindling, each point is a lifeline away from insignificance.
On a night where every attack threatened to tip the match into chaos, Kawasaki found the composure—and crucially, the goals—to keep their season alive. Shimizu, battered but unbowed, must regroup quickly. For both, the race is far from over, but at Todoroki, the message was clear: in the J1 League’s wildest autumn, fortune favors the bold.