by Toby Amos
One of the most common general associations
with the country of Japan is the institution that is sumo wrestling. If asked
about sport in Japan; it would almost
certainly come to mind. However, despite sumo still being considered the
national sport, there are others which are actually far more popular- some of
which you may not expect.
Historically, the country’s most popular sport
is Baseball which, since it was introduced in 1872, has experienced huge growth
at amateur and professional level alike. In fact one of the most watched
sporting events in the entire country is the Japanese Highschool Baseball
Championships. This is comparable to the large following which college football
has in The United States. Japan is one of very few countries outside of the
Americas to play Baseball competitively at all.
However, more recently, Japanese sport has
followed the example of the country’s large corporations, such as Mitsubishi
and Yamaha, which produce anything from cars to washing machines. It has
diversified. Rugby Union has been a sport in Japan since the late 19th century
but, despite a few notable performances throughout the decades, did not start
to really grow until much more recently. Japan won the right to host this
year’s Rugby World Cup in 2013 and at the time, they were ranked 15th in the
world. Naturally, since then, both investment and interest in the sport has
increased massively. In 2015 the ‘Cherry Blossoms’ pulled of the single biggest
in world cup history when they beat the then number 3 ranked South Africans
34-32. The following year, The Tokyo based ‘Sunwolves’ became the first Asian
team to compete in Super Rugby (the top league for southern hemisphere club
sides). This all leads us to the tournament which is now well under way.
Hosting any major sporting event can provide a
huge boost to an economy. This proved true for the UK when the London Olympics
helped us to narrowly avoid a double dip recession. However, the opposite can
be true if costs begin to spiral out of control. When preparing for the 2019
Rugby World Cup, Japan was at little risk of this as it already had a supply of
relatively new stadiums after co-hosting the 2002 FIFA World Cup. In fact all
12 where games are to be played were pre-existing. Stadiums and other
infrastructure would normally represent a large part of the cost to a host
nation so this tournament was unusually inexpensive. Given that there is little
cost for the success of the tournament to mitigate, it can only be beneficial
to the Japanese economy. Organisers project the benefits to be worth around
¥440 billion or around £3.3 billion during the 6 weeks from September 20th to
November 2nd. This figure is mainly as a result of a huge boost in tourism and
the thousands of yen that will be spent locally each day. The 12 cities across
the nation which are hosting matches will reap the benefits of greater
consumption and more jobs will be created to meet demand. However these are
unlikely to be sustainable. In order to continue to maintain benefit off the
back of the World Cup, Japan must continue to invest in sport. The Government
has made their intentions in this regard clear as they have set a target of
expanding the sport-related sector to be worth ¥15 trillion or £114 billion by
2025.
Perhaps even greater is the potential cultural
impact of this year’s World Cup in Japan. The hosts have started strongly
recording wins over Russia, Samoa and, most impressively, Ireland. This places
them at the top of their pool and in a strong position to reach the quarter
finals. The longer their success
continues, the more the country will get behind them and the sport will only
continue to grow. One of the key factors in the growth in popularity of any
sport is star players. Japan has just that in Newzealand-born captain Michael
Leitch, and younger talents Kazuki Himeno and Kotaro Matsushima. All of whom
will play a vital role in Japan’s success going forward.
While the World Cup will have a notable
economic impact in Japan, this will be dwarfed by next years Olympics in Tokyo.
However, the cultural impact of the former will likely outweigh that of a far
bigger event - particularly if Cherry Blossom’s current form of persists. Regardless, we can expect sport to
become an even more important part of the rich culture which is Japan’s. If by
some miracle, Japan were to win a home World Cup then would we would no longer
associate Japanese sport with sumo wrestling but with rugby? Perhaps not, but
everyone’s second favourite nation at the World Cup (at least) has already
caused 2 major upsets in the past 4 years, all they need is 3 more.
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