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Kawasaki Frontale vs Tokyo Verdy Preview | J1 Matchday 15 — When the Goals Will Come, and Why It Matters

By JPick Data Team Published: May 5, 2026 14:00 JST J1 League Matchday 15 | Kawasaki Todoroki Stadium | Kickoff: Wednesday, May 6, 2026 17:00 JST


Kawasaki Frontale head into Wednesday's home fixture having conceded in every one of their last seven matches. Tokyo Verdy, meanwhile, have scored 12 of their 16 away goals after half-time — a 75% second-half rate that puts them on a collision course with the exact period in which Kawasaki's defense has been most vulnerable. A look at the goal-timing data reveals exactly where this game will be decided.

Key Takeaways

  • Kawasaki have conceded 52% of their total goals in the 31-60 minute window — the period when Tokyo Verdy begin to exert pressure in away matches
  • Tokyo Verdy's away goals skew heavily to the final third of matches: nine of 16 (56%) arrive after the 61st minute
  • Kawasaki's record when scoring first in the first half is perfect — three games, three wins. The first-half scoreline is the game's decisive variable

Recent Form

Kawasaki Frontale (10th, 15 pts): L-W-W-L-L (last 5: 2W 0D 3L) Tokyo Verdy (5th, 18 pts): L-L-W-W-W (last 5: 3W 0D 2L)

Kawasaki are 5-0-6 through 11 matches, with three wins and three losses at home. Their home goal difference stands at −4 (11 scored, 15 conceded) and they are on a two-match losing streak. Tokyo Verdy, at 6-0-4 in 10 games, sit fifth and have won three straight — they have scored in four consecutive matches. Their away form (1-0-3) is shakier, but the underlying trend in those four games points toward competitive performances that have simply come unraveled early.


The Key Battleground — Where Does Kawasaki Concede, and Where Does Verdy Score Away?

JPick data shows Kawasaki Frontale have scored eight goals in the first half of matches this season, while conceding 11 in the same window. The real concern is what happens around the break: seven goals conceded in the 31-45 minute stretch (28% of all conceded) and a further six in 46-60 (24%). In a roughly 30-minute block either side of half-time, Kawasaki have shipped 52% of the 25 goals they've let in.

Tokyo Verdy's away pattern runs counter to this. They've scored just four goals in the first half of away games, compared to 12 after the break. That second-half total is spread across three escalating windows: three goals between 46-60, four between 61-75, and five in the 76-90 — Verdy get progressively more dangerous as matches wear on.

The overlap isn't subtle. The period where Kawasaki most frequently concede (31-60 minutes) coincides with where Verdy begin to click in away games. This structural mismatch around the interval is where Wednesday's match will likely be won or lost.

Kawasaki's game-state data only reinforces this dynamic. When they have led at half-time, they have won all three such matches. When they have conceded before the break, they have lost both times. Whether the first 45 minutes end in Kawasaki's favor has, in practice, determined the outcome of their games. Tokyo Verdy face a mirror-image constraint on the other end: in away matches where they've conceded first, they've lost four times out of five.


Who Are the Key Players for Kawasaki vs Tokyo Verdy?

Kawasaki Frontale: Erison (FW)

The Brazilian striker leads Kawasaki's scoring with five goals from seven appearances in JPick data. He's the focal point of an attack that has gone scoreless in five separate matches, which underlines just how much Kawasaki's output depends on him clicking. Five of Kawasaki's season goals have come between 0-15 minutes — if Erison is the early catalyst, it suits the structure Kawasaki need.

Kawasaki Frontale: Taito Wakizaka (MF)

Three goals and two assists from seven appearances make Wakizaka the most influential player in Kawasaki's midfield by output. He links the build-up and the finish; his ability to drag the game's tempo toward Kawasaki in the opening phase is what makes a first-half lead possible.

Tokyo Verdy: Yuito Someno (FW)

Three goals and an assist across six appearances puts Someno level with the team's top-scoring output. He's the most likely finisher when Verdy's late-game pressure eventually yields chances. In an away game that Verdy expect to be decided in the final 30 minutes, Someno is the end product of that plan.

Tokyo Verdy: Koki Morita (MF)

The midfielder with three assists from eight appearances — Tokyo Verdy's top provider. The combination of Morita creating and Someno finishing is the mechanism behind Verdy's away goals surge. If Kawasaki's defense holds up for 60 minutes, this partnership is the most likely threat to unravel it.


Go Deeper with JPick

The JPick app tracks Player Impact Score (PI) — a proprietary metric measuring each player's influence on their team's points per game and expected goal differential when on versus off the pitch. For this fixture, Kawasaki's attacking dependence on key individuals and Verdy's second-half surge patterns are both visible in the full PI breakdown available to Pro subscribers.


Head-to-Head — What Is the History Between Kawasaki and Verdy?

JPick's database (J1 fixtures from 2022 onward) shows no recorded meetings between the two clubs. Tokyo Verdy returned to the top flight in 2024 after an extended absence, meaning league encounters at this level are effectively new ground. This matchday provides the data points that will start building that history.


How Could This Match Play Out?

Standings projection (JPick simulation, accounting for other Matchday 15 results):

  • Kawasaki win: Kawasaki climb to 18 pts (6th), Verdy remain 5th on 18 pts
  • Draw: Kawasaki reach 16 pts (6th), Verdy move to 19 pts (4th)
  • Verdy win: Kawasaki stay at 15 pts (10th), Verdy jump to 21 pts (4th)

The tactical objectives for both sides are clear-cut. Kawasaki need the first 45 minutes to go their way — score first, protect it, repeat the pattern that has produced three wins from three when leading at half-time. Tokyo Verdy want the opposite: a goalless or low-scoring first half that keeps the game open, so their second-half engine can engage.

The complicating factor is the seven-match conceding streak. Kawasaki haven't kept a clean sheet in over two months of league football, and Verdy's attack, though slow-starting in away games, has produced in every game of that four-match scoring run. Whatever happens in the opening phase, there are strong data reasons to expect goals.


Follow the Data on JPick

The JPick app tracks real-time standings shifts, time-of-goal distributions, and match-by-match impact scores for every J1 player. This fixture's data will update after the final whistle — a useful moment to check how the pre-match patterns held up.


Data analysis: JPick — Your data-first guide to J.League.