The Eleventh Striker
(Meitantei Konan: Jūichininme no Sutoraikā)
Ran Mouri
Kogoro Mouri
Shinichi Kudo
Sonoko Suzuki
Hiroshi Agasa
Ai Haibara
Detective Boys
Juzo Megure
Ninzaburo Shiratori
Miwako Sato
Wataru Takagi
Kazunobu Chiba
Misao Yamamura
Hideo Akagi
Naoki Uemura
Ryusuke Higo
Takahiro Sanada
Kaoru Koda
Azusa Enomoto
Yoko Okino
Officer Tome
Female forensics member
Naomichi Mugikura
Rikuo Endo
Makoto Kyogoku
Kobun Shizuno
Yuichiro Yano
Iwao Teraoka (co-op)
Tsutomu Miyazawa (co-op)
Hajime Kamegaki (co-op)
Kappei Yamaguchi as Shinichi Kudo
Wakana Yamazaki as Ran Mouri
Rikiya Koyama as Kogoro Mouri
Naoko Matsui as Sonoko Suzuki
Kenichi Ogata as Hiroshi Agasa
Megumi Hayashibara as Ai Haibara
Yukiko Iwai as Ayumi Yoshida
Ikue Otani as Mitsuhiko Tsuburaya
Wataru Takagi as Genta Kojima, Wataru Takagi
Chafurin as Juzo Megure
Kazuhiko Inoue as Ninzaburo Shiratori
Atsuko Yuya as Miwako Sato
Isshin Chiba as Kazunobu Chiba
Toshio Furukawa as Misao Yamamura
Koji Tsujitani as Hideo Akagi
Takahiro Sakurai as Ryusuke Higo
Mikiko Enomoto as Azusa Enomoto
Shigeru Chiba as Shinzo Yamamori
Mirei Kiritani as Kaoru Koda
Hiroki Tochi as Kazumasa Nakaoka
Daiki Nakamura as Ryousuke Sakaki
Norihiro Inoue as Keiichirou Motoura
Hiroyuki Yoshino as Takahiro Sanada
Minoru Inaba as Kouji Matsuzaki
Satsuki Yukino as Tomofumi Motoura
Rika Adachi as Herself
Seiji Miyane as Himself
Kazuyoshi Miura as Himself
Yasuhito Endo as Himself
Yasuyuki Konno as Himself
Kengo Nakamura as Himself
Seigo Narazaki as Himself
Yasuaki Iwasada as J-League staff
Shizuka Arai as Miyuki Tabeta
Cho as Naomichi Mugikura
Ai Maeda as Announcer A
Kaoru Morota as Announcer B
Keitaro Aso as Security guard
Yutaka Aoyama as Security guard B
Takuo Kawamura as Security guard C
Ryuzo Hasuike as Policeman
Yasuihiko Kawazu as Cameraman
Masahito Kawanago as Cameraman B
Shogakukan young voice actors: Anna Yamada, Ami Hamanaka, Yudai Yamaya, Machi Inohana, Haruki Matoyama, and Rion Kawaguchi
Detective Conan: The Eleventh Striker (名探偵コナン 11人目のストライカー Meitantei Konan: Jūichininme no Sutoraikā) is the 16th movie in the Detective Conan franchise. It was released in Japan on April 14, 2012 and it was directed by Kobun Shizuno and written by Kazunari Kouchi. The movie brought 3.29 billion yen to box office. This movie first released between the episodes 651 and 652.
As part of the Detective Conan: Cinema Saturdays event in Anime! on TMS Official Channel, the movie had a limited release between August 30th to September 7th 2025 with English subs.
The story begins with a mysterious person calling to the Mouri Detective Agency that a bomb is to explode in place. The clues were left behind and Conan and the Detective Boys who are playing soccer with the soccer pros. The bomb explodes off in the stadium scoreboard and the bomber leaves another code for the Detective Mouri and Conan vows to solve this case and find the bomber and his motive.
Cast
Introduced
Featured
Gadgets
Case
Situation
Kogoro's detective agency receives a mysterious phone call. Someone on the other end warns about a bomb and leaves behind a code, "The Boy in Blue and The Blue Zebra, the rain from above ..." After that, a car exploded in front of Mouri Detective Agency.
If Conan can decipher the riddle, he can stop the bomb. An adventure begins for Conan and the Detective Boys, taking place at a soccer match between Hideo Akagi of the Tokyo Spirits and Ryusuke Higo of Big Osaka.
Conan solves the first riddle and finds the bomb planting on the electronic scoreboard of Touto Stadium. He manages to inform the police to evacuate the fans on the Spirits side before the bomb explodes, thus leaving no casualties. However, only two weeks later, another threatening letter was sent to Mouri Kogoro's residence, announcing the bomber has installed bombs in all the stadiums and will explode at the end of the matches, unless certain conditions are satisfied. This time, no evacuation or bomb defuse attempts are allowed.
The police and Conan solve the second code and inform the ten strikers of the teams to perform the secret action the culprit has demanded. Thanks to that, they successfully defuse the bombs in nine stadiums, and apparently the activation signal in the National Stadium is malfunctioned. Meanwhile, the police, led by Shiratori, investigates a potential suspect, Keiichirou Motoura. He has a clear motive for bombing: his son, Tomofumi, dies on the way to the hospital, where the ambulance carrying him was blocked by Mouri Kogoro for two minutes, and Motoura carries the crime out of revenge for his son. Motoura, while being angry at Mouri, denies that he install the bombs.
People
Real-life people
Resolution
The culprit
The case
In other languages
Gallery
Trivia
- Starting from this movie, the movie was produced by V1 Studio, one of TMS Entertainment production studios.
- The movie was made as a collaboration work for J.League 20th anniversary. The movie production was possible because of the friendship between Conan producer Michihiko Suwa and Yasuaki Iwasada, the public relations manager of the J.League, who is a fan of Detective Conan himself. Iwasada was the one to convince Suwa and TMS to make a movie about football.
- The movie is also a commemorative work for the 90th anniversary of Shogakukan.
- According to Suwa, the stadium in the movie was modeled after Toyota Stadium, in Aichi Prefecture, because Suwa lives in Aichi and it's "the coolest looking stadium there was in Japan".
- Several real life J.League football players provided voice work for animated versions of themselves in the film, including: Kazuyoshi Miura (Yokohama F.C.), Yasuhito Endo (Gamba Osaka), Yasuyuki Konno (Gamba Osaka), Kengo Nakamura (Kawasaki Frontale), and Seigo Narazaki (Nagoya Grampus).
- The names of Tokyo Spirits players are based on real-life players: Masami Kihara comes from Masakazu Kihara and Masami Ihara; Hidetoshi Nagata comes from Hidetoshi Nakata; Kazushi Shimura comes from Kazushi Kimura; Tsuyoshi Itazawa comes from Tsuyoshi Kitazawa; Shigetatsu Masunaga comes from Shigetatsu Matsunaga; and Masakiyo Maedono comes from Masakiyo Maezono.
- The movie brought 3.29 billion yen to box office.
- Kazumasa Nakaoka's motorbike is a Suzuki SV 650 S.
- The car that explodes in front of Mouri Detective Agency is a 2001 dark blue Toyota Prius I [NHW11].
- In real-life, J1 league has only 18 teams. In the movie, two fictional teams are added: Tokyo Spirits and Big Osaka. The movie takes place in the 2011 J.League season, with Tokyo Spirits fighting for the champion, while Big Osaka is struggling at relegation place. The final match between these two teams ended in a draw, saving Big Osaka from relegation, but taking away the champion's trophy from Tokyo Spirits. The winner was Kashiwa Reysol.
- Apart from real-life J.League players, the special guest voice actor for this movie is Mirei Kiritani who voiced Kaoru Koda. Moreover, the "Shogakukan young voice actress" Anna Yamada, at that time 11 years old, would later become a successful movie actress.
See also
- Movies
- Bonus File 1: Flower of Fantasista
- Promise with a J-Leaguer
- The J League Bodyguard
- Behind the Scenes of the J League Finals
- Movies
- Animation directed by Masatomo Sudo
- Animation directed by Seiji Muta
- Animation directed by Akio Kawamura
- Animation directed by Hiroyuki Notake
- Animation directed by Yoshiharu Shimizu
- Animation directed by Hiroyuki Horiuchi
- Animation directed by Yoichi Takada
- Animation directed by Koichi Suenaga
- Animation directed by Hiroaki Noguchi
























