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アオアシ
412
40
Finished
Jan 5, 2015 to Jun 23, 2025
7.8/10
Average Review Score
75%
Recommend It
4
Reviews Worldwide
Basic premise The premise of Aoashi is simple. Ashito Aoi, a third year middle school student from Ehime loves football. He is very passionate about the game and we can immediately grasp onto that. He has a raw, street-level understanding of football. After one of his games he meets Fukuda Tatsuya, a J Youth League coach who invites him to Tokyo for tryouts where he’s thrust into a world where technique, discipline, and tactical thinking matter just as much as passion. Meaning of the name "Aoashi" The name "Ao Ashi" (アオアシ) is a combination of two Japanese words: "Ao" (アオ / 青) – This means blue, often symbolizing youth,growth, or even the color of the Japanese national football team (the “Blue Samurai”). "Ashi" (アシ / 足) – This means foot or leg, clearly referencing football (soccer). Meaning of the name "Aoi Ashito" 葦 (Ashi) — This kanji means “reed”, a plant that grows in wetlands. Reeds are known for being flexible, resilient, and capable of growing in tough conditions. Symbolically, it can represent someone who adapts and grows despite adversity — just like Ashito's journey in the manga. 人 (To / Hito) — Literally means “person” or “human.” "Aoi Ashito" as a name carries the message of “A young, adaptable person with potential to grow and thrive in tough conditions, like a reed under a blue sky.” Ashito's Character Ashito, much like a reed, starts off as someone raw and unrefined, but he bends, learns, and grows with time. He’s not naturally elite, but thrives through adaptability, learning, and effort. His name reflects the theme of growth that is central to Ao Ashi. Ashito is refreshingly flawed, a protagonist who often fails, reflects, and adapts. He’s emotional, impulsive, and arrogant at times, but watching him evolve is deeply satisfying. He is a determined teenager who plays for his passion of the game. But as the series progresses he realises that his recklessness is what's holding him and his teammates back. I really enjoyed the growth of his character because him in the early chapters and him in the later chapters are very different. He learned to adapt and grow his game. Characters Now let's talk about some other characters in this series. In pure honesty I feel this series has one of the best cast of characters. What stands out is how the manga gives attention to every player, not just the MC, building a full, believable team. It is not only Ashito that is trying to go pro there are several others who share the same dream as him. Not only his teammates even people not involved in the game are very interesting characters. In Aoashi it is not like everyone is gonna see sunshine. You could be cheering for one but he may still be on the bench in the final saga of the manga. Every character has their own motivation for their dreams. It's not only Ashito that we are following we are following various individuals towards their future. Some of my favourite moments of this series has been the stories of these characters who make this series what it is. They are pillars who support this series. Football and realism Now Aoashi shows the real game of football. It explains the tactics the rules the plays the formations the position and everything you can ask from a football series. It breaks down the sport technically and mentally, highlighting: • How formations work • The importance of spatial awareness • The grind of Japan’s youth academy system Me myself as a football fan and who casual plays football I really appreciate it. You can pick up the argument that Aoashi is slow because they dive deep into all these tactics and plays, but that is what made Aoashi superior for me. All the tactics and the plays the thoughts of players and all the real world references that this series has made me enjoy it so much more then I thought I would. This is what made me appreciate it even more. It’s less about “crazy powers” and more about real-world strategy and development, making it a great read for football enthusiasts. Art The art of Aoashi is pretty good in the beginning but as the series progresses the art progresses as well. Tactical plays and positioning are often illustrated from a bird’s-eye view, a smart choice for a series focused on strategy. What makes it beautiful Aoashi is beautiful because it tells a story rooted in realism, growth, and emotional depth. Instead of relying on over-the-top powers or flashy action, it focuses on the tactical and mental aspects of football. The kind that demands discipline, awareness, and teamwork. Ashito’s journey isn’t about instant greatness, it’s about failure, learning, and slowly evolving into someone who truly understands the game and his place within a team. That grounded, honest progression makes every small success feel earned and deeply satisfying. What elevates Aoashi is how human it feels. Every character not just the protagonist is given space to grow, doubt, and rise again. It shows that football isn’t just a sport but a test of character, vision, and resilience. Through quiet struggles, emotional setbacks, and the relentless pursuit of improvement, Aoashi becomes more than a sports manga, it becomes a heartfelt story about chasing dreams the hard way, and finding beauty in the process.
To the world stage! Glory and ambition lie ahead of young Ashito Aoi as he takes the first steps to becoming a pro soccer player. But after being catapulted into a new harsh environment, can he hold onto his spider's thread and climb his way to the top? A fateful encounter on Futami Beach in Ehime, Japan leads to the meeting between Fukuda Tatsuya; once a rising star and a player on the cusp of greatness whose career ended all too soon, and Aoi Ashito; a brash and hot-headed striker who loves soccer despite his selfish tendencies. After being selected to try out for the Tokyo City Esperion Youth club, Ashito Aoi stakes his future on the chance to create a better life for his single mother and older brother, all while realizing his own shortcomings and dealing with the highly competitive world of J-Youth Soccer. (Source: Titan Manga)
Ao Ashi is a story about understanding a person's limitations vis-a-vis the world around them, about how people's experiences to their home countries overlap with their experiences with their immediate social circles. It tells a story about players struggling to contrast belonging to a rising footballing power - albeit by no means a leading one globally - with their own sense of ambition, and negotiating between wanting to rise and prioritize ambition - even if it means risking the alienation that puts a sense of distance between you and others - and alternatively staying back home and reforming what you can, even if itmeans you can't rise as highly as you'd otherwise want. Ashito is the embodiment of this central conflict the series puts forward, being a rash, impulsive man that puts himself ahead of his team. He's crude, violent and acts first, thinks second which both pushes him forward as a striker yet limits both his potential personal growth as well as his growth as a player, to say nothing of stunting his teammates' growth. This single-minded obsession with getting better without relying on others foreshadows his main flaw - which ties directly to the series' themes. The danger of forgetting what ground he stood on, that even brought him to the spot he's at, is highlighted over and over again in specific arcs, with several characters highlighted as foils to flesh this theme fully; this includes arguably the deuteragonist of the story in Fukuda as a negative example whose arc has concluded, Kuribayashi as an interesting positive example for appearing obsessed purely with ambition but taking others around him seriously and Akutsu for presenting an example of someone that saw football as a chance to reset the horrible ground he stood on, yet continues to live by the shadow of that regardless. Arguably equally important to Ao Ashi as a story is the core appeal of football as not just a sport but as a means of causing, escaping and empathizing with the pain of others. Central to this particular theme's focus is Ashito and Akutsu's dynamic, who share the commonality of coming from impoverished backgrounds that saw in football a means of living lives they otherwise couldn't have, Tripone's arc seeing in football as a means of escaping racial prejudice, and perhaps most importantly Hana's arc, which is about as much as recovering from the trauma of watching the person she admired most cataclysmically fail and making sure Ashito doesn't make the same mistakes as well as enjoying football as a sport in spite of the sport causing and likely continuing to cause into the future personal pain in her own life. Her romantic dynamic with Ashito is simultaneously messy but also charming specifically because both characters to an extent see through each other later on in the story, which in spite of slapstick humor being used as a fairly predictable trope early on also grounds a certain nuance in that dynamic; interactions where the two speak heart to heart, and others where they don't speak much feel natural, almost comforting at times. Plenty of side characters are also really damn well developed; a few examples were already previously highlighted, but Yuuma, Togashi, Anri, Nozomi and Shiba come to mind. Characters receive focus and exit the narrative frequently certainly (which is narratively justified considering the nature of the sport and how youth football works), but it's honestly somewhat astounding by the end to look back and realize just how many characters there were and how many were meaningfully developed past standard tropes. The series handles dialogue between the cast very well; characters feel relevant to the scenes they're in and the series abandons attempting to flesh out Esperion as a club member by member in favor of a personal journey developing characters as they struggle through Esperion's journey as a club and what it even means to play the sport. Some characters choose the comfort of what they know, others opt for a reformist approach to improve the system they're in, yet others aspire to go abroad to one day return and improve the system they're in and others yet finally want to self-improve because being talented at the sport is all they know. The series handles all these differing perspectives and how different characters feel about them in a way I'd say is nuanced, never saying one approach or the other is more or less correct...so long as characters never forget to appreciate on the ground they once stood on. Despite the story being largely centered on youth football with only a minority of the story focused on professional football, I think the series highlights just how massive the world of football is to everyone in it; there's always someone better, nobody's perfect, and you have to simultaneously live with that without slipping into negative nihilism and decline, a struggle that eternally prods at the cast as they grow as players. Perhaps Ao Ashi's strongest strength is not just its humanization of its cast, but also its humanization of football as a sport; the series is chalk full of references and emphasizes the global appeal of the sport in a way that's easily understandable, from players being referenced to sports journalism being a pretty interesting subplot to how youth football works as an institution and how it differs from country to country. It does a damn good job showing off football as a uniting force, viciously criticizes ethnic and racial essentialism and showing off how social circles around the sport work. The series is certainly persistent in what it wants to say about the sport bringing people together and yet it works because its earnest and straightforward about it wants to say. Yuugo Kobayashi is an honestly fantastic artist and I adore how this series aesthetically looks; there's some really clever uses of ink as a means of emphasizing narrative moments, and a pleasant grittiness to the way the series carries itself, from a lot of characters' messy hair to the tenderness of romantic moments between Hana and Ashito to the strong use of visual metaphor, with a specific use partway through the story standing out. I don't have much to complain about the writing either, which improves gradually as the series progresses. His writing works well for the emotionally charged journey Ao Ashi is and the paneling is often incredibly impactful, especially when used to convey physicality; I look forward to whatever his next work is and hope he takes pride in his work here. Ao Ashi is the best football manga manga's produced that I have read to date, and one of the best sports series in general. It struck a chord with me both as a football fan and as someone that adores this medium, so much so that I've reread it since its completion, and my mind still occasionally drifts back to what it's trying to say as a story. It's one of my favorite manga ever, and I cannot recommend it highly enough. Thank you to anyone and everyone that read this review, any and all feedback would be appreciated.
Greatest piece of fiction From the dynamics, plot, characters, story, romance, everything was amazing this may be bias but this is the greatest piece of fiction to grace this planet and I will die on this hill Although it had an open ending which isn't my favourite thing ever, the conclusion before the last chapter was beautiful. There was a good build up for the ending as we can see Aoi growing as a player and understanding what kind of player he really wants to be after training with the senior team, the Barca match with Aoi pushing his potential, and in the end when a yeargoes by and the kids from the academy coming from middle school recognizing him and wanting to be like him. the ending with Aoi looking at the the crow in the sky and Fukuda saying "I''ll take you the world." locking eyes with Aoi as we was talking to the new A-team Everything about this manga was amazing from beginning to finish the emotions I felt I have never felt with other mangas. It may be glaze or whatever but I fell in love with this manga finished in a couple days. Greatest piece of fiction
Since it's rated 8.7 on MAL, and it focuses on U-18 professional clubs rather than high school, I thought it would be similar to "Catenaccio" another such manga. But Aoi Ashito feels like he's written to make you like him, and feels too artificial and forced. And the writing itself is childish so I suspect that it will only find purchase among children. After 18 chapters, I do not care one iota about Ashito. He showed nothing of worth from Chapter 1, and if it weren't rated 8.7 on MAL, I would have dropped it after the first chapter. I usually end with a silver lining or mentionone good thing about the manga right about now, but... the art is mediocre, the story is infantile, and the characterization is poor. Honestly, this is such a mediocrity that if this were rated less than 7.2 I wouldn't even bother reviewing. Adults who are looking for football manga should try "Catenaccio" or "Giant Killing" instead.
