Japan's football team were held up for four hours by a baggage and immigration inspection at a Pyongyang airport on the eve of their World Cup qualifier against North Korea, reports said Tuesday. The Blue Samurai touched down in the capital of the hermit state around 3:00 pm Monday, but were not able to leave the airport until after 7:00 pm, according to the Yomiuri Shimbun, Kyodo News and other major media. Dour local officials warned players when they laughed, and confiscated items including bananas, chewing gum, and instant noodles, the Nikkan Sports and Sports Nippon newspapers reported. The airport experienced three power outages during the lengthy process. The team began their official practice around 8:00 pm -- three hours later than intended -- wearing hats and gloves in a bitterly cold Kim Il Sung Stadium, reports said. Asian champions Japan have already secured their passage to the fourth and final qualifying stage of the tournament but North Korea cannot now progress. But the North Koreans will be looking to avenge a 1-0 loss in their previous encounter with Japan in September. Speaking after the training session on Monday, Japan coach Alberto Zaccheroni said the first match for Japan on North Korean turf in 22 years was just a regular game. "I am not planning on asking the players to do anything differently in this match. I am just going to tell them to enjoy themselves, grow together and play for the sake of the national team," he said. Just 150 tickets have been allocated for travelling Japanese fans at Tuesday night's game, with supporters being warned to tone down their usual spirited support to avoid potential conflict with the authorities. Japan does not have diplomatic relations with North Korea, which still demands reparations from its former colonial rulers for wartime atrocities. The communist regime is widely despised in Japan, where feelings run high over the unresolved abductions in the 1970s and 80s of young Japanese citizens who were used to train Pyongyang's spies in Japanese language and customs.