Goson Sakai

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Goson Sakai
Personnel
birthday March 20, 1996
place of birth Sanjō , Niigata PrefectureJapan
size 183 cm
position Defensive midfielder
Juniors
Years station
2011-2013 Albirex Niigata
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
2014-2017 Albirex Niigata 1 (0)
2014-2015 →  J.League U-22 Selection  (loan) 4 (0)
2016 →  Fukushima United FC  (loan) 5 (0)
2018-2019 Lueneburg SK Hansa 45 (4)
2019– VfR Aalen 18 (2)
1 Only league games are given.
As of May 1, 2020

Gōson Sakai ( Japanese 酒井 高 聖 , Sakai Gōson ; born March 20, 1996 in Sanjō , Niigata Prefecture ) is a German - Japanese football player .

Gōson Sakai is the son of a Japanese and a German. He is the brother of Noriyoshi Sakai and Gotoku Sakai .

Career

Gōson Sakai learned to play football in the youth team of Albirex Niigata . Here he signed his first professional contract in 2014. From 2014 to 2015 he played four times in the J.League U-22 Selection . This team, which played in the third division, the J3 League , was made up of the best young players from the higher-class clubs. The team was founded with a view to the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro . The players were selected on a weekly basis from a pool for which each club was able to name talented individuals worth promoting; the composition of the team therefore varied greatly from game to game. Fukushima United FC , a third division club from Fukushima , loaned him out for the 2016 season. For the club, he completed five third division games. At the beginning of 2018 he moved to his mother's home country in Germany . Here he signed a contract with SK Hansa from Lüneburg . With the club from Lüneburg , a town in Lower Saxony , he played in the fourth highest league, the Regionalliga Nord . For the Lüneburgers he played 45 games and scored four goals. He left Lüneburg in the summer break of 2019. The third division relegated VfR Aalen from Aalen took him under contract from July 2019. The club from Baden-Württemberg now also played in the fourth division, the Regionalliga Südwest .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Change to Lüneburg SK Hansa sportbuzzer.de, accessed on May 5, 2020
  2. Change to VfR Aalen kicker.de, accessed on May 5, 2020