Hungry Heart: Wild Striker

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📖 SYNOPSIS

Having an older brother who plays for A.C. Milan sounds like a flex, but for Kyosuke Kano it's basically a curse — every coach, every teammate, every spectator has measured him against Seisuke his entire life, and he's done. Transferring to Jyoyō Akanegaoka High School, he swears off soccer completely. Fresh start, no ball, no pitch, no comparisons. That lasts about five minutes. Miki Tsujiwaki, the captain of the girls' soccer team, drags him back into the orbit of the sport he clearly still loves, and from there the show becomes a 52-episode journey about a kid learning to play for himself instead of someone else's legacy. The soccer itself is grounded — more realistic match tactics than flashy super moves — and the cast fills out nicely, including a Brazilian transfer student who adds some genuinely fun cultural dynamics to the team. What keeps you watching is Kyosuke's arc. He's not a prodigy falling from grace; he's a talented player who psyched himself out, and watching him claw back confidence one game at a time is satisfying in a way that pure power fantasies aren't. The romance with Miki develops naturally alongside the sports drama without overtaking it. If you liked Captain Tsubasa but want something more down-to-earth, or if Days and Giant Killing are your thing, this 2002 Nippon Animation TV series fits right in that lane. It's a solid character-driven sports anime that deserved more attention than it got.

✨ MUST WATCH IF...

You want a realistic soccer anime — no superpowers, just grounded high school matches across 52 episodes
Kyousuke's arc of escaping his brother's shadow and rediscovering his love for soccer hooks you
You enjoy a solid sports soundtrack that genuinely amps up the intensity during key matches
Character-driven stories matter more to you than flashy animation or rapid-fire pacing

❌ SKIP IF...

52 episodes feels bloated — the story probably could've landed its best moments in 30–35
Nippon Animation's early-2000s visuals don't hold up if you're used to modern studio quality
You want a clean ending — this one wraps up rushed and leaves some threads dangling

🎬 EPISODE GUIDE

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MANGA BRIDGE

This season covers Chapters 1-6 of the manga. Continue reading from Chapter 1.

Manga cover

🎭 CHARACTERS

Kyousuke Kanou

Kyousuke Kanou, a soccer ace, rediscovers his passion after coaching a girls' team and joins Jyoyo's male team as their striker.

Portrayed by Toriumi Kousuke

Miki Tsujiwaki

Jyoyō Akanegaoka's soccer team captain, Miki supports Kyosuke, helping him rediscover his love for soccer and acting as his supportive, yet scolding friend.

Portrayed by Kato Natsuki

Kouji Sakai Jefferson

Charming, swift Jyoyo goalkeeper Kouji, initially cocky, matures respecting Japanese soccer.

Portrayed by Takatsuka Masaya

Rodrigo

Initially cold, Rodrigo is a skilled Brazilian soccer player driven by family and ambition, evolving into Akanegaoka's captain.

Portrayed by Ishizuka Katashi

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Hungry Heart: Wild Striker

Studio

Nippon Animation

Season

Fall 2002

Start Date

2002-09-11

End Date

2003-09-10

Episodes

52

Type

TV

©高橋陽一/日本アニメーション2002

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