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For Japan’s aging soccer players, 80 is the new 50

Soccer may be the best thing for these aging yet still motivated Japanese players

By Kim Kyung-Hoon, Satoshi Sugiyama, and Tom Bateman | Photos by Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters

Tokyo (Reuters) – Mutsuhiko Nomura’s soccer career has spanned 18 World Cups, or 70 years, to be exact.

Now the silver-maned former Japanese national team player is a member of the brand new over-80 division of Tokyo’s “Soccer For Life” (SFL) league, which played its first match this month.

The sprightly 83-year-old and his teammates are among a growing number of seniors pushing the boundaries of active living in Japan, one of the world’s fastest-graying societies.

“When I was a kid, men in their 50s and 60s were considered ‘grandpas’,” Nomura, already a member of several amateur teams, said after a pre-season practice match in February.

“And now, we’re all still at it in our 80s. It’s shocking.”

Mutsuhiko Nomura, 83, and his wife Junko Nomura, 80, watch the Japanese national team’s soccer match against Colombia, at their home in Tokyo, Japan

Players from Red Star, White Bear, and Blue Hawaii attend the opening ceremony of the SFL (Soccer For Life) 80 League in Tokyo, Japan

Nihon Soccer OB Club members, a team whose members’ average age is 77.4-year-old, do physical training before a practice match in Tokyo

Red Star’s Haruo Kiyoto, 80, catches his breath after the second half of the SFL (Soccer For Life) 80 League opening match

Mutsuhiko Nomura, 83, stretches during a practice with his TAFF (Tama Area Friday Football) teammates

Red Star’s midfielder Mutsuhiko Nomura, 83, and his teammates toast with canned beers at a park

As Japan’s average lifespan inches up, people aged 65 and more form nearly a third of its population of 126 million, with life expectancy, now at 85, ranking among the world’s highest.

That has brought societal changes, too: about a fifth of those older than 70 are employed, and the government encourages pensioners to start collecting later, by holding out the promise of larger deferred payments.

Elderly security guards and shopkeepers have become a common sight.

“I think the formation of the 0-80 division is a reflection of what we’re seeing in Japanese society, where the elderly demographic can be active like this,” said Yutaka Ito, the secretary general of the SFL league

“I think the formation of the 0-80 division is a reflection of what we’re seeing in Japanese society, where the elderly demographic can be active like this,” said Yutaka Ito, the secretary general of the SFL league.

It was only two decades ago that Tokyo created a division for the 0-60 age group. In 2012, the 0-70 division followed, and five years later, the 0-75 category. At that rate, 0-80 was simply a matter of time.

A role model for soccer

White Bear’s goalkeeper Shingo Shiozawa, 93, waits for the ball to come to his side at the SFL (Soccer For Life) 80 League opening match in Tokyo, Japan

If his more “mature” teammates are something to go by, Nomura may easily have another decade on the pitch: the oldest player, Shingo Shiozawa, is 93.

“If I hadn’t played soccer, I’d have been dead by now,” said the former designer of racing cars, who plays goalie.

He credits the sport with motivating him to quit smoking and helping to speed his recovery after treatment for spinal stenosis.

With an average age of 83-1/2, however, stiff backs, creaky knees, and labored breathing were often on display as the players of the three SFL teams slogged through inaugural matches under a blazing sun last Wednesday.

White Bear’s goalkeeper Shingo Shiozawa (center), 93, claps with his teammates following the Japanese custom ‘temije’ (a ceremonial rhythmic hand clapping)

Red Star’s midfielder Mutsuhiko Nomura (left), 83, shoots to score a goal against Blue Hawai’s goalkeeper Hiroshi Nishino, 87

A ball propelled forward by a player failed to reach his slow-moving teammate, while a few stumbled and wobbled on the pitch. An 89-year-old who ran out of breath asked to be substituted about 10 minutes into a match, unable to play the rest of the 15-minute half.

After the game, Nomura and his teammates toasted their prowess with cans of beer, in a ritual familiar to many younger players.

Despite decades of watching Nomura play soccer, his wife Junko says she’s not concerned about injuries—only his high blood pressure, which she logs every day in a notebook, along with his activities and meals.

A ball propelled forward by a player failed to reach his slow-moving teammate, while a few stumbled and wobbled on the pitch. An 89-year-old who ran out of breath asked to be substituted about 10 minutes into a match, unable to play the rest of the 15-minute half

“He likes to eat meat, so I try to get him to eat vegetables,” she said of Nomura, who started playing soccer in middle school and won the national tournament three times in university.

“I think soccer is the best thing for his health.”

Far from slowing down, Nomura has also taken to kicking the ball around with his daughter and granddaughter on weekends, teaching them tricks and building their love of the game.

“I sometimes go to watch the seniors play, and it makes me feel I should work hard,” said his 48-year-old daughter Yuriko.

“I really admire him. I hope to be like him, and continue playing when I’m older.”

(Reporting by Kim Kyung-Hoon, Satoshi Sugiyama and Tom Bateman; Editing by Chang-Ran Kim and Clarence Fernandez)

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