
Daichi Kamada isn't hedging. The Crystal Palace midfielder used Japan's latest international window to restate his squad's collective goal without softening it: they want to win the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Not the last sixteen. Not a quarter-final. The whole thing. With less than a year until kick-off, it's worth asking — why not Japan?
Kamada, speaking after Japan's most recent fixture, reiterated the squad's World Cup target in terms that left no room for diplomatic retreat. This isn't a new position — Japan have been building toward 2026 with intent — but hearing it said out loud, again, by one of the squad's senior European-based players gives it a different weight.
Japan have reportedly enjoyed a strong recent international window, with results that underline the direction Hajime Moriyasu's side are travelling. The details of individual fixtures are still filtering through sources, but the broader picture is consistent: this is a squad that no longer treats deep tournament runs as the ceiling.
Three years ago, that kind of talk would have raised eyebrows. Now it raises a different question — why not Japan? They knocked out Germany and Spain at Qatar 2022 before falling to Croatia on penalties in the last sixteen. The squad has matured since then, with Kamada, Takefusa Kubo, and Ritsu Doan operating at the top end of European club football week in, week out.
The 2026 tournament — co-hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico — expands to 48 teams, which means more paths through the group stage and a longer knockout bracket. Japan will back themselves to navigate that.
Kamada has now said the quiet part loud twice. At some point, the rest of the world has to start writing it down.
Japan's remaining fixtures before the tournament will sharpen the picture. A strong window is a data point; a run of them is a pattern. Moriyasu's side have the squad depth and the European pedigree to be dangerous in the knockout rounds — the question, as it always is with Japan, is whether they can sustain that level when the stakes are highest and the margins disappear entirely.
For now, Kamada has set the tone. Japan aren't turning up in 2026 to make up the numbers.
Daichi Kamada isn't hedging. The Crystal Palace midfielder used Japan's latest international window to restate his squad's collective goal without softening it: they want to win the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
Bronnen
ESPN FC
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INTManchmal ist ein Trainerwechsel mitten im Turnier kein Befreiungsschlag – manchmal ist er das lauteste Eingeständnis, dass es schon zu spät ist. Tunesien hat das bei der WM 2026 auf die härteste Art g
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
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