XtraTime Web Desk: Japan avoided defeat for the second time in the Copa America (W0 D2 L3), since their 1-1 draw against Bolivia in 1999. A sublime Koji Miyoshi scored twice as Japan earned a thrilling 2-2 draw against Uruguay at the Copa America amid more VAR controversy in Porto Alegre.

Miyoshi twice gave Japan the lead in the Group C clash but the Copa invitee was pegged back on both occasions by a Luis Suarez penalty and Jose Gimenez on Thursday. After Miyoshi's opener, Uruguay was awarded a dubious 32nd-minute spot-kick following a VAR review, which penalised Naomichi Ueda for an innocuous attempt to block the ball under minimal contact on Edinson Cavani.
Miyoshi restored Japan's advantage 14 minutes into the second half but Uruguay — 4-0 winner on matchday one — secured a share of the spoils thanks to Gimenez's 66th-minute header.
Entertaining contest
It was an entertaining contest from the outset after Suarez's audacious half-way line attempt almost embarrassed Japan goalkeeper Eiji Kawashima.
Japan was impressive and put Uruguay on the back foot as former Leicester City forward Shinji Okazaki side-footed just wide, while Suarez went close again for the South American side inside 15 minutes. Japan was routed 4-0 by two-time reigning champion Chile in its opener but it broke the deadlock in the 25th minute when Miyoshi found a way through and scored from a tight angle.
However, Uruguay moved back on level terms seven minutes later after Cavani went down under minimal contact and a VAR check allowed Suarez to step up and convert the spot-kick.
View image on TwitterView image on Twitter
Copa América✔@CopaAmerica As celebrações dos goleadores do segundo gol de cada seleção! ?? vs ??#CopaAmerica ? @Staff_images
1116:15 AM - Jun 21, 201948 people are talking about thisTwitter Ads info and privacy Baffled by the decision, Japan nearly went behind nine minutes prior to the break but Cavani's thunderous effort from outside the area rattled the crossbar.
Both teams had chances to move ahead in an end-to-end second half, but it was Japan which sensationally retook the lead thanks to Miyoshi approaching the hour mark. After Cavani wasted a golden opportunity at the other end, Fernando Muslera spilt a cross straight at the feet of Miyoshi and the Japan forward fired home from close range.
Japan's lead, however, only lasted seven minutes as defender Gimenez glanced a header past Kawashima from a corner and Uruguay almost completed the comeback inside the final 10 minutes but Suarez's header hit the woodwork.
What does it mean? Match of the tournament
Amid small crowds and VAR controversies this month, Japan and Uruguay produced the best game of the Copa America so far. Played at a high pace and with a lot of quality, both teams left everything on the pitch.
Japan shows its quality
The Samurai Blue brought a young squad to Brazil, with a focus on next year's Olympics in Tokyo. While they were put to the sword by Chile, Japan was a constant threat against Uruguay and unfortunate not to claim its first Copa victory.
VAR in the spotlight again
Technology has played a big role in this year's tournament and the video assistant referee was in the thick of the action again on Thursday. Uruguay benefited from a controversial decision in the first half, which raised further questions about VAR's accuracy.