ABSTRACT

Discussion about globalisation and sport has taken off since the early 1990s. One aspect of this has been the migration of sports talent (Maguire 1999). A small, but growing, number of authors have undertaken sociological and historical analyses of the migration of sports talent (Bale and Maguire 1994) and a number of these have focused on football players (Lanfranchi and Taylor 2001; Magee and Sugden 2002). In the 2002 World Cup, four out of the 23 players in the Japanese national team squad were ‘migratory players’. In the FIFA Confederation Cup held in 2003, over one-fifth of the national team members were ‘migratory’. According to a survey conducted by the national daily newspaper Mainichi Shinbun (2002), 71 per cent of J.League players hoped to play abroad – amongst players under the age of 21, the figure was nearly 85 per cent. In total, since the launching of the J.League in 1993, over 70 Japanese players have moved to foreign football clubs. Whilst Nakata Hidetoshi (at the time of writing, playing for Parma in Italy’s Serie A) was estimated by France Football magazine to be the sixth best paid football player in the world (quoted in The Guardian, 7 May 2003: 30), to date there has been no sustained discussion of the mobility of Japanese football players in this circuit of sport labour migration.