SOU revisits special international bond in spring football game

Raiders sophomore running back Gunner Yates makes a leap for a touchdown in the first quarter of the Raiders 54-24 win over Kwansei Gakuin University in Ashland Saturday. Photo by Bob Palermini
May 5, 2024

Yates totals five touchdowns as Raiders top Japan’s Kwansei Gakuin in first Mills Bowl meeting since 1988

By Joe Zochert, Rogue Valley Times

For the past 36 years, it is safe to say how understated and not talked about enough how the Southern Oregon University football team has played a key role in developing football internationally.

On Saturday night at Raider Stadium, the Raiders got a chance to put that attention in focus once again during a 54-24 victory over Kwansei Gakuin University from Nishinomiya, Japan, in the fourth installment between the two programs.

The connection between the Raiders and the Fighters is traced back to the 1980s when Chuck Mills, a SOU Hall of Fame football coach, booked a trip for the Raiders to Japan just like how he took his Utah State and Wake Forest teams a decade earlier before he moved to Ashland.

Kwansei Gakuin University players get ready to face the Southern Oregon University Raiders in Ashland Saturday evening. Photo by Bob Palermini

Mills continued the tradition with the Raiders during his tenure, making a first trip to Japan in 1985 — winning 49-24 — before losing 27-9 in another visit in 1988. In between, Kwansei Gakuin came to Ashland in 1986 as the first Japanese team to play football on US soil, with that game ending in a 21-17 SOU victory.

Before Raiders head coach Berk Brown took the helm of the program, former SOU coach Charlie Hall laid the groundwork to bring the Fighters — who have won six national titles in a row — back to the states to revive this tradition from its long hibernation.

Rei Nagai (45), a senior linebacker for the Kwansei Gakuin University Fighters, gives his team a pep talk before their game against Southern Oregon University Saturday in Ashland. Photo by Bob Palermini

“I’m so appreciative that (coach Hall) brought this back,” said Brown. “He did a lot of the leg work and I just coached in it and organized a lot of things leading up to it. But it was really coach Hall that got things going and I’m so glad he did.”

“When I heard about the game, I did a lot of research on Japan and American football in Japan and coach Mills,” he added. “It shocked me to hear that over 200 colleges are playing football in Japan. That’s a big deal, and this is the best of the best of them.”

Kwansei Gakuin head coach Kazuki Omura talks to his team before the start of the fourth edition of the Mills Bowl, a series that started in 1985. Photo by Bob Palermini

Southern Oregon isn’t the only team with special international ties. The Ashland high school football team takes part every few years in game called the Pacific Rim Bowl featuring an all-star team of Japanese football players.

When Kwansei Gakuin arrived at the Southern Oregon campus, there was a special connection between both teams despite the language barrier.

Kwansei Gakuin wide receiver Taro Igarashi can’t hold on to a pass in the first quarter of Saturday’s game against the SOU Raiders. Photo by Bob Palermini

Sports is a universal language that quickly bonded both sides at a joint breakfast on Wednesday and a combined team practice leading up to the game, consisting of 7-on-7 games and 1-on-1 drills.

From that practice, Raiders running back Gunner Yates could see how different the styles that the teams played, with the Fighters emphasizing speed and more movement in the backfield on handoffs and fakes that could cause some neck pain to keep track of at each turn.

“That was unique,” Yates said. “I’ve never seen anything like that. But it was definitely new and it was fun to play against them and practice different styles that we have never seen in offense or defense before. It’s pretty cool.”

“They’re moving a lot of crosses and they’re just so quick and there’s so many movements, it’s definitely new,” he added. 

Even with the differences, similarities were abundant in a game that did not count statistics or add to wins or losses. Both boasted great running backs in Yates for Southern Oregon and Shoei Itami of Kwansei Gakuin.

The counterparts put out great games, with Yates scoring four rushing touchdowns — three in the first quarter — including a 48-yard run that had him juking around defenders.

Trevor Jaasko, Raiders sophomore wide receiver, makes a catch early in the game against Kwansei Gakuin University. Photo by Bob Palermini

The sophomore also received a 32-yard TD pass from Brennan Stults in the third quarter to build a 44-24 lead. Yates recorded 14 carries for 145 yards and tallied 50 receiving yards on three catches.

“It was just awesome,” Yates said about finishing spring training on a high note. “Just being able to work. We’ve put it in in the offseason. It finally came into full swing and my O-line just made it so easy.”

Fighters running back Itami finished with 103 rushing yards on 11 attempts and caught his lone reception for 42 yards.

Fighter running back Shoei Itami fumbled for a turnover in the first series of the Mills Bowl Saturday. Photo by Bob Palermini

“(Itami) could start for any Frontier team,” Brown said of the Raiders’ NAIA conference. “He is a special player. When he and a guy like Yates get in open space, that’s dangerous for any defense.”

It was also a perfect way for the Raiders to cap the offseason with a spring game against another team, instead of a team scrimmage.

Fighters fans cheered for the Kwansei Gakuin University team from the bleachers at Raider Stadium Saturday. Photo by Bob Palermini

Brown was excited to see his team clash styles with KGU, with great passing, efficient rushes and smart clock management.

Stults threw for three touchdowns for the Raiders on 9-for-10 passing for 122 yards.

Wide receiver Ted Wickman had only two catches in the game but both went for scores, with a 7-yard touchdown in the second quarter and a 23-yard TD reception to close out the final frame.

A SOU cheerleader supports her team in the rain Saturday evening in Ashland. Photo by Bob Palermini

During the spring game, Brown could see how the competitiveness, passion and effort needed to play football are things easily translatable and that you know it when you see it.

“I think one of the coolest things that I learned is that it doesn’t matter if you’re from Ashland, Oregon, or from Japan. If you’re a football player, you’re a football player,” said Brown. “We all do this because we love it so much.”

Kwansei Gakuin head coach Kazuki Omura watches his team in the second half of the Mills Bowl Saturday. Photo by Bob Palermini

“Whether you’re a coach, whether you’re a player, no one on this field tonight was earning a full-ride scholarship,” added the coach. “They do it for the purest reason, which is for the sheer love of the game. And you can just see it on their guy’s face, you can see it on our guy’s face — just relishing the opportunity to play against each other.”

There is hope that it won’t take another 36 years for the two teams to meet again. Brown noted that he hopes to get the fundraising to send a future Raiders team out to Japan to extend coach Mills’ legacy for international football.

Mills, who coached at SOU from 1980-88, is considered the “Father of American Football” in Japan. The Heisman Trophy equivalent there is called the Mills Trophy.

Kwansei Gakuin University quarterback Shuta Hoshino (2) celebrates a touchdown in the third quarter. Photo by Bob Palermini

Kwansei Gakuin 7 10 7 0 — 24

Southern Oregon 20 10 14 10 — 54

SOU — Yates 9 run (Batres kick)

SOU — Yates 48 run (kick failed)

KG — Igarashi 8 yard pass from Hoshino (Onishi kick)

SOU — Yates 2 run (Batres kick)

KG — Sawai 1 run (Onishi kick)

KG — FG Onishi 47

SOU’s Gunner Yates rushes for a gain in the Miller Bowl in Ashland Saturday. Photo by Bob Palermini

SOU — FG Batres 34

SOU — Wickman 7 pass from Stults (Batres kick)

SOU — Yates 8 run (Batres kick)

KG — Hoshino 2 run (Onishi kick)

SOU — Yates 32 pass from Stults (Batres kick)

SOU — Wickman 23 pass from Stults (Batres kick)

SOU — FG Batres 30

Reach reporter Joe Zochert at jzochert@rv-times.com. This story first appeared in the Rogue Valley Times.

Senior tight end Ted Wickman (47) celebrates his Raider touchdown with teammates. Photo by Bob Palermini
Picture of Bert Etling

Bert Etling

Bert Etling is the executive editor of Ashland.news. Email him at betling@ashland.news.

Related Posts...

Our Sponsors

Latest posts

Test

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nunc lobortis enim non odio vulputate, sit amet dapibus ligula dictum. Proin consectetur fringilla dapibus. Pellentesque et dolor iaculis, ullamcorper turpis faucibus,

Read More >

Ask Strider: Advice for big brothers

Ask Strider: A worried older brother asks our advice columnist’s advice. And a dog’s guardian wants to know if there is any hope getting their hat-hating dog to calm down. As always, Strider tries to give words that help!

Read More >

Our Sponsors

Ashland Climate Collaborative Sreets for Everyone Ashland Oregon
Ashland.news Classifieds Ashland Talent Phoenix Medford Oregon
Pronto Printing Ashland Medford Southern Oregon

Explore More...

This week's theme: bicycle shops, services and routes. Solve it in your browser or download and print. Next Friday's Crossword: OSF's Secret Season #03
This week's theme: four hidden tribes who had to leave our area, in recognition of Indigenous Peoples' Day. Solve it in your browser or download and print. Next Friday's crossword: Enjoy the Ride #03
This week's theme shakes things up for International Shakeout Day, Oct. 16th. Solve it in your browser or download and print. Next Friday's crossword: First Settlers #02
After a successful production of  “The Vagina Monologues” and raising more than $2,000 for Planned Parenthood of Southwestern Oregon, Ashland actor and director Lia Dugal intends for “The Climate Monologues” to premiere in Oregon in late 2025 or early 2026 at the Bellview Grange in Ashland.

Don't Miss Our Top Stories

Get our newsletter delivered to your inbox three times a week.
It’s FREE and you can cancel anytime.

ashland.news logo

Subscribe to the newsletter and get local news sent directly to your inbox.

(It’s free)