[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":462},["ShallowReactive",2],{"article-ronaldo-sixth-world-cup-how-far-can-he-go":3,"article-related-ronaldo-sixth-world-cup-how-far-can-he-go":118},[4],{"_path":5,"_dir":6,"_draft":7,"_partial":7,"_locale":8,"title":9,"description":10,"slug":11,"category":12,"cover":13,"publishedAt":14,"featured":15,"author":16,"teams":17,"tags":19,"body":26,"_type":112,"_id":113,"_source":114,"_file":115,"_stem":116,"_extension":117},"/articles/ronaldo-sixth-world-cup-how-far-can-he-go","articles",false,"","How Far Can Ronaldo Go at a Sixth World Cup?","Cristiano Ronaldo is set to reach a sixth World Cup at age 41. Portugal still need his goals, but they also need the right balance of minutes, role, and knockout-stage management.","ronaldo-sixth-world-cup-how-far-can-he-go","Analysis","/images/portugal-ronaldo-2026-world-cup.jpg","2026-05-30",true,"World Cup Desk",[18],"portugal",[18,20,21,22,23,24,25],"cristiano-ronaldo","analysis","tournament-news","squad-news","group-stage","knockout-stage",{"type":27,"children":28,"toc":109},"root",[29,37,42,47,52,57,62,67,72,77,82],{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":32,"children":33},"element","p",{},[34],{"type":35,"value":36},"text","At 41, Cristiano Ronaldo is standing at the door of another World Cup. FIFA confirmed in Portugal's squad announcement that he will travel to the 2026 tournament as captain, chasing an unprecedented sixth World Cup appearance. That alone is historic: from a young wide forward in Germany 2006 to a penalty-box finisher in North America 2026, Ronaldo has carried an entire generation of football memory through the same shirt.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":38,"children":39},{},[40],{"type":35,"value":41},"The real question, though, is not whether Ronaldo can add another record. It is whether Portugal can use him wisely. If the plan is to treat him like the all-purpose star of ten years ago, Portugal may end up lowering their own ceiling. If the plan is to turn him into a sharper, more selective final weapon, this team still has the profile to make a serious run.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":43,"children":44},{},[45],{"type":35,"value":46},"Portugal's foundation is strong enough. Ruben Dias, Nuno Mendes, Joao Neves, Vitinha, Bruno Fernandes, Bernardo Silva, Rafael Leao, Joao Felix, and Goncalo Ramos give Roberto Martinez enough ball progression, wide threat, and attacking variety to avoid becoming a one-man operation. In other words, Portugal should not arrive at the 2026 World Cup as a team waiting for Ronaldo to solve everything on his own.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":48,"children":49},{},[50],{"type":35,"value":51},"That is the first key to how far Ronaldo can go: he has to be placed in the right role. He still offers elite box instincts, strong aerial value, and total authority from the penalty spot. What he no longer should be asked to do is press relentlessly for long stretches, beat full-backs over and over from the flank, or drop deep every phase to build the attack. The more Portugal let their midfielders and wingers handle progression, the more Ronaldo can save his energy for the moments that matter most: the box, second balls, set pieces, and the final twenty minutes of tight matches.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":53,"children":54},{},[55],{"type":35,"value":56},"The group stage is the first hurdle Portugal must manage well. According to FIFA's published schedule, Portugal face DR Congo, Uzbekistan, and Colombia in Group K. It is not a group of death, but it is not a soft landing either. DR Congo will test Portugal's control through physical duels, Uzbekistan may bring a compact defensive block, and Colombia have enough individual quality to drag a match into something far more chaotic.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":58,"children":59},{},[60],{"type":35,"value":61},"For Ronaldo, the ideal group-stage script is not three full matches and three survival shifts. It is early control of the group, enough points from the first two games, and room to rotate in the third. At 41, energy management in a World Cup built on travel, heat, and short recovery windows is not caution. It is strategy. If Portugal want a genuinely dangerous Ronaldo in the knockout rounds, they cannot spend his burst too early.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":63,"children":64},{},[65],{"type":35,"value":66},"Once the knockout phase begins, Ronaldo's value becomes more subtle. World Cup knockouts are often not about ninety minutes of flowing football. They are about a few set pieces, one loose ball in the area, a goalkeeper's big save, and a single star finishing the decisive chance. Ronaldo remains dangerous in exactly that world. He does not need to dominate every minute. He only needs one cross, one penalty, or one far-post run to tilt a game.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":68,"children":69},{},[70],{"type":35,"value":71},"The problem is that stronger opponents will target him more clearly. If Portugal's attack becomes nothing more than crossing toward Ronaldo, elite centre-backs will be comfortable. If Portugal can use Vitinha, Bruno, Bernardo, and Joao Neves to keep stressing central spaces, then release runners like Leao or Pedro Neto beyond the line, Ronaldo's presence becomes something defenders can never forget. The threat is not that he touches the ball every attack. The threat is that the back line cannot switch off for a second while he is there.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":73,"children":74},{},[75],{"type":35,"value":76},"So Portugal's reasonable floor is getting out of the group, and their realistic target is the quarter-finals. If the bracket breaks kindly, the core stays healthy, and Martinez is decisive with both starters and bench roles, a semi-final is not fantasy. Winning the whole tournament would require more than Ronaldo's last great World Cup storyline. It would require defensive stability, ruthless transitions, and emotional control across seven matches.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":78,"children":79},{},[80],{"type":35,"value":81},"Ronaldo does not need another World Cup to prove his greatness. A possible sixth appearance, goals across five different World Cups, and Portugal's scoring record already make the case. But football is not always about completeness. Sometimes it is about the final moment. If Portugal can turn Ronaldo from the universal answer into the decisive weapon, the most realistic range for this veteran is somewhere between the quarter-finals and the semi-finals. And if the draw, the form, and the fortune of tournament football all lean his way, then the final question of his World Cup career becomes far more interesting than it first sounds.",{"type":30,"tag":83,"props":84,"children":85},"ul",{},[86,99],{"type":30,"tag":87,"props":88,"children":89},"li",{},[90],{"type":30,"tag":91,"props":92,"children":96},"a",{"href":93,"rel":94},"https://www.fifa.com/en/tournaments/mens/worldcup/canadamexicousa2026/articles/cristiano-ronaldo-roberto-martinez-portugal-squad-announcement",[95],"nofollow",[97],{"type":35,"value":98},"FIFA：Ronaldo set for sixth World Cup as Portugal squad named",{"type":30,"tag":87,"props":100,"children":101},{},[102],{"type":30,"tag":91,"props":103,"children":106},{"href":104,"rel":105},"https://www.fifa.com/en/tournaments/mens/worldcup/canadamexicousa2026/articles/portugal-team-profile-history",[95],[107],{"type":35,"value":108},"FIFA：Portugal at the FIFA World Cup: Team profile and history",{"title":8,"searchDepth":110,"depth":110,"links":111},3,[],"markdown","content:articles:ronaldo-sixth-world-cup-how-far-can-he-go.md","content","articles/ronaldo-sixth-world-cup-how-far-can-he-go.md","articles/ronaldo-sixth-world-cup-how-far-can-he-go","md",[119,259],{"_path":120,"_dir":6,"_draft":7,"_partial":7,"_locale":8,"title":121,"description":122,"slug":123,"category":12,"cover":124,"publishedAt":125,"featured":15,"author":16,"teams":126,"tags":129,"body":134,"_type":112,"_id":256,"_source":114,"_file":257,"_stem":258,"_extension":117},"/articles/german-machine-still-has-power","The German Machine Still Has Its Power","Germany opened their 2026 World Cup campaign with a 7-1 win over Curacao, combining high pressing, wide overloads, strong chance creation, and ruthless finishing.","german-machine-still-has-power","/images/germany-machine-still-power.png","2026-06-15",[127,128],"germany","curacao",[127,128,130,131,132,133,24,22],"kai-havertz","deniz-undav","julian-nagelsmann","match-analysis",{"type":27,"children":135,"toc":254},[136,141,146,151,156,161,166,171,176,181,186,191,196,201,206,211,216,221],{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":137,"children":138},{},[139],{"type":35,"value":140},"Germany did not need long to make their message clear. The machine is still running.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":142,"children":143},{},[144],{"type":35,"value":145},"In their opening Group E match, Germany beat Curacao 7-1 and produced the kind of performance that turns a comfortable win into a statement. The scoreline was heavy, but it was not only about the goals. Germany controlled the rhythm, squeezed the pitch, attacked through both wide channels, and kept finding new ways to turn pressure into chances.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":147,"children":148},{},[149],{"type":35,"value":150},"Curacao arrived as a debutant with energy and courage, and they briefly gave the match a different emotional shape. But once Germany found their passing tempo and began to overload the final third, the game moved almost entirely in one direction. This was a reminder that Germany's strength is not only individual talent. It is the ability to keep repeating actions until the opponent breaks.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":152,"children":153},{},[154],{"type":35,"value":155},"Julian Nagelsmann's side started with the familiar German logic of control through structure. Germany built from a high base, pushed numbers around the ball, and used their full-backs and wide players to stretch Curacao's defensive block. The aim was not simply to keep possession. It was to keep Curacao defending in motion: slide left, recover right, track a runner, close a half-space, then do it all again.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":157,"children":158},{},[159],{"type":35,"value":160},"That is where the tactical difference became clear. Curacao could survive individual moments, but Germany kept creating sequences. When the ball went wide, the next pass was often inside. When Curacao narrowed, Germany switched the point of attack. When the first shot was blocked, the second phase was already waiting. Germany's pressure was less like one punch and more like a chain of small collisions.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":162,"children":163},{},[164],{"type":35,"value":165},"The data backed up what the eye test showed. Germany finished with 65 percent possession, 26 shots, 12 shots on target, and an expected-goals total of about 3.91. Curacao had moments, including one very good one, but Germany produced the volume and quality of chances that normally make an upset almost impossible.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":167,"children":168},{},[169],{"type":35,"value":170},"The opening goal came early. Felix Nmecha scored in the sixth minute, giving Germany the perfect platform and forcing Curacao to play from behind before the match had settled. Curacao answered through Livano Comenencia in the 21st minute, a goal that briefly challenged the tone of the night and reminded Germany that tournament openers can become awkward if concentration slips.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":172,"children":173},{},[174],{"type":35,"value":175},"Germany's response was the important part. They did not become rushed. They became sharper.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":177,"children":178},{},[179],{"type":35,"value":180},"Nico Schlotterbeck restored the lead before half-time, and Kai Havertz converted from the penalty spot in first-half stoppage time. That late first-half goal mattered. It turned a contest into a chase, and it sent Germany into the break with both scoreboard control and psychological control.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":182,"children":183},{},[184],{"type":35,"value":185},"The second half then became a demonstration of depth and timing. Jamal Musiala scored shortly after the restart, giving Germany the fourth goal and removing the last serious tension from the match. Nathaniel Brown added another, Deniz Undav joined the scoring, and Havertz completed his double late on. By the end, the 7-1 scoreline reflected both Germany's attacking variety and Curacao's inability to keep absorbing waves of pressure.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":187,"children":188},{},[189],{"type":35,"value":190},"Havertz's two goals will naturally take attention, because forwards are judged by decisive touches. But Deniz Undav's contribution was just as revealing. His goal and creative involvement showed why Germany can be dangerous even when the match has already tilted. They do not have to rely on one fixed attacking pattern. They can use runners between the lines, late arrivals, set-piece pressure, penalties, and second-half changes to keep the opponent from ever settling.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":192,"children":193},{},[194],{"type":35,"value":195},"Joshua Kimmich's influence also mattered. In matches like this, the captain's work can look routine because Germany have so much of the ball. But that routine is exactly the point. Kimmich helped maintain the rhythm, accelerate the switch when Curacao's block shifted, and keep Germany playing in the areas where the next chance could emerge. Against a lower block, control is not passive. It is a form of pressure.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":197,"children":198},{},[199],{"type":35,"value":200},"There is still a note of caution. A 7-1 win over Curacao does not automatically answer every question Germany will face later in the tournament. Stronger opponents will press Germany's build-up more aggressively, punish turnovers more severely, and deny the same amount of space around the box. The group stage can flatter a favorite if the favorite is allowed to play at its preferred tempo.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":202,"children":203},{},[204],{"type":35,"value":205},"But that should not reduce what Germany did here. Opening matches are about more than three points. They are about tone. Germany scored early, absorbed a response, restored order before half-time, and then used the second half to turn control into damage. That is exactly what a serious contender is supposed to do.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":207,"children":208},{},[209],{"type":35,"value":210},"Group E now has a clear reference point. Germany sit at the top after one match, while Curacao must recover quickly from a difficult debut. For Germany, the next challenge is to carry the same precision into matches where the spaces are smaller and the pressure is higher.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":212,"children":213},{},[214],{"type":35,"value":215},"The most important conclusion is simple: Germany still look like Germany. Organized without being slow, aggressive without losing shape, and clinical enough to make a good period feel like a landslide.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":217,"children":218},{},[219],{"type":35,"value":220},"The German machine is not just moving. It is moving with purpose.",{"type":30,"tag":83,"props":222,"children":223},{},[224,234,244],{"type":30,"tag":87,"props":225,"children":226},{},[227],{"type":30,"tag":91,"props":228,"children":231},{"href":229,"rel":230},"https://www.espn.com.au/football/report/_/gameId/720083",[95],[232],{"type":35,"value":233},"ESPN: Germany 7-1 Curacao match report",{"type":30,"tag":87,"props":235,"children":236},{},[237],{"type":30,"tag":91,"props":238,"children":241},{"href":239,"rel":240},"https://theanalyst.com/articles/germany-vs-curacao-stats-world-cup-2026",[95],[242],{"type":35,"value":243},"The Analyst: Germany vs Curacao stats and match analysis",{"type":30,"tag":87,"props":245,"children":246},{},[247],{"type":30,"tag":91,"props":248,"children":251},{"href":249,"rel":250},"https://www.foxsports.com/soccer/fifa-world-cup-men-germany-vs-curacao-jun-14-2026-game-boxscore-647624",[95],[252],{"type":35,"value":253},"FOX Sports: Germany vs Curacao box score",{"title":8,"searchDepth":110,"depth":110,"links":255},[],"content:articles:german-machine-still-has-power.md","articles/german-machine-still-has-power.md","articles/german-machine-still-has-power",{"_path":260,"_dir":6,"_draft":7,"_partial":7,"_locale":8,"title":261,"description":262,"slug":263,"category":12,"cover":264,"publishedAt":125,"featured":15,"author":16,"teams":265,"tags":268,"body":272,"_type":112,"_id":459,"_source":114,"_file":460,"_stem":461,"_extension":117},"/articles/japan-charge-relentlessly-european-power","Japan Charge Relentlessly and Look Every Bit as Strong as a European Power","Japan's 2-2 draw with the Netherlands showed why the Samurai Blue can stand toe to toe with elite European opposition, from the pre-match numbers to the transition bursts, score swings, and what comes next.","japan-charge-relentlessly-european-power","/images/japan-charge-relentlessly-european-power-v2.png",[266,267],"japan","netherlands",[266,267,269,270,271,21,24,22],"takefusa-kubo","daichi-kamada","keito-nakamura",{"type":27,"children":273,"toc":457},[274,279,284,314,319,324,329,334,339,344,349,354,359,364,369,374],{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":275,"children":276},{},[277],{"type":35,"value":278},"If one match was supposed to remind the world how far Japan have come, this was it. Japan did not beat the Netherlands in Arlington, but the 2-2 draw still felt like a statement. The score mattered, naturally. The bigger point was the way the Samurai Blue got there: with speed, nerve, tactical discipline, and the kind of transition football that can make even established European powers look unstable.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":280,"children":281},{},[282],{"type":35,"value":283},"That is why the central claim holds up after ninety minutes: Japan charged relentlessly, and they looked every bit as strong as a European power.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":285,"children":286},{},[287,289,296,298,304,306,312],{"type":35,"value":288},"Before kick-off, the numbers still leaned Dutch. As of the latest official FIFA men's ranking update on 11 June 2026, the Netherlands were ranked eighth and Japan 18th. The betting market reflected that gap as well, with Fox Sports listing the Netherlands as slight moneyline favorites at ",{"type":30,"tag":290,"props":291,"children":293},"code",{"className":292},[],[294],{"type":35,"value":295},"+105",{"type":35,"value":297},", compared with Japan at ",{"type":30,"tag":290,"props":299,"children":301},{"className":300},[],[302],{"type":35,"value":303},"+270",{"type":35,"value":305},", with the draw at ",{"type":30,"tag":290,"props":307,"children":309},{"className":308},[],[310],{"type":35,"value":311},"+250",{"type":35,"value":313},". In other words, Japan were respected, but not expected to control the emotional center of the match.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":315,"children":316},{},[317],{"type":35,"value":318},"And yet the warning signs were already there for anyone paying attention. Japan arrived in solid shape. The JFA's recent match reports show a 1-0 win over England at Wembley on 31 March and another 1-0 win over Iceland on 31 May in Tokyo. Those are not empty tune-up results. They point to a team that is comfortable defending compactly, then breaking games open with one fast, clean attacking sequence.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":320,"children":321},{},[322],{"type":35,"value":323},"There was also adversity. Captain Wataru Endo withdrew from the World Cup squad days before the opener because of a foot injury, a significant loss in leadership and midfield control. A less mature team might have entered the Netherlands game emotionally flat after that setback. Japan did the opposite. They looked connected, urgent, and convinced.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":325,"children":326},{},[327],{"type":35,"value":328},"The first half was cautious on the scoreboard but informative in style. The Dutch had more of the ball, and Japan had to survive a few uncomfortable moments, including an early Zion Suzuki save. What stood out, though, was Japan's patience. They did not chase the game recklessly. They stayed narrow, protected central spaces, and waited for the right moments to run.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":330,"children":331},{},[332],{"type":35,"value":333},"The match changed immediately after the break. Virgil van Dijk gave the Netherlands the lead in the 50th minute, attacking the ball well and guiding a header in for 1-0. That could have become the moment when a technically stronger European side settled down and managed the rest of the evening. Instead, it triggered Japan's most impressive stretch.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":335,"children":336},{},[337],{"type":35,"value":338},"Seven minutes later, Japan hit back through exactly the kind of move that has become their signature. Takefusa Kubo found Keito Nakamura, and Nakamura turned and rifled his finish past Bart Verbruggen from the left side of the arc. It was not only an equalizer. It was a demonstration of Japan's in-game revival through transition: one sharp pass, one quick turn, one decisive strike, and the Dutch advantage was gone.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":340,"children":341},{},[342],{"type":35,"value":343},"The Netherlands went ahead again in the 64th minute through Crysencio Summerville after Ryan Gravenberch's assist, and once more Japan had a choice. They could accept that this was one of those honorable defeats that still gets praised after the final whistle. Or they could keep leaning into the article's core truth and play like a team that no longer sees elite European opposition as a ceiling.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":345,"children":346},{},[347],{"type":35,"value":348},"Japan chose the second path. They kept pushing. They kept believing in the next action. In the 88th minute, Daichi Kamada rose to meet Koki Ogawa's corner and forced the ball in for 2-2. It was the reward for persistence, but it was also the reward for personality. Japan did not steal a point by accident. They earned it by refusing to let the game's momentum become Dutch property.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":350,"children":351},{},[352],{"type":35,"value":353},"The star performances told the same story. Kubo was the clearest creative spark, giving Japan a player who could receive under pressure and turn one good touch into forward momentum. Nakamura delivered the cleanest attacking moment of the night with his equalizer. Kamada supplied the final emotional punch. Suzuki's early composure in goal also mattered, because games like this often turn on whether the underdog stays alive long enough for its attacking plan to matter.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":355,"children":356},{},[357],{"type":35,"value":358},"That is what makes this result more than a draw on paper. Japan did not simply show effort. They showed a version of high-level tournament football that travels well: defensive discipline, transition precision, emotional resilience, and enough technical quality to punish lapses. Those are not outsider traits anymore. Those are the traits of a side that can compete with major teams from Europe on equal terms.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":360,"children":361},{},[362],{"type":35,"value":363},"Now the next question becomes just as interesting. According to FIFA's official schedule, Japan face Tunisia in Monterrey on Saturday, 20 June 2026, before closing Group F against Sweden in Arlington on Thursday, 25 June 2026. The Tunisia game is dangerous because it will likely ask a different question. The Netherlands gave Japan space to counter into. Tunisia may offer less space and force Japan to create more against a tighter block. Still, after this performance, Japan should back themselves to edge that match. The most reasonable prediction is a narrow Japan win, something like 1-0 or 2-1, with Kubo and Kamada again central to breaking the game open.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":365,"children":366},{},[367],{"type":35,"value":368},"Sweden should be even tougher in a different way. That match looks likely to become a fight over physical duels, set pieces, and second balls, and it may decide qualification or group position. But Japan's draw with the Netherlands changes the tone of that fixture. Instead of entering it as a side hoping to survive, Japan now look like a team that can play for control. If they take care of Tunisia, a draw against Sweden may be enough. If they repeat the same transition sharpness and defensive concentration shown against the Dutch, they have a real chance to finish in the top two.",{"type":30,"tag":31,"props":370,"children":371},{},[372],{"type":35,"value":373},"That is the proper reading of Japan's opener. The result was 2-2, but the message was larger than the scoreline. Japan did not play like plucky challengers. They played like a team that believes it belongs in the same competitive tier as strong European opposition. On this evidence, that belief is not romance. It is football reality.",{"type":30,"tag":83,"props":375,"children":376},{},[377,387,397,407,417,427,437,447],{"type":30,"tag":87,"props":378,"children":379},{},[380],{"type":30,"tag":91,"props":381,"children":384},{"href":382,"rel":383},"https://inside.fifa.com/fifa-world-ranking/men",[95],[385],{"type":35,"value":386},"FIFA: FIFA/Coca-Cola Men's World Ranking, last official update 11 June 2026",{"type":30,"tag":87,"props":388,"children":389},{},[390],{"type":30,"tag":91,"props":391,"children":394},{"href":392,"rel":393},"https://apnews.com/article/world-cup-netherlands-japan-score-d5cb428f3a5f1199345894d44a6bdded",[95],[395],{"type":35,"value":396},"AP: Daichi Kamada's late header gives Japan a 2-2 draw with the Netherlands in World Cup opener for both",{"type":30,"tag":87,"props":398,"children":399},{},[400],{"type":30,"tag":91,"props":401,"children":404},{"href":402,"rel":403},"https://www.foxsports.com/stories/soccer/2026-world-cup-netherlands-japan-odds-prediction-picks",[95],[405],{"type":35,"value":406},"Fox Sports: Netherlands vs. Japan odds and prediction",{"type":30,"tag":87,"props":408,"children":409},{},[410],{"type":30,"tag":91,"props":411,"children":414},{"href":412,"rel":413},"https://www.jfa.jp/eng/news/00036199/",[95],[415],{"type":35,"value":416},"JFA: SAMURAI BLUE win 1-0 at Wembley with Mitoma's decisive counter goal",{"type":30,"tag":87,"props":418,"children":419},{},[420],{"type":30,"tag":91,"props":421,"children":424},{"href":422,"rel":423},"https://www.jfa.jp/eng/news/00036396/",[95],[425],{"type":35,"value":426},"JFA: SAMURAI BLUE defeat Iceland 1-0 in final home fixture before FIFA World Cup 2026",{"type":30,"tag":87,"props":428,"children":429},{},[430],{"type":30,"tag":91,"props":431,"children":434},{"href":432,"rel":433},"https://apnews.com/article/wataru-endo-japan-world-cup-107688964d460bf54f0b9dcdace91972",[95],[435],{"type":35,"value":436},"AP: Japan captain Wataru Endo is out of the World Cup and retires from international duty",{"type":30,"tag":87,"props":438,"children":439},{},[440],{"type":30,"tag":91,"props":441,"children":444},{"href":442,"rel":443},"https://www.fifa.com/en/match-centre/match/17/285023/289273/400021475",[95],[445],{"type":35,"value":446},"FIFA: Tunisia vs Japan match centre",{"type":30,"tag":87,"props":448,"children":449},{},[450],{"type":30,"tag":91,"props":451,"children":454},{"href":452,"rel":453},"https://www.fifa.com/en/tournaments/mens/worldcup/canadamexicousa2026/articles/japan-sweden-preview-live-stream-team-news-tickets",[95],[455],{"type":35,"value":456},"FIFA: Japan v Sweden preview",{"title":8,"searchDepth":110,"depth":110,"links":458},[],"content:articles:japan-charge-relentlessly-european-power.md","articles/japan-charge-relentlessly-european-power.md","articles/japan-charge-relentlessly-european-power",1781478214308]