The Knight in the Area

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The Knight in the Area
Area no Kishi 9.png
The ninth volume of the original Japanese release of The Knight in the Area released by Kodansha on February 18, 2008
エリアの騎士
(Eria no Kishi)
GenreSports
Manga
Written byHiroaki Igano
Illustrated byKaya Tsukiyama
Published byKodansha
MagazineWeekly Shōnen Magazine
DemographicShōnen
Original run20062017
Volumes57 (List of volumes)
Anime television series
Directed byHirofumi Ogura
Produced by
  • Motomichi Araki
  • Tomoharu Matsuhisa
Music by
StudioShin-Ei Animation
Original networkTV Asahi
Original run January 7, 2012 September 28, 2012
Episodes37 (List of episodes)
Wikipe-tan face.svg Anime and manga portal

The Knight in the Area (Japanese: エリアの騎士, Hepburn: Eria no Kishi) is a Japanese manga series written by Hiroaki Igano and illustrated by Kaya Tsukiyama. The series was adapted into an anime by Shin-Ei Animation and broadcast on TV Asahi starting from January 7, 2012[1] and finished on September 28, 2012.

Plot[]

Kakeru Aizawa is the younger brother to Suguru Aizawa, a soccer prodigy belonging to Japan's under–15 national team. Prior to the series, Kakeru quits his position as a forward after a traumatic experience prevented him from playing with his left leg and settles for a managerial position. After the two are hit by a truck, Suguru dies and has his heart transplanted into Kakeru. With it, Kakeru returns to soccer to achieve his brother's dream of winning the World Cup.

Characters[]

Kakeru Aizawa (逢沢 駆, Aizawa Kakeru)
Voiced by: Yūko Sanpei[2]
Suguru's younger brother. He plays as a forward. As a sixth grader, and after causing an injury on his friend and teammate Hibino by shooting hard the ball with his left foot, he becomes wary of using it which seriously hinders his ability to score and particularly his confidence, to the point that he seems to be unable to score. As a consequence, he starts to play less and less often and starts working more as assistant manager, to the exasperation of his brother, ace Suguru. Nonetheless, he keeps practicing soccer secretly in the park every night.
Things began to change as his childhood friend and old crush, Mishima Nana, returns to Japan one day and becomes the team's manager. Further, a mysterious masked man appears one night at the park and challenges him to play, which they keep doing every night. This motivates Kakeru to try again at the team, and in a practice match he is the only forward to be able to keep up with Suguru’s sudden and strong passes, but he fails to score because of his fear of using his left leg. Feeling disappointed he tells his brother he’ll give up on soccer just minutes before they’re both hit by a truck. After he recovers from the accident and from the heart transplant he received from his brother as his “last pass,” Kakeru discovers that he seems to have inherited some of Suguru’s skills and temperament, and that he can use his left leg again.
The masked man is revealed to be Nana, who’d been asked by Suguru to help Kakeru, and she reveals to him that his transplant came from his brother. After learning that and finding out that his brother’s dream was that both of them would win the World Cup he decides to return to soccer and make his brother’s dream reality.
Suguru Aizawa (逢沢 傑, Aizawa Suguru)
Voiced by: Jun Fukuyama, Motoko Kumai (child)[2]
Kakeru's older brother. Suguru was a genius midfielder and captain of the school soccer team, who even starred in the U-15 team for Japan. He was expected by many to shoulder the future of Japan's football world. He was aware of his little brother's talent as a soccer player and was irritated by Kakeru's lack of motivation. It is hinted in the manga that Suguru might have somehow predicted his own death, as he started having regular nightmares, which ended the day of his death. After hearing his brother's decision to give up on soccer, he's about to tell him about the great dream he had that morning, when both of them are run by a truck whose driver fell asleep. Suguru had the worse part, and it was soon obvious that he was beyond help. Knowing this and also that Kakeru would need a heart transplant to survive, the doctors and the family decide to have his heart transplanted to Kakeru, who accordingly dreams that Suguru is giving him a final pass. Giving his heart to Kakeru, he also gives him his dream of winning the world cup.
Nana Mishima (美島 奈々, Mishima Nana)
Voiced by: Shizuka Itō[2]
A childhood friend of Suguru and Kakeru, nicknamed Seven. Since returning from Los Angeles, she has become a manager, like Kakeru. She is skilled in soccer and has a relation to Kakeru.
Kota Nakatsuka (中塚公太, Nakatsuka Kouta)
Voiced by: Minoru Shiraishi[2]
Yusuke Saeki (佐伯祐介, Saeki Yusuke)
Voiced by: [2]
Mito Aizawa (逢沢美都, Aizawa Mito)
Voiced by: Kei Shindō[2]
Aizawa Father (逢沢父)
Voiced by: Aruno Tahara[2]
Aizawa Mother (逢沢母)
Voiced by: Rei Sakuma[2]

Media[]

Manga[]

The series is written by Hiroaki Igano and illustrated by Kaya Tsukiyama.[3] The series is serialized in Weekly Shōnen Magazine beginning in 2006 and ended in 2017.[4] 57 volumes has been compiled from the individual chapters.[3]

Anime[]

The adaptation of the series into an anime was first announced in Weekly Shōnen Magazine's 43rd issue in 2011.[3] It is produced by Shin-Ei Animation and directed by Hirofumi Ogura.[1] On January 5, 2012, Crunchyroll announced it will simulcast The Knight in the Area.[5] The series aired on January 7, 2012 on TV Asahi[6] and finished on September 28, 2012.

The episodes uses one theme song: an opening theme titled Higher Ground (ハイヤーグラウンド, "Haiyā Guraundo") by "S.R.S".[1]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Knight in the Area staff list" (in Japanese). TV Asahi. Retrieved January 29, 2012.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Credits from "I Like Soccer". The Knight in the Area. January 7, 2012. TV Asahi.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c "The Knight in the Area Soccer Manga Gets Anime". Anime News Network. September 16, 2011. Retrieved September 18, 2011.
  4. ^ "The Knight in the Area Soccer Manga Ends in 5 Chapters". Anime News Network. February 22, 2017. Retrieved February 26, 2021.
  5. ^ Emily Balistrieri (January 5, 2012). ""The Knight in the Area" Anime Joins Crunchyroll's 2012 Winter Season". Crunchyroll. Archived from the original on January 29, 2012. Retrieved January 29, 2012.
  6. ^ "The Knight in the Area episode 1" (in Japanese). TV Asahi. Retrieved January 29, 2012.

External links[]

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