Tokyo Verdy vs Kashima Antlers Preview | J1 Matchday 13 — When the First-Half Press Meets the Second-Half Specialists
By JPick Data Team Published: April 28, 2026 16:30 JST J1 League Matchday 13 | Ajinomoto Stadium | Wednesday, April 29, 2026 — Kickoff 13:00 JST
League leaders Kashima (1st, 30 pts) — the only undefeated side in J1 with a perfect 10W–0D–0L record, 10 consecutive wins, and goals in every match — visit Ajinomoto Stadium to face Tokyo Verdy (10th, 12 pts). The 18-point gap in the standings is one story. JPick's data tells another: this fixture pits two teams whose match rhythms run in opposite directions. Kashima do their work in the first half. Verdy come alive after the break. The mismatch isn't in points — it's in tempo.
What the Data Says Heading In
- Kashima's anomaly: 10W–0D–0L on the season, 10 straight wins, scoring in every league match, with just 3 conceded goals across 10 games (8 clean sheets). 30% of their goals across all competitions come between 31–45 min (peak window).
- Verdy's second-half profile: 13 goals across all competitions — 2 in the first half, 11 in the second. They've lost 4 of 5 matches when trailing at halftime, with one comeback win.
- H2H: Verdy returned to J1 in 2024. Direct league meetings with Kashima in JPick's database (since 2020) are limited.
Recent Form
Verdy: L-W-L-L-W (Last 5: 2W 0D 3L | 12 pts | 10th | 8 played)
Kashima: W-W-W-W-W (Last 5: 5W 0D 0L | 30 pts | 1st | 10 played)
Through Matchday 12. Season totals: Verdy 4W–0D–4L, Kashima 10W–0D–0L (undefeated).
Kashima's First-Half Game vs Verdy's Second-Half Identity
Beneath the surface of their perfect record, Kashima are operating with a highly unusual match rhythm. Their 20 goals across all competitions concentrate at 31–45 minutes (6 goals, 30% — their peak window) and 76–90 minutes (7 goals, 35%). The pattern: open the game with measured pressure, strike late in the first half, then close it down in the final minutes. When leading at halftime (5 matches), they're 5W–0D–0L. They've also recorded a comeback win from a 1-match halftime trailing position. When scoring first (5 matches), it's 5W–0D–0L. They have not conceded the opening goal once this season.
The defensive numbers are equally historic. Kashima have shipped just three goals in 10 league matches, keeping eight clean sheets. When expanding the sample to all competitions (five goals conceded), a striking pattern emerges: 80% of those concessions come in the first half, with just one second-half goal allowed across the full season. They simply do not get turned over late in games.
Tokyo Verdy's match identity is the exact opposite. Of their 13 goals across all competitions, 11 (85%) have arrived after the break: 0–15 min (1), 16–30 min (1), 31–45 min (0) — the opening 45 minutes are practically silent. They've recovered to win one of five matches when trailing at halftime; the other four ended in defeat. Kashima's lead-and-protect style runs directly counter to Verdy's late-game model.
The Players Carrying Kashima's Streak
JPick's Player Impact Score (PI), which measures how team results shift when a player is on or off the pitch (scaled −100 to +100), points to Kyosuke Tagawa (FW, 26, PI +66, +0.81 PPG impact) as Kashima's primary attacker. His JPick Edge Score — the metric capturing recent performance acceleration — shows him at 1.6× his season-average baseline, a rare combination of high PI and rising Edge data.
Long-term anchors include Kimito Nono (PI +18, 30 games) and Ryotaro Araki (PI +16, +0.22 PPG impact). Gaku Shibasaki holds his own with a +0.82 contribution to expected goal difference, providing rhythm in midfield.
For Tokyo Verdy, the standout is Naoki Hayashi (PI +33, +0.35 PPG impact), the defensive central figure. In midfield, Kosuke Saito (PI +27, with a 40-match long-term sample, +0.28 xGD contribution) provides continuity. Daiki Fukazawa (PI +15, 30 games) rounds out a back-line that's built on long-sample, high-trust core players.
The data sets up the central question: can Verdy's defense suppress Tagawa and prevent the first-half score that triggers Kashima's typical match path? If Verdy reach halftime level, their second-half profile gives them a credible route. Concede in the first half, however, and the 4-from-5 halftime-trailing-loss pattern becomes the most likely outcome.
JPick app users can track Tagawa's Edge Score history, compare PI Scores between Hayashi and Saito match-by-match, and see the player-level data driving Kashima's 10-game perfect run.
Head-to-Head — Recent Meetings Between Verdy and Kashima
Because Verdy only returned to the top flight in 2024, there is very little modern J1 history between these two clubs. Today's matchup — defined by the "perfect run vs second-half identity" frame — is something close to a first-time data set.
For broader context, Ajinomoto Stadium itself has historical multi-year data (52 matches across 2020–23): home win rate 48%, draw 15%, away win 37%, average goals per game 2.71, both-teams-to-score 42%. The venue characteristics tilt slightly toward the home side — an environment in which Verdy's second-half model would, in theory, get the chance to function.
The Tactical Verdict
JPick's strength comparison: 37% Verdy vs 63% Kashima in attacking metrics, 43% vs 57% in current form. Against the only undefeated side in J1 — separated by 18 points in the standings — Verdy don't lead in any of the headline indicators. Their two structural advantages are limited to: their second-half scoring profile and the venue's slight home bias.
Standings simulation (JPick, this match only):
- If Verdy win: 15 pts (climb to 6th), Kashima stay 1st on 30
- If drawn: Verdy 13 pts (climb to 8th), Kashima 31 pts (1st)
- If Kashima win: Verdy stay on 12 (10th), Kashima 33 pts (extending top-of-table lead)
Final standings depend on concurrent results.
The tactical question for Wednesday is simple: where, if anywhere, does the league's only perfect side finally stumble? Kashima's track record of dictating in the first 45 runs counter to Verdy's late-game design. If the score is level at halftime, the match opens up. If Kashima can apply their typical pattern, the streak likely extends in form.
JPick app users can access Ajinomoto Stadium's venue trends, both squads' goal-timing heatmaps, and Edge Score risers' per-match performance data. Track whether Kashima's streak holds — or where it bends.
Dive deeper into every J.League match.