Shocker at Shizuoka: Japan upsets Ireland in Brighton sequel

SHIZUOKA, Japan (AP) — Nobody seemed less surprised than Jamie Joseph and his Japan players after the Rugby World Cup hosts toppled Ireland 19-12 in one of the tournament's greatest upsets.

In a remarkable show of practicing what they preached, Japan gave the Irish a 12-3 start on Saturday and then nothing else but headaches and bruises. Such was Japan's speed on attack, the Irish felt they were chasing shadows. And such was Japan's speed in defense, the Irish got jittery and lapsed into uncharacteristic errors.

Ireland was ranked No. 1 coming into the tournament, but all week the Japanese players spoke about how confident they were. Winger Lomano Leki even predicted a win by eight points. The talk appeared to be mere hype to attract more local fans — the match was 3,000 short of a sellout. After all, what did Japan have to be confident about?

They'd never beaten Ireland. Conceded an average 48 points to them over 28 years of despair. But coach Joseph revealed they had been audaciously targeting this Ireland side.

"We have been preparing for this game a hell of a lot longer than the Irish have," Joseph said. "The last year at least, if not the last three years. The Irish have been thinking about this game since Monday."

Incredibly, the planning bore a sequel to their famed defeat of two-time champion South Africa in the 2015 World Cup, dubbed the Miracle of Brighton. This was not entirely a Shocker at Shizuoka, but it sparked jubilant celebrations at Rugby World Cup fan zones and pubs across the country.

At the first Rugby World Cup staged in Asia, Japan supporters are growing in confidence that their team will qualify for the quarterfinals for the first time.

The Irish knew what was coming. They were braced for impact. Both teams had put nerves to rest, Ireland more impressively in humbling Scotland 27-3, while the Japanese got past Russia 30-10 on the opening night of the tournament. Japan was the big favorite against Russia, but on Saturday they were the underdogs reinforced by smart tactics and deep belief.

They went after Ireland out wide, working the ball lightning quick for center Timothy Lafaele, Lemeki, Kotaro Matsushima and fullback Ryohei Yamanaka to have the Irish defense backpedaling. They were relentless, as was the defense, to doubling up the tackles and rushing to reform the line.

"A big focus for us was to put two in the tackle because we knew how hard they would come at us," Joseph said. "They surprised us with their kicking game to our wings and they caught us out a couple of times."