Former Giants QB Jameis Winston embraces Japanese tradition after World Cup thriller
· Yahoo Sports
Jameis Winston’s World Cup stop in Arlington ended with a gesture that captured the spirit around Japan’s 2-2 draw with the Netherlands as much as the match itself.
The former New York Giants quarterback was at AT&T Stadium as part of FOX’s World Cup coverage, taking in one of the early tournament thrillers as Japan and the Netherlands traded momentum in front of a packed Dallas crowd.
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After the final whistle, Winston joined a ritual that has become one of Japanese soccer’s most distinctive contributions to major international tournaments.
Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty ImagesJameis Winston joins Japanese fans cleaning up after Japan vs. Netherlands
In a post shared by Yahoo Sports on X, Winston was shown taking part in the post-match clean-up tradition with Japanese fans.
“Jameis Winston partook in the Japanese tradition of picking up trash after soccer matches,” Yahoo Sports revealed.
The moment fit the reputation Japan supporters have built across multiple World Cups. Fans often stay behind after matches to collect trash from their section, treating the stadium as a shared space rather than someone else’s job to fix.
Winston’s decision to join in made the clip feel less like a celebrity sighting and more like a respectful response to the culture around him. It also gave the former NFL quarterback a different kind of World Cup moment while working around the tournament.
Japan and Netherlands draw gave Jameis Winston a fitting World Cup stage
Japan’s 2-2 draw with the Netherlands gave the clean-up scene a stronger backdrop because the match itself had already delivered the kind of drama that keeps a crowd in its seats until the end.
Virgil van Dijk scored for the Netherlands, Keito Nakamura answered for Japan, and the game swung again before Daichi Kamada struck late from a corner to secure Japan’s point. The result left both sets of fans with something to process after a match full of momentum shifts.
Japanese supporters have drawn global praise for similar post-match clean-ups since earlier World Cups, including moments when they have stayed behind even after emotionally draining results.
The practice reflects a wider cultural habit of respect for public spaces, something many fans see as normal rather than performative.
Winston did not need to become the story of Japan’s match, but by picking up trash alongside supporters, he became part of one of the World Cup’s most admired traditions.
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