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The Greatest Match in Sports Anime History

The greatest match in sports anime history isn’t Haikyuu’s Karasuno vs. Shiratorizawa. It’s the football version of the exact same match from a decade earlier: Eyeshield 21’s Shinryuuji vs. Deimon.

From pre-game to post-game, Eyeshield 21 took 9 episodes, one shy of Haikyuu’s 10. Both matches came in tournament games against the perennial regional champions. In order to move on to play against their fated rivals, they’d need to beat teams that were considered a class above their fated rivals. All the matches up to this point were won by flashes of brilliance barely edging out growing pains. That would no longer cut it. Everything would finally have to come together to pull off the upsets. These are the games that would evolve the teams from x-factors into legitimate contenders.

Haikyuu’s match was well-animated and got into the sport with interesting play and realistic detail. It did have some weaknesses, however:

  • Too many mid-match interruptions for character backstories
  • Being kind of gay (though not as gay as expected)
  • Only the ace and the blocker lived up to the Shiratorizawa hype
  • A few luck-based plays that were out of place in a serious match
  • Too much shit talking (in volleyball you taunt your opponents by cheering/celebrating, not by engaging them directly)

Eyeshield 21 handled the bulk of its character backstories before the match. It came before sports anime were legally required to be gay. The role-players made their presence felt. Each play was earned. The shit talking fit the sport. In addition, Eyeshield 21 gave us two of the all-time greatest moments in anime:

  • The ultimate comeback
  • The most satisfying faceplant ever

Will we ever see another team sports anime as good as Eyeshield 21? Probably not, since modern sports anime are less about sports and more about implied sodomy.

5 Replies to “The Greatest Match in Sports Anime History”

  1. After 9 episodes of Yuri on Ice, I am rather accustomed to gay. In fact, Yuri on Ice overall is the kind of gay that should be in anime more often instead of the obnoxious okama dudes bouncing around and generally molesting every male character in sight. Only real exception is Bentham Bon Clay, AKA Mr. 2. That guy was a man among men. I may check out Eyeshield since I’m convinced that I am a closeted sports anime fan. I thought Ippo would be boring when I first heard about it, but I watched it nearly 3 times already. Dia no Ace, Yowaimushi Pedal, DAYS, and now Yuri on Ice. I guess its time I came out and openly watch Haikyuu and Eyeshield. Just really embrace this thing.

    • Why do you hate expressions of gay pride?

      In all fairness, Ippo is the best sports anime ever. It just doesn’t qualify as a team sports anime.

      I’ve rarely seen a sports anime I didn’t like. The genre gets a bad rap for being formulaic, but the details of the specific sport more often than not overcome it.

      I just start watching All Out, expecting it not to be gay. Boy was I wrong…

  2. Where has the non-gay sports anime (H2, Touch, Cross Game) gone to? Where is my Mix adaption? Does no one appreciate Adachi Sensei anymore?

  3. “It came before sports anime were legally required to be gay.”
    Sports anime were legally required to be gay before anime.

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