Japan’s Urawa Red Diamonds is trying to “harness the power” of its boisterous followers when it hosts Saudi Arabia’s Al Hilal in Saturday’s Asian Champions League closing second leg.
The two sides drew 1-1 in final week’s first leg in Riyadh, with defending champion Al Hilal taking a Thirteenth-minute lead by means of Salem Al Dawsari earlier than Shinzo Koroki levelled for Urawa early within the second half.
Away targets nonetheless rely as a tie-breaker in Asia’s premier membership competitors, and near 60,000 followers will likely be at Saitama Stadium, north of Tokyo, for the return leg.
Goalkeeper Shusaku Nishikawa was a part of the Urawa group that beat Al Hilal to carry the title in 2017 and he believes the membership’s followers can spur them on to glory once more.
“Make no mistake, the atmosphere at home will be fantastic and it will allow us to play more than we did in the first leg,” he informed reporters on Tuesday.
“It’s not just the players on the pitch — the players coming off the bench and those not playing are also doing a great job.
“We want to harness the power of playing at home,” the 36-year-old added.
Al Hilal will likely be with out Al Dawsari after the star winger picked up a late pink card for kicking out at midfielder Ken Iwao within the first leg.
The two groups are assembly within the closing for the third time in six years — Urawa got here out on prime in 2017 however Al Hilal bought revenge two years later.
The winter World Cup in Qatar and journey problems arising from the pandemic imply the ultimate is happening nearly 9 months after Urawa received by means of from its semifinal.
Ighalo menace
Nishikawa stated he had “goosebumps” desirous about the environment that awaits Saturday’s sport however warned his team-mates to not get carried away by the event.
“Rather than thinking about anything special, the challenge is to prepare for the game as normal,” he stated.
Al Hilal will pose Urawa a menace even with out Al Dawsari, with former Manchester United striker Odion Ighalo set to play up entrance alongside ex-Porto man Moussa Marega.
Ighalo scored 4 targets in Al Hilal’s 7-0 semi-final thrashing of Qatar’s Al Duhail, and Urawa midfielder Atsuki Ito is aware of the Nigerian is able to pouncing once more within the closing.
“If we prepare for the game thinking we’re going to do it because we got a 1-1 draw and we get too far ahead of ourselves, we’ll get burnt,” he stated.
“Al Hilal are a strong team, so we need to be careful and make sure we don’t allow that kind of atmosphere.”
Ito was born in Urawa’s residence metropolis of Saitama and remembers the membership’s earlier two Champions League triumphs, in 2007 and 2017.
He stated the competitors is “special” for a membership identified for having the most important help in Japan.
“I’ve been watching it since I was a little kid and there’s a special atmosphere for Champions League games,” stated the 24-year-old.
“I want to win the title and celebrate with all the fans.”
Source: sportstar.thehindu.com