It is difficult to comprehend what the Japan gameplan was on Sunday as they took on Costa Rica at Ahmad bin Ali Stadium in the FIFA World Cup.
The most logical explanation is that they were intent on lulling the opposition into a false sense of security.
That is the only way to comprehend an abjectly-pedestrian first-half display — from both parties, to be fair — that would have left the 41,479 present wondering what all the fuss about a World Cup was about.
But Japan were the bigger culprits to blame for the sheer dreariness. They had just claimed a massive come-from-behind 2-1 win over Germany four days ago, coming into a game against opponents who had been thrashed 7-0 by Spain and knowing that victory would almost guarantee them a place in the Round of 16.
For all the possession they boasted, they hardly looked interested in finding an alternate route to goal when the repeated wing-play failed to reap the desired results.
And even if the gameplan had indeed been to bore Costa Rica into submission (it obviously wasn’t), the big problem?
Japan ended up putting themselves to sleep, and ultimately were hit with the archetypal sucker punch when Keysher Fuller pounced on a defensive lapse with nine minutes remaining to score and hand the Costa Ricans a 1-0 triumph.
So after all the good work they achieved by beating Germany, plenty of that has been undone and the Japanese now have the unenviable task of needing a result against Spain on Thursday if they are to advance into the knockout round.
The players will certainly have to hold their hands up for a display that desperately lacked urgency and invention.
Still, Japan coach Hajime Moriyasu has to shoulder the main responsibility with some peculiar team selections.
Firstly, he opted to make five changes to the XI that started against Germany with three in attack, as Ritsu Doan, Ayase Ueda and Yuki Soma came in for Takefusa Kubo, Daizen Maeda and Junya Ito.
Promoting Doan off the bench was understandable given he had bagged the equaliser against Germany as a substitute, yet the inclusion of Ueda and Soma — both with less than ten caps to their names respectively — was more difficult to rationalise, especially with the likes of Kaoru Mitoma, Takuma Asano and Takumi Minamino waiting in the wings.