The 19-year-old arrived in Nagoya on Monday to join his Samurai Blue team-mates for their Wednesday showdown against Uzbekistan to determine the winner of Asia's Group C

He may not be old enough to vote or drink alcohol in his home country, but Ryo Miyaichi is making waves among fans and team-mates alike as he prepares for his potential international debut on Wednesday night against Uzbekistan.The 19-year-old has drawn even more attention since joining Bolton on loan from Arsenal in January, scoring in an FA Cup match and making his first Premier League start against Chelsea last weekend."Of course I want to score," Miyaichi told the surrounding throng of reporters following Monday's closed practice. "I want the supporters watching to enjoy watching me get a goal."The practice included a 45-minute meeting to bring the starlet and fellow first-time Alberto Zaccheroni call-up Takashi Inui up to speed with the Italian's tactics."[Zacheroni's] tactics are more complicated than I thought," Miyaichi admitted. "I have to absorb it all in."Since arriving in Japan for his first national team call-up, the young playmaker's name is on everyone's lips, including his team-mates."His break-out speed is first-class," gushed veteran Kengo Nakamura, who was joined by captain Makoto Hasebe and others in praising Miyaichi's skills."He's very polite, like a high schooler," said Southampton's Tadanari Lee, who shared the flight with Miyaichi to Nagoya's Chubu International Airport.While 'polite' has been used frequently by local media to describe Japan's most-anticipated young player, defender Tomoaki Makino told reporters that he saw the truth behind Miyaichi's public image."He's still pretending to be docile," the Urawa Reds mood-maker revealed. He added: "But in truth he's always got plenty of jokes [in practice]."We'll have to work on bringing his personality out into the open."