Hiroshi Nanami

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Hiroshi Nanami
Personnel
birthday November 28, 1972
place of birth FujiedaJapan
size 177 cm
position midfield
Juniors
Years station
1988-1990 Shimizu Commercial High School
1991-1994 Juntendō University
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1995-2008 Júbilo Iwata 301 (32)
1999-2000 →  FC Venice  (loan) 24 0(1)
2006 →  Cerezo Osaka  (loan) 13 0(2)
2007 →  Tokyo Verdy  (loan) 17 0(0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1995-2001 Japan 68 0(9)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2014– Júbilo Iwata
1 Only league games are given.

Hiroshi Nanami ( Japanese 名 波 浩 , Nanami Hiroshi ; born November 28, 1972 in Fujieda , Shizuoka Prefecture ) is a former Japanese football player .

Career

Club career

Hiroshi Nanami played in his youth for various school clubs before he started his professional career in 1995 with the Japanese first division club Júbilo Iwata . For this team he played around 300 games in 13 years and scored 32 goals as a midfielder. With Júbilo Iwata he was able to win the Japanese championship three times in 1997, 1999 and 2002. In the 1999/2000 season, Nanami was loaned to FC Venice in Serie D , the fourth highest Italian league, for one season. Here he made 24 league appearances and scored one goal. After Nanami played for Júbilo Iwata until 2006, he was officially under contract there until 2008, but was loaned out in the penultimate two seasons. While he was loaned to Cerezo Osaka in 2006 within the first division and scored two goals in 13 games, the year after he was loaned to Tokyo Verdy in the second division , where he came to 17 games, but remained without a goal. In his last season he played again for Júbilo Iwata, where he played 13 games, but was again without hits. After that season, Hiroshi Nanami ended his active football career.

National team

In 1995, Nanami made his debut for the Japanese national soccer team in the game against Oman as part of qualifying for the 1998 World Cup . With Japan he successfully qualified for the 1998 World Cup in France, but there he lost all three games in the group stage against Argentina , Jamaica and Croatia and was eliminated without points.

In 2000 Nanami won his first major international title when Japan became Asian champions by beating Saudi Arabia 1-0 in the final . In addition, Nanami was voted the best player of the tournament as well as the All-Star Team .

His last appearance for the Japanese national team was in 2001. In total, he played 68 games for Japan and scored nine goals.

Coaching career

Before the 2014/15 season, Nanami coached his former team Júbilo Iwata , for whom he had played for a total of 13 years.

title

Awards

  • Best player at the Asian Cup 2000 , also in the All-Star Team
  • in the Best Eleven of the J1 League in the years: 1996, 1997, 1998, 2002

Web links

predecessor Office successor
Chodadad Azizi Asian Cup Best Player
2000
Shunsuke Nakamura