São Paulo
·14 Juni 2026
The Tricolor academy player who represented Japan

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsSão Paulo
·14 Juni 2026

São Paulo’s relationship with the World Cup does not involve only players who represented the Brazilian National Team, but also athletes who played for other countries. At the 1998 World Cup in France, Wagner Lopes, a player developed in São Paulo’s youth system and, at the time, a forward for Bellmare Hiratsuka, was one of Japan’s standout names in the tournament.

Born in Igaçaba, a district of Pedregulho in the state of São Paulo, on January 29, 1969, Wagner arrived at Tricolor at age 15, in August 1984, and soon showed himself to be a promising athlete, winning that year’s São Paulo state children’s championship. Unlike the other boys in his age group, he skipped steps and was never even registered for a Copa São Paulo de Juniores.
He made his professional debut on April 21, 1985, in a match played by the mixed squad—then nicknamed Expressinho—against Bragantino in Bragança Paulista (a 4–3 win for the home side), and quickly earned a place in the main squad, despite being given only limited opportunities on the field.
In total, he played 15 matches for the Morumbis club, with three wins, eight draws, four losses, and 1 goal scored: in the 2–1 defeat to Santo André on April 2, 1986. However, he left Tricolor with two titles on his résumé: Paulista Champion in 1985 and 1987. After saying goodbye to the team on May 31, 1987 (a 0–0 draw against Mogi Mirim at Morumbis), Wagner Lopes headed East.

— I come from a poor, humble family, my parents were farm workers, I have eight siblings and I’m the youngest. São Paulo gave me the chance to become a professional. At 18, Careca was the starter, an above-average player, someone we looked up to. I wanted to play, but he was much better. Dr. Juvenal Juvêncio told me to go to Japan for three years and then come back. I ended up staying 17.
The forward was loaned to Nissan Motors (now Yokohama F. Marinos) in Japan. In the fledgling Japanese football scene, he stood out tremendously, winning in a short period the Japanese championship (Japan Soccer League), the Japan Cup (JSL Cup), and the Emperor’s Cup—winning the latter twice in a row.
In 1990, he was loaned out again, this time to Hitachi (now Kashiwa Reysol). He was only granted a free transfer by Tricolor on February 25, 1993. In the Land of the Rising Sun, he would also play for Honda FC (1995), Bellmare Hiratsuka (now Shonan Bellmare, in 1997), Nagoya Grampus (1999), FC Tokyo (2001), and Avispa Fukuoka (where he retired, in 2002).
After so many years of work and residence in Japanese territory, Lopes obtained local citizenship in September 1997 and was then promptly called up to represent the Japanese national team, which was still competing in the qualifiers for the 1998 World Cup. He was a hugely important figure in the squad that, for the first time, earned the right to take part in the final stage of the competition, scoring three goals in six matches.
In France, Japan did not go very far. Wagner played in all three matches and provided the assist for Masashi Nakayama’s goal against Jamaica—the first in Japan’s World Cup history. Wearing the blue shirt, he also played in the 1999 Copa América (CONMEBOL things…), even scoring two goals. In total, he made 20 appearances and scored five goals for Japan.
Currently, Wagner Lopes, back in Brazil, is a coach and has already managed dozens of clubs, both here and in Japan (and even Indonesia!), and since 2025 has been in charge of Luverdense, from Mato Grosso.

Personal Archive
WAGNER LOPES (FW-1985)
This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇧🇷 here.







































