Saturday, April 20, 2013

Sports Japan - 2012/12/16





Dec. 16, Sun.

The J. League: 2012 Champions
[Focus]
1. How Sanfrecce Hiroshima became Champions
Sanfrecce Hiroshima have won their first J. League championship in the Japan Professional Football League's 20th season. Manager Hajime Moriyasu placed his priority on team solidarity through the 34-match league season. Sanfrecce stand out for their finely coordinated passing game, the whole team moving and connecting as one; second row players are swift to cut forward and join the attack, and through balls are delivered goalwards the moment possession is won with the mutual understanding nurtured in steady training, which this year bore rich fruit. There was a close race to the finish with Vegalta Sendai, themselves hanging in tightly to bring fresh courage to the region devastated by last year's earthquake and tsunami, but Sendai crashed to defeat in the second to last round of games and Hiroshima clinched it at home with a match to spare in front of more than 30,000 supporters.
2. Hisato Sato's Four Amazing Individual Crowns
Sanfrecce Hiroshima striker Hisato Sato (30) won an unprecedented four individual prizes at the J. League Awards after the league season ended. He was a top scorer with 22 goals, Player of the Year for leading Sanfrecce to the league title, a member of the league's 2012 Best XI and winner of the individual Fair Play Award. He is not so tall at only 1m70cm but slips through to meet and touch in the well-judged pass for scoring a goal time after time. In Sanfrecce's passing game, Sato may only have 20 seconds of contact with the ball all match. That is about 30 touches. With the opportunities so limited, how does he manage to find the space and score? The key to the goals and victory lies in how Sato never stops looking for ways to evade his markers. We watch Sato's calculated movement to discover the secrets of this year's goals.
[Science Lens]
Secrets of Ten-pin Bowling - Laws of the Strike
People of all ages enjoy the sport of bowling but few are aware of the complexities of its techniques. The pins don't fall down by chance - it is all inevitable once the bowl has been released. You are virtually 100% certain to score a strike if you release the ball to hit a certain point of pin array at a certain angle. What technique will achieve that angle? The secrets are revealed by high-speed camera.
[Guest]

Michael Plastow

Football journalist. Born in Sussex, England, in 1959. Japan correspondent of British magazine World Soccer since 1991, covering the J. League, FIFA U-17 Championship, FIFA World Cup etc. for print and broadcasting media. Also a writer and translator for NHK's international services since 1983 with teaching experience at Gunma and Nihon universities.




Dropped video frames

Found average frame timing of 33 ms

Line Duration (ms) Time window
No missing frames

Total frames: 50399



This video has no dropped frames so has been marked as CFR by removing the timecodes. It will play on the PS3.

Get updates through the Hello Fun Time FaceBook page.

part 1 of 1: http://go4up.com/dl/14OprRX8h1Mh/hellofuntime.com_20121216_Sports_Japan.rar


No comments:

Post a Comment

I can't re-post files, sorry. The exception is files that are less than a day old. All mediafire links are broken forever. If you ask nicely and show that you tried but couldn't find the file elsewhere, someone may share it again.