The sub-in opposite drives the home team to fourth win in Nagoya
Kento Miyaura receives greetings from his teammates
Kento Miyaura was Japan’s golden substitution in their fourth Volleyball Nations League 2023 victory. The sub-in opposite powered the home team to a 3-1 (25-27, 25-22, 25-21, 25-20) win over defending VNL champions France in the last Pool 2 game in Nagoya on Sunday. This result pushed Japan to the top of the current standings on 12 points and only two sets lost, and only previous leaders USA have a shot at reclaiming the first place after week one, should they take the three points from their last match in Ottawa later in the day. Meanwhile, France are leaving Nagoya with a 1-3 win-loss record and three points, currently standing 12th in the table.
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Japan and France finished the match level on attack points and kill blocks, but the Asians outserved the Europeans with seven aces against three. The unforced mistakes were also more abundant on the French side. Outside hitters Ran Takahashi and captain Yuki Ishikawa led the home team’s scorers with 17 and 16 points, respectively, while Miyaura was right behind them with 13 (including a block and two aces), delivering 10 of them in the last set alone. French opposite Theo Faure was the best scorer of the match on 21 points, including four blocks. Outsides Kevin Tillie and Timothee Carle added 14 and 13, respectively, for France.
With Faure in brilliant shape at the net, France had the upper hand for the most part of the first set, but eventually could not hold on to their five-point lead as Japan caught up at 17-17 to prompt an exciting epilogue. The point-for-point battle was pushed to overtime. The home team denied two French set points before Faure brought in the third one with a successful spike and converted it himself to a 27-25 win with a monster block, his ninth point of the set. To get back into the game, Japan outblocked France in set two. They were in control of the scoreboard for the better part of the set, but the Europeans, persistent in attack, especially through Carle, came back to draw level at 20-20 and even take the next rally to step in front. Japan regained the lead and pushed ahead to win the set by 25-22 on a monster block by sub-in Miyaura.
The third set offered an even battle with the lead going back and forth until a 20-20 tie. However, from that point on, it was the French unforced errors that tilted the set…
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