Tag: Gamba Osaka History

  • Gamba Osaka Make History in Riyadh

    AFC Champions League Two 2025–26 Final — Match Report

    Al Nassr 0–1 Gamba Osaka | May 17, 2026 | Al Awwal Park, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia


    A Miracle Born from Adversity

    The 2026 season started as badly as possible for Gamba Osaka.

    During pre-season camp, Asahi Uenaka picked up an injury. In the opening match, Takashi Usami went off hurt. In the second round, both Shogo Sasaki and Shota Fukuoka followed him to the treatment room. Then key defender Riku Handa suffered a serious injury. It felt like the squad was falling apart before the season had even started.

    But the team did not break. Under their young head coach, Jens Wissing — only five months into the job — the players came together. And in the end, they lifted the trophy of the AFC Champions League Two (Asia’s second-tier continental club competition, organised by the Asian Football Confederation).


    Starting Line-ups

    Gamba Osaka lined up in a 4-2-3-1 formation.

    Rui Araki started in goal. The back four, from right to left, was Takeru Kishimoto, Shinnosuke Nakatani, Genta Miura, and Ryo Hatsuse. Two defensive midfielders — players who sit in front of the defence and protect it — were Rin Mito and Tokuma Suzuki. Ryotaro Meshino started on the right wing and Ryoya Yamashita on the left. Issam Jebali played as the attacking midfielder (the player linking midfield and attack), with Deniz Hümmet as the lone striker up front.

    Al Nassr fielded a world-class squad featuring Cristiano Ronaldo, Sadio Mané, and João Félix. Brazilian international Bento started in goal. Spain international Iñigo Martínez was part of the defensive line.


    Match Report

    First Half: Defending Well, Then Striking at the Right Moment

    In the early part of the first half, Gamba kept the ball and worked play into Al Nassr’s half. However, they could not find the net. Al Nassr gradually took control of the game, and Gamba spent more time defending in a compact block.

    Then, on 30 minutes, the moment arrived.

    Jebali played a perfectly timed through ball. Hümmet received it and calmly placed his right-foot shot into the bottom-right corner. Gamba had the lead they had been waiting for.

    Al Nassr kept firing in powerful shots, but none of them hit the target. Gamba went into half-time leading 1–0.


    Second Half: Five Substitutions to Hold the Lead

    As the second half began, Wissing made his first change. He withdrew goalscorer Hümmet and brought on Harumi Minamino.

    Al Nassr kept pressing throughout the second half. Gamba relied on the counter-attack — winning the ball quickly and pushing forward at pace — to relieve the pressure and create danger.

    On 60 minutes, Suzuki and Yamashita came off, replaced by Shuto Abe and Kanji Okunuki.

    On 70 minutes, Meshino came off and Welton came on.

    On 80 minutes, Jebali went off with an injury. Takashi Usami came on as the attacking midfielder, completing all five substitutions allowed in the match.

    There were six minutes of stoppage time in the second half. Gamba used their corner kicks smartly to run down the clock. And then the final whistle blew. The players erupted in celebration. This was the club’s 10th title in its history — won far away in Riyadh.


    Tournament MVP: Issam Jebali

    The AFC Champions League Two 2025–26 Most Valuable Player award went to Issam Jebali.

    He was the heart of the attack throughout the knockout stage — the phase of the tournament where teams are eliminated after a single defeat. In the final, he topped it all off with the decisive assist. Wissing’s decision to move him into the attacking midfielder role paid off in the best possible way.


    Man of the Match

    Honestly, every single player on this team deserves a mention today. But if we have to choose one name, goalkeeper Rui Araki is the clear candidate.

    Ronaldo hit the post at one point. Araki made save after save to keep Al Nassr out and give his team the win.

    Of course, there are other worthy candidates too. Hümmet, who scored the only goal. Jebali, whose pass led directly to it. And Nakatani and Miura, who threw themselves in front of shot after shot throughout the match.


    The Unsung Hero: Masaaki Higashiguchi

    Araki guarded the goal in the final, but there is someone who must not be forgotten: club legend and goalkeeper Masaaki Higashiguchi.

    He started in goal for every match except the final. He kept Gamba in the competition with consistent, reliable performances all the way to the final. When the final came, he accepted a place on the bench — and every player in that dressing room understood how much he had contributed. Without him, this trophy does not exist.


    The Season’s Greatest Contributor

    Looking across the whole season, the single biggest reason for this success is head coach Jens Wissing.

    Five months into the job, he has delivered Gamba Osaka’s first title in 11 years. His most important tactical move was converting Jebali into an attacking midfielder.

    When Usami’s injury left him without a natural player in that position, Wissing turned to Jebali — a player who had struggled to settle into a clear role in previous seasons. The decision worked perfectly. Jebali became the team’s creative hub and delivered the crucial assist in tonight’s final. The club’s decision to appoint Wissing has been proved completely right.


    To the Away Supporters in Blue and Black

    Amid an unsettled situation in the Middle East, some Gamba Osaka supporters still made the long journey to Riyadh. They deserve the highest respect.

    Gamba Osaka is nothing without its supporters. They, alongside the players and the manager, are part of what made this title happen.


    A Night Written into Club History

    Gamba Osaka’s last Asian title came in 2008, when they won the AFC Champions League — Asia’s top continental club competition. Tonight’s AFC Champions League Two victory is the club’s first Asian trophy in 18 years.

    Their most recent domestic title was the 2015 Emperor’s Cup — Japan’s most historic national knockout cup competition, which is open to every club in the country, from J1 League professionals down to amateur sides. Wissing has ended an 11-year wait for silverware.

    Injuries hit Gamba hard throughout 2026. Yet the team stayed together and climbed to the top of Asia. That scoreline — 1–0 — will not look spectacular in the history books. But everyone who watched knows exactly what it took. This victory in Riyadh is now part of Gamba Osaka’s story forever.


    Glossary for first-time J-League fans:

    • AFC Champions League Two → Asia’s second-tier continental club competition (below the AFC Champions League Elite)
    • Knockout stage → The part of a tournament where teams are eliminated after one loss (also called the knock-out round or playoff round)
    • Defensive midfielder → A central midfielder whose main job is to protect the defence and win the ball back
    • Attacking midfielder → A central player who operates between midfield and the strikers, creating chances
    • Lone striker → A single centre-forward playing at the top of the team’s attacking shape
    • Counter-attack → Moving quickly from defence to attack right after winning the ball
    • Emperor’s Cup → Japan’s most historic national knockout cup competition, open to all clubs from top professionals to amateur teams
    • J1 League → Japan’s top professional football division
  • Lose Before the Final. Win the Title. That’s Gamba Osaka.


    May 16. History Is About to Be Made in Riyadh.

    Gamba Osaka will play in the AFC Champions League 2 (ACL2) final on May 16 local time — May 17, 3:15 AM Japan time. The ACL2 is a continental club competition organised by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC). Think of it as Asia’s version of the UEFA Europa League.

    Their opponents are Saudi Arabian powerhouse Al Nassr. The match takes place at King Saud University Stadium — Al Nassr’s home ground.

    Al Nassr have some of the biggest names in world football. Their squad includes Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal), Sadio Mané (Senegal), Kingsley Coman (France), Marcelo Brozović (Croatia), and João Félix (Portugal) — all former stars at Europe’s top clubs. In the group stage, Al Nassr won all six matches, scored 22 goals, and conceded just two. They have been almost unstoppable.

    Gamba have matched them step for step. They also won all six group stage matches. In the knockout rounds, they beat South Korean side Pohang Steelers, then Thai clubs Ratchaburi FC and Bangkok United — to book their place in the final.

    Now Gamba are chasing their 10th club title. Their previous nine are:

    • 2005 J1 League
    • 2007 Nabisco Cup (Japan’s domestic League Cup — a knockout competition for J1 clubs, now called the Levain Cup)
    • 2008 AFC Champions League
    • 2008 Emperor’s Cup (Japan’s oldest cup competition, open to both professional and amateur teams — similar to England’s FA Cup)
    • 2009 Emperor’s Cup
    • 2014 Nabisco Cup
    • 2014 J1 League
    • 2014 Emperor’s Cup
    • 2015 Emperor’s Cup

    A win on May 16 would also be Gamba’s first Asian title in 17 years, since their 2008 ACL triumph.


    Gamba Lost — Six Days Before the Final

    With six days until the ACL2 final, Gamba played a home match in Matchday 16 of the Meiji Yasuda J1 League — Japan’s top division — against Sanfrecce Hiroshima on May 10.

    They lost 0–1. A defeat, six days before the biggest game of their season.

    You’d be forgiven for worrying. But Gamba fans know something the rest of the world might not.

    Gamba Osaka almost always lose — or fail to win — the match right before they lift a trophy. And then they lift the trophy.

    This is not a coincidence. History proves it.


    2005 J1 League: First Title, After Three Straight Defeats

    Gamba’s trophy-winning story begins with the 2005 J1 League title.

    They started the season slowly. But from July, they went on a long winning run and climbed to the top of the table in September. It looked like they would hold on.

    They didn’t.

    In November, they lost three matches in a row. After the third defeat — against JEF United Chiba in Matchday 33 — Gamba dropped out of first place.

    Matchday 34 was the final day of the season. Five clubs still had a chance to win the title.

    Gamba beat Kawasaki Frontale. Meanwhile, league leaders Cerezo Osaka needed only a draw to be champions — but Yasuyuki Konno, a defensive midfielder from FC Tokyo (a man who would join Gamba himself seven years later), scored a last-minute equaliser. Cerezo drew. Gamba moved above them on points.

    The title was theirs.

    Three defeats in a row. Then a miraculous first championship.


    2007 Nabisco Cup: Lose on Saturday, Celebrate the Next Weekend

    The Nabisco Cup is Japan’s domestic League Cup. It is a knockout competition for J1 clubs, similar to England’s Carabao Cup. (The competition was renamed the Levain Cup in 2016.)

    In the 2007 Nabisco Cup final, Gamba faced Kawasaki Frontale.

    One week before the final — on October 27 — Gamba lost a league match to Shimizu S-Pulse.

    Then, on November 3, they walked out at the National Olympic Stadium (the old one, built for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics — not the current venue), beat Kawasaki 1–0, and lifted the trophy.


    2008 AFC Champions League: Beaten Mid-Week, Asian Champions by Month’s End

    In 2008, Gamba reached the AFC Champions League final for the first time. Their opponents were Australian club Adelaide United.

    Three days after losing to Shimizu S-Pulse in a league match on October 26, Gamba hosted Adelaide in the first leg of the final at home — and won 3–0.

    Three days after that, they returned to J1 League duty and were beaten heavily by FC Tokyo. Center back Sota Nakazawa was out with a back injury, so defensive midfielder Tomokazu Myojin had to step into the defensive line. The team was far from full strength.

    It didn’t matter. On November 12, Gamba flew to Australia for the second leg and won 2–0. The aggregate score was 5–0. Gamba Osaka were champions of Asia.


    2014 Nabisco Cup: The Fans Sang — and the Players Responded

    The 2014 season was Gamba’s first year back in J1 after spending a season in J2. (In Japan’s football pyramid, clubs are promoted to J1 or relegated to J2 based on their final league position. J2 is the second division, similar to England’s Championship.)

    Gamba chased league leaders Urawa Reds hard that season. But on November 2, they conceded a last-minute equaliser against Vegalta Sendai. It felt like a defeat.

    The Gamba fans inside the stadium did not boo. They did not panic. After the final whistle, they began to sing — chanting “Grab the cup!” — to lift the players.

    Six days later, Gamba faced Sanfrecce Hiroshima in the Nabisco Cup final. They went 0–2 down. Then they scored three goals and won 3–2. A stunning comeback.


    History Repeats Itself

    The pattern is clear. Before almost every Gamba title, the club loses — or at least fails to win — in the match immediately before the final.

    (There are some exceptions. Competitions like the Emperor’s Cup have many matches concentrated at the end of the year, so the pattern does not always apply there. But in the cases above, it holds almost every time.)

    The 0–1 loss to Sanfrecce Hiroshima on May 10 is not a reason for alarm.

    For fans who know Gamba’s history, it might actually feel like a good sign. Sound familiar? It should.

    Playing Al Nassr — a squad full of global superstars, on their own pitch, with their own fans — will not be easy.

    But Gamba Osaka did something very similar in 2008, in Australia, against Adelaide United. Now, under Head Coach Jens Wissing, they travel to Riyadh carrying 17 years of ambition.

    Gamba Osaka win when it matters. That is who they are.


    This article is written for overseas football fans who are new to the J.League.