O-soji, the life philosophy behind Japanese fans cleaning up trash at 2026 World Cup stadiums
Japan make their debut Sunday against the Netherlands. Japanese fans already left an incredible image of civic behavior at Qatar 2022.
After Japan’s opening match at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, a moment far from the pitch stole the spotlight. The team had just stunned Germany with a 2–1 comeback win, and the locker room erupted in the kind of wild celebration you’d expect after toppling a soccer giant. Photos of the chaos — gear everywhere, players shouting in pure joy — spread across the world.
But what happened next made an even bigger impression.
When Japan’s delegation left the Khalifa International Stadium, stadium staff walked into a spotless locker room. Everything was neatly arranged, trash removed, floors mopped clean... it was spotless, as if the celebrations hadn’t even happened at all. In a sports world where post‑game messes are practically a given, the gesture felt extraordinary.
Leaving a place exactly as you find it
What Japan performed wasn’t just tidiness. It was O‑soji, or “The Great Clean‑Up,” a cultural ritual typically done at the end of the year — and after meaningful moments — to clear out physical and mental clutter and symbolically close a chapter.
The Japanese team repeated the ritual after every match in Qatar, win, lose or draw. Their fans joined in too, picking up trash in the stands, bagging it up and disposing of it. And with it, earning global admiration for their respect and discipline.
That tradition is set to cross borders again today.
Japan opens its tournament run in Arlington, Texas, facing the Netherlands — one of the favorites to contend for the title.
Whether Japan wins, loses, or draws against Ronald Koeman’s squad, one thing’s for sure: both the players and their supporters will leave the AT&T Stadium’s locker rooms and stands as immaculate as they found them. Moments like these remind the world that sometimes soccer — and even the World Cup — is only part of the story.
Projected starting lineups
Netherlands: Verbruggen; Dumfries, Van Dijk, Van de Ven, Van Hecke; Gravenberch, De Jong, Reijnders; Summerville, Malen, Gakpo.
Japan: Suzuki; Ito, Tomiyasu, Watanabe; Doan, Sano, Kamada, Nakamura; J. Ito, Ueda, Kubo.
Referee: Ismael Elfath
Kickoff: 10:00 PM ET Stadium: AT&T Stadium, Dallas
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