Mio Bivouac Shiga
Mio Bivouac Shiga | |||
Basic data | |||
---|---|---|---|
Surname | Mio Bivouac Shiga | ||
Seat | Kusatsu , Shiga | ||
founding | 2005 | ||
Colours | green | ||
president | Kojin Gonda | ||
Website | mio-biwako.com | ||
First soccer team | |||
Head coach | Hiroshi Otsuki | ||
Venue | Nunobiki Higashiomi Stadium | ||
Places | 5000 | ||
league | Japan Football League | ||
2019 | 9th place | ||
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Mio Biwako Shiga ( Japanese MIO び わ こ 滋 賀 Mīo Biwako Shiga ) is a Japanese football club from Kusatsu in Shiga Prefecture . The club has played in the Japan Football League since 2008 .
history
The origins of the club go back to the Sagawa Kyūbin Kyōto Soccer-bu ( 佐川 急 便 京都 サ ッ カ ー 部 , ~ Sakkā-bu , English Sagawa Express SC Kyōto ), a company team of the Kyōto- based transport company Sagawa Express . After the end of the 2005 season, the Sagawa Kyūbin Kyōto Soccer-bu , at that time active in the Kansai regional league, merged with a youth football club called FC Mi-o Catfish Kusatsu ( FC Mi-O キ ャ ッ ト フ ィ ッ シ ュ Kusatsu FC Mi-o Kyattofishu Kusatsu ) to FC Mi-o Biwako Kusatsu ( FC Mi-O び わ こ Kusatsu ). In the following two seasons the league reached second place, at the end of the 2007 season they also qualified by winning the Shakaijin Cup for the national regional league promotion round . There Mi-o Biwako reached a third place, which was synonymous with promotion to the Japan Football League . Immediately after the rise, the club name was simplified to Mio Biwako Kusatsu ( MIO び わ こ 草津 ).
In the new league, the club was able to establish itself in midfield after a few teething problems. In 2012 it was renamed Mio Biwako Shiga again with the aim of expanding its own fan base to the entire Shiga prefecture in general and the area around the southern shores of Lake Biwa in particular, where the home games are also played. In mid-2013, an application was made for a professional license as part of the J. League's so-called Hundred Year Plan, which has not yet been granted because not all requirements have been met. The conclusion of this process is still open.
Club name
The name Mio Biwako consists of two parts. Here, Mio refers , usually capitalized, to the former Japanese province of Ōmi , from whose area the present-day Shiga Prefecture emerged. By swapping the syllables, an intended proximity to the Italian word “mio” (German: mein ) was created. Biwako, on the other hand, refers to Biwa-ko , i.e. Lake Biwa , on the banks of which the team is based.
successes
- Kansai Soccer League (Division 1)
- 2nd place: 2006, 2007
Stadion
The club carries out its home games at Nunobiki Higashiomi Stadium in Higashiōmi in Shiga Prefecture . The stadium has a capacity of 5000 spectators.
player
Status: August 2020
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Coach chronicle
Status: August 2020
Trainer | nation | from | to |
---|---|---|---|
Tetsuya Totsuka | Japan | September 13, 2007 | January 31, 2008 |
Naoki Hiraoka | Japan | February 1, 2008 | July 23, 2008 |
Hiroki Azuma | Japan | October 1, 2008 | January 31, 2009 |
Haruo Wada | Japan | February 1, 2009 | October 1, 2011 |
Hiroki Azuma | Japan | October 1, 2011 | July 1, 2014 |
Koji Kawashima | Japan | July 1, 2014 | January 31, 2015 |
Kōtarō Nakao | Japan | January 1, 2015 | December 31, 2015 |
Masafumi Nakaguchi | Japan | February 1, 2016 | January 31, 2020 |
Hiroshi Ōtsuki | Japan | February 1, 20230 | today |
Season placement
season | league | space | Emperor's Cup |
---|---|---|---|
2006 | Kansai Soccer League (Division 1) | 2. | |
2007 | 2. | 2nd round | |
2008 | Japan Football League | 14th | |
2009 | 8th. | ||
2010 | 11. | 2nd round | |
2011 | 13. | ||
2012 | 8th. | ||
2013 | 16. | 1 round | |
2014 | 12. | ||
2015 | 11. | 2nd round | |
2016 | 9. | 1 round | |
2017 | 13. | ||
2018 | 7th | 2nd round | |
2019 | 9. | ||
2020 |
Web links
- Official Website (Japanese)
- Mio Biwako Shiga at transfermarkt.de
- Mio Biwako Shiga at soccerway.com
Individual evidence
- ↑ Kader 2020 In: transfermarkt.de (German), accessed on August 7, 2020
- ↑ Trainer Chronicle In: transfermarkt.de (German), accessed on August 7, 2020