KUALA LUMPUR – National hockey coach Brendon Carolan delivered a blunt assessment of Malaysia’s performance after the Speedy Tigers squandered an early advantage to fall 4-1 to Japan in their Nations Cup Group A clash at the Hartleyvale Hockey Stadium in Cape Town on Friday.
The defeat leaves the world number 14 side on three points from two matches, following their 5-2 opening win over Scotland on June 11.
Carolan made no attempt to soften the disappointment, particularly after a bright opening that saw Malaysia take the lead.
“We wanted to continue playing well, like how we started against Scotland. Our performance against Japan wasn’t good enough,” Carolan told Scoop when contacted.
“We were defensively disappointing by conceding some soft goals and, obviously, some soft penalty-corner set-pieces.
“All we can do is play better in the next match. We want to make sure we get full points against New Zealand.
“I think we will get back on track in a couple of days with a good recovery period. We’ll go through the video to be factual about what went wrong in the match.
“We have to deal with the good and the bad, and try to help our players get back on track.”
Malaysia started strongly when veteran forward Faizal Saari struck in the fourth minute to give the Speedy Tigers an early boost.
However, Japan steadily took control, capitalising on defensive errors to turn the match around before the break.
Hyota Yamada equalised in the 26th minute through a penalty corner, before Kazumasa Matsumoto put Japan ahead just three minutes later with a field goal.
The Japanese dominance continued after half-time, with Tsubasa Tanaka extending the lead in the 50th minute, before Raiki Fujishima added a fourth from a penalty corner in the 55th minute to complete the win.
It marked another painful result for Malaysia against Japan, who had also edged the Speedy Tigers 5-4 in the third-place play-off of the World Cup qualifiers in Ismailia, Egypt, in March.
Statistics underlined Japan’s superiority, as they earned five penalty corners and converted two, while Malaysia failed to win a single penalty corner throughout the match.
Despite the defeat, there was a personal milestone for captain Marhan Jalil, who became the first Malaysian hockey player to reach 350 international caps.
Malaysia’s route to the semi-finals has now become significantly more difficult, with Carolan’s side likely needing positive results against defending champions New Zealand on Tuesday and South Korea on Wednesday to stay in contention for a top-two finish in the group. – June 14, 2026

