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shoes five finger shoes For Japan, this was a break from its own victimhood. Because of its women's soccer team, thousands packed bars here during vampire hours. They chanted their country's name. They chewed on towels and covered their eyes. Finally, they went wild with joy.Japan's penalty shootout victory over the United States on Sunday didn't rekindle Japan's national pride — even in mourning, that never ebbed. But it reminded this recovering country why that pride existed in the first place.Until the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear meltdown of four months ago, Japan was a country known foremost for its dignity and high achievement.Its trains ran faster, its food tasted better, its athletes trained harder.Japan managed to build an elite
shoes five finger shoes women's soccer team despite scant girls' participation nationwide. It did so with hard work — identifying elite players early, then making them practice more than 2 ½ hours daily over 10 years.The Nadeshiko had finished in fourth place at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, but the team's run to the finals this time caught many by surprise.Only about 25,000 girls and women play soccer in Japan — indicative of a country that, critics say, does too little to nurture its female talent. At least in soccer, though, Japan has found a way to capitalize on the talent that enters the system. Each of Japan's 47 prefectures has a well-organized training
shoes five finger shoes academy. National team coaches attend tournaments of girls as young as 12. Those who excel receive relentless coaching.Many fans here didn't know of the Women's World Cup — or of the Japanese women's team's abilities — until days ago, after a quarterfinal upset of Germany.Then Japan embraced its Nadeshiko, as the women's team is known.Its romp to the finals turned into front-page news. The prime minister talked about it.The match against the United States began at 3:45 a.m. local time, but at one Tokyo sports bar, 20- and 30-somethings were packed in elbow to elbow, arriving early enough to sing the country's national anthem."The Japanese people," said Toshihiro Higaki, 26, "needed something they can be proud of."Much as television broadcasters talked about the soccer team's ability to inspire the country, the opposite was also true: The country inspired the soccer team.In a pep talk before the team's semifinal game, coach Norio Sasaki told his players to think about the disaster victims from the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.Sasaki showed photos of devastated towns along Japan's northeastern coast that were washed away by the tsunami.The players knew that each goal, each victory — over such soccer powerhouses as Sweden, Germany and, finally, the United States, which it had not defeated in 25 previous contests — would give people back home in Japan more hope, a dash more courage.A breathless team captain Homare Sawa in a way spoke for her country's response to the earthquake and tsunami that left more than 25,000 dead or missing."We ran and we ran," said Sawa, who scored the goal that tied the score at 2-2 and was the tournament's top scorer with five goals. "We were exhausted, but we kept running."Along