Japanese fans stayed behind to clean their section of Dallas Stadium after Japan’s World Cup draw with the Netherlands.
Japanese soccer fans turned heads at the World Cup again, this time in Texas. After Japan’s 2-2 draw with the Netherlands at Dallas Stadium in Arlington on Sunday, supporters of the Samurai Blue stayed in their seats and cleaned up the trash before heading out. Photos and videos of the cleanup spread fast online and drew praise from fans around the world.
The match was a thriller, ending level at 2-2 in a Group F clash. Once the final whistle blew, though, many Japanese fans did not rush for the exits. They pulled out trash bags and collected bottles, food wrappers, and other litter left in the stands.
FOX 4 Dallas reporter Steven Dial, who was inside the stadium, said fans were continuing their tradition of cleaning up. One clip that went viral showed New York Giants quarterback Jameis Winston, who is covering the World Cup for FOX, pitching in to help pick up litter. FIFA shared footage of the effort on social media.
Why Japanese Fans Clean World Cup Stadiums
The habit starts young, and that is really the heart of it. The practice traces back to how children are raised in Japan, where students clean their own classrooms and hallways at school. Scott North, a sociology professor at Osaka University, told the BBC that cleaning up after matches is an extension of those basic behaviors learned in the classroom.
Koichi Nakano, who teaches politics and history at Sophia University, told The Associated Press that fans tidying stadiums are behaving much as they did when they learned to enjoy sports as schoolchildren, where the focus was on moral education as much as physical education. Barbara Holthus of the German Institute for Japanese Studies in Tokyo added that people in Japan are taught early not to inconvenience others. The idea is simple. You leave a place the way you found it, or cleaner.
The players live by the same code. Japan’s national team has a habit of leaving locker rooms spotless after matches, often with thank-you notes and folded origami cranes left behind.
Japan’s Stadium Cleaning Tradition Since 1998
This is not new. According to ESPN, the tradition first drew international notice at the 1998 World Cup in France. Japan went out in the group stage that year, but fans stayed to collect rubbish anyway and earned praise for it. The gesture has followed the team ever since.
At the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, supporters cleaned their section of Khalifa International Stadium after a stunning 2-1 win over Germany. They had even tidied up after the tournament opener between Qatar and Ecuador, a match Japan was not part of. The country’s football association handed out thousands of trash bags during that tournament, with thank-you messages printed on the outside.
Coaches have long treated it as routine. After the Germany match, then-coach Hajime Moriyasu said it was nothing special, just the culture they grew up with, the idea that you leave a place cleaner than before.
For some, the cleanup is a starting point for more. Volunteer Hirokazu Tsunoda has described picking up litter as a gateway to broader community service, including disaster relief work.

