Japanese hoping home advantage yields Asian Champions League success
- Domestic league leaders Yokohama face Kobe on Thursday with the side led by Australian coach Kevin Muscat going into the clash in impressive form
- Kitchee are the first club from Hong Kong to reach the knockout rounds but will face a stiff challenge to progress further ahead of Friday’s clash with BG Pathum United

Japanese clubs will look to return to prominence when the Asian Champions League resumes on Thursday, with three J-League outfits among the eight teams remaining in the eastern side of the draw.
It has been four years since Kashima Antlers became the last side from Japan to win the title but at least one J-League outfit is guaranteed to feature in Saturday’s quarter-final draw.
Yokohama F Marinos, Urawa Red Diamonds and Vissel Kobe have been granted home advantage for the eastern half of the knockout rounds, with the last 16, quarter-finals and semi-finals all being played in Saitama, north of Tokyo, over the coming week.

Domestic league leaders Yokohama face Kobe on Thursday with the side led by Australian coach Kevin Muscat going into the clash in impressive form.
The former Melbourne Victory defender has rejuvenated the squad since taking over from Ange Postecoglou and Yokohama lead the J-League standings by five points with Kobe languishing in the relegation zone.
Ricardo Rodriguez’s Urawa, meanwhile, are looking at the continental scene for success after their domestic challenge failed to ignite.
The two-time Asian champions are bogged down in mid-table in the J-League and face a Johor Darul Ta’zim side on Friday that eliminated 2020 winners Ulsan Hyundai in the group phase.