After a career in Japan, Miki Yamane made the move to the U.S. and Major League Soccer this season, joining the Galaxy.
It’s a move with many adaptations, on and off the field, but through the early weeks the returns have been good.
“You can see he’s adjusting to many things,” Galaxy defender Maya Yoshida said of Yamane. “Many things are new for him. For him, it’s hard, but it’s good to be fresh after a long time in J-League with the same club. Everything is new for him.”
Yoshida, who is also Japanese, left Japan early his professional career and played in several stops in Europe before joining the Galaxy. Yamane, 30, spent his entire career in Japan, debuting with Shonan Bellmare in 2016, before making the move.
As the Galaxy (5-2-3, 18 points) heads into Seattle for a second meeting with the Sounders (2-5-3, 9 points), Yamane has played nine of the 10 games.
“I think he came in super aggressive and was flying, trusting his instincts in the game. I thought he got off to a great start,” Galaxy coach Greg Vanney said. “I think as a couple of things have sort of happened on his side, I think he feels responsible for a couple of situations that has made him maybe a touch passive in a few games.
“We want him to not worry about the things that have happened and trust himself.”
Vanney pointed to the penalty kick that Yamane gave up in the 2-1 loss to LAFC on April 6 as one of those instances that have affected Yamane.
“He takes that hard because that becomes a goal against us and then we lose the game,” Vanney said. “We’ve had a couple of set pieces where near-post space was won (by the opposition) and he’s supposed to control the near-post space.
“He takes that hard, I think it’s more emotionally … the league is challenging, there’s going to be challenges, not everything is going to perfect and it’s being able to get beyond that. I want to move forward, you can’t change anything in the past. You have a better chance in our…
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