Match Page | Independent fan guide
Japan rout Tunisia 4-0, eliminate Hervé Renard from the World Cup
Tactical report, final score, events, and key fantasy impact for Japan vs Tunisia.
Final Score
4 - 0
Japan vs Tunisia
Tactical Story
Japan moved one step closer to reaching the knockout stages of the World Cup for the fourth consecutive time after pummeling Tunisia 4-0 in Group F. Japan's four goals were the most the Samurai Blue had ever scored in a World Cup game, as Japan comfortably dismantled a Tunisia side that became the first to ever fire its coach after the opening game. Ayase Ueda scored twice, along with Daichi Kamada and Junya Itō to put Japan level with the Netherlands on four points.
The Dutch are currently on top the group due to having scored one more goal than Japan across its two matches. The loss for Tunisia means it is eliminated from the tournament. Japan are guaranteed at least third in the group, which could be enough to advance to the knockout stages.
Tunisia appointed two-time Africa Cup of Nations winner Hervé Renard to try and rescue the Eagles of Carthage after its humiliating 5-1 loss to Sweden, but the North African nation could not contain Japan's speedy attack nor create any clear chances of their own. Kamada opened the scoring in the fourth minute, the fastest in Japan's World Cup history. The Crystal Palace midfielder was perfectly positioned for Keito Nakamura's cross and barely had to move to tap in his second goal of the tournament.
In the 31st minute, Ayase Ueda received the ball in the midfield and drove toward the Tunisia box. When Ueda opted not to pass to a few advancing runners, any chance of a goal seemed lost - but the 27-year-old fired an angled shot from outside the box which flew into the left corner of the goal to make it 2-0. The Feyenoord striker had an impressive club season with Feyenoord, scoring 24 goals in the Eredivisie to earn the league's top scorer award.
In the 69th minute, Junya Itō slotted a third goal for Japan after a Ueda's flick put Itō in a one-on-one with Tunisia's goalkeeper Aymen Dahmen, which he finished calmly. Ueda's masterful looping header in the 83rd minute, his second of the night, capped off an impressive night for the Samurai Blue. Japan, who have not lost to a European opponent in 90 minutes since 2019, will play against Sweden in Dallas on Thursday.
Tunisia will play the Netherlands in Kansas City at the same time.
⏱️ Match TimelineLive Events
Match Event
Kamada opened the scoring in the fourth minute, the fastest in Japan's World Cup history.
Match Event
In the 31st minute, Ayase Ueda received the ball in the midfield and drove toward the Tunisia box.
Goal - Junya It
In the 69th minute, Junya Itō slotted a third goal for Japan after a Ueda's flick put Itō in a one-on-one with Tunisia's goalkeeper Aymen Dahmen, which he finished calmly.
Goal - Ueda
Ueda's masterful looping header in the 83rd minute, his second of the night, capped off an impressive night for the Samurai Blue.
Match Event
Japan, who have not lost to a European opponent in 90 minutes since 2019, will play against Sweden in Dallas on Thursday.
Key Turning Point
Goal! Tunisia 0, Japan 1. Daichi Kamada (Japan) left footed shot from very close range to the centre of the goal. Assisted by Keito Nakamura.
Player of the Match
Daichi Kamada (Japan)
Impact Performance
Group Impact
Japan secure all three points to boost their position in Group F, while Tunisia look to bounce back in their next fixture.
Tactical Takeaways
Daichi Kamada, Ayase Ueda, Junya Ito rewarded fantasy managers with goal returns, while key playmakers picked up assists.
Next Fixtures
Next for Japan
Next for Tunisia
Pre-match File
Keep the original scouting file with the final analysis so the match reads as one evolving page rather than separate preview and report entries.
Match Metadata
- Group
- Group F
- Date
- June 20
- Venue
- Monterrey
Fixture details can move, so check the final schedule before kickoff.
Style Clash
Japan can make the contest orderly by choosing the right moments to step high early and make the first pass uncomfortable. Tunisia gain leverage if they can string passes together and pin the game in place before the shape resets.
Stylistic Clash Profile
Comparing tactical leanings and spectrum gaps
High Press vs Low Block
Japan will press high; Tunisia will defend in a compact block.
Match Intelligence Board
First 15
What to Watch in the First 15 Minutes
Japan will judge the opening by whether Japan's wing-backs and wide attackers pin opponents back or have to defend too deep. Tunisia are looking for signs that Skhiri is setting the tempo or Tunisia are simply clearing pressure.
Duel
Key Duel
Takefusa Kubo and Ismaël Gharbi frame the match. The team that gets its main threat facing goal more often should like the script.
Upset Path
The Upset Path
Tunisia can make this awkward by dragging the game toward their preferred tempo and forcing Japan into their weakest phase. Tunisia's best path is to drag the game into a low-event rhythm, trust the back four and find one moment through Gharbi or a second striker.
Fantasy
Fantasy Teaser
Takefusa Kubo has the stronger minutes-and-role case. Ismaël Gharbi is viable only for managers who expect Tunisia to spend meaningful time attacking.
Prediction
Prediction Lens
Japan have the better route on paper. The warning label is that Tunisia do have a live script, so the result band matters more than the name alone.
Neutral Watch
What to Watch if You Are a Neutral Fan
Neutral fans should track the first clean counter, the first pressure spell after a turnover, and whether the game becomes controlled, stretched, or nervous before halftime.
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