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The original was posted on /r/soccer by /u/Sparky-moon on 2026-02-11 13:33:20+00:00.
Original Title: The J-League is celebrating its 100th season in 2026 with a revolutionary innovation: the elimination of draws. If a match ends in a tie after 90 minutes of regulation time, a penalty shootout will be held to decide the winner.
This year, 2026, the J-League, Japan’s soccer league, is celebrating its 100th season with a revolutionary innovation: the elimination of draws. For the first time in the history of the competition, if a match ends in a tie after 90 minutes of regulation time, a penalty shootout will be held to decide the winner. The winner does not get three points and the loser does not get any, but the winner does get a bigger prize than the usual point awarded for a draw.
According to the rules approved by Japan’s top division, the winner of the penalty shootout will get two points, while the losing team will get one point. In other words, the winner of the penalty shootout will receive an additional reward, while the loser will receive the usual points after a draw. Similarly, keeping the traditional system intact, a win in 90 minutes will continue to earn three points, and a loss in regulation time will continue to earn zero points.
That said, it should be noted that this measure will only apply to the so-called transition season, which is currently underway. The Japanese league has always been played during the calendar year, but in 2026 it will align its schedule with the European one, starting in August-September and ending in May of the following year. However, to avoid being without soccer until next August-September, the aforementioned transition season is being played from early February until June, during which an extra point will be awarded for winning a penalty shootout after a match ends in a draw.
In principle, the plan is not to continue with this elimination of draws beyond the transition season, but it may end up convincing people and plans may change in that regard. The organizers emphasize that this innovation is primarily intended to eliminate draws, which historically detracted from the excitement of the league, and to offer fans more intense and spectacular matches; therefore, it cannot be ruled out that it will end up continuing. Who knows? Maybe one day we will look back on the 2026 transition season in the J-League as the moment when draws disappeared from leagues around the world.