Japan put in an impressive performance against the Netherlands in their opening fixture, and the 89th-minute equaliser from Daichi Kamada was fully deserved.
They remained compact in central areas and were able to restrict the Netherlands to only a handful of shooting opportunities, and goalkeeper Zion Suzuki was effective whenever he was called into action. Even without Wataru Endo and Kaoru Mitoma, Japan have a strong and well-organised side who work well together, and it would not be a surprise to see them make it far at this World Cup.
By contrast, Tunisia were dealt a humbling 5-1 defeat by Sweden last time out, making multiple costly individual errors that led directly to goals. They were all over the place defensively, which Japan will be able to exploit.