Kiyoshi Okuma
{{short description|Japanese footballer and manager}}
{{Infobox football biography
|name=Kiyoshi Okuma
大熊 清
|image=Kiyoshi Okuma2011.jpg
|image_size=250
|caption=
|fullname=Kiyoshi Okuma
|birth_date={{Birth date and age|1964|6|21}}
|birth_place=Saitama, Saitama, Japan
|death_date=
|death_place=
|height={{Height|m=1.78}}
|position=Defender
|currentclub=
|clubnumber=
|youthyears1=1980–1982|youthclubs1=Saitama Urawa Minami High School
|youthyears2=1983–1986|youthclubs2=Chuo University
|years1=1987–1992|clubs1=Tokyo Gas|caps1=|goals1=
|totalcaps=|totalgoals=
|nationalyears1=|nationalteam1=|nationalcaps1=|nationalgoals1=
|manageryears1=1994–2001|managerclubs1=FC Tokyo
|manageryears2=2002–2005|managerclubs2=Japan U-20
|manageryears3=2010–2011|managerclubs3=FC Tokyo
|manageryears4=2014|managerclubs4=Omiya Ardija
|manageryears5=2015–2016|managerclubs5=Cerezo Osaka
|medaltemplates=
}}
{{Nihongo|Kiyoshi Okuma|大熊 清|Okuma Kiyoshi|born June 21, 1964}} is a former Japanese football player and manager. His younger brother Yuji Okuma is also a former footballer.
Playing career
Okuma was born in Saitama on June 21, 1964. After graduating from Chuo University, he joined Tokyo Gas in 1987. He retired in 1992.
Coaching career
After retirement, Okuma became a coach at Tokyo Gas (later FC Tokyo) from 1994. In 1994, he managed as caretaker in 1994 Emperor's Cup. In 1995, he became a manager and managed until 2001. In 2002, he became a manager Japan U-20 national team. He managed at the 2003 and 2005 World Youth Championship. In July 2006, he became a coach for Japan national team under manager Ivica Osim and Takeshi Okada. After 2010 World Cup, he resigned. In September 2010, he returned to FC Tokyo and managed until 2011. From 2014, he managed Omiya Ardija (2014) and Cerezo Osaka (2015-2016).
Managerial statistics
[https://data.j-league.or.jp/SFIX07/?staff_id=305 J.League Data Site]{{in lang|ja}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
!rowspan="2"|Team !rowspan="2"|From !rowspan="2"|To !colspan="5"|Record | ||||
G | W | D | L | Win % |
---|---|---|---|---|
align="left"|FC Tokyo
|align="left"|1999 |align="left"|2001 {{WDL|96|49|9|38}} | ||||
align="left"|FC Tokyo
|align="left"|2010 |align="left"|2011 {{WDL|49|27|11|11}} | ||||
align="left"|Omiya Ardija
|align="left"|2014 |align="left"|2014 {{WDL|22|3|7|12}} | ||||
align="left"|Cerezo Osaka
|align="left"|2015 |align="left"|2016 {{WDL|43|24|9|10}} | ||||
colspan="3"|Total
{{WDLtot|210|103|36|71}} |
Personal honors
As manager
- AFC Coach of the Month - March 2000
Team honors
As manager
- Japan Football League - 1998
- J2 League - 2011
- Emperor's Cup - 2011
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{J.League manager}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20100921122017/http://www.fctokyo.co.jp/home/index.phtml?cont=item&item=10118 FC Tokyo]{{in lang|ja}}
{{FC Tokyo managers}}
{{Omiya Ardija managers}}
{{Cerezo Osaka managers}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Okuma, Kiyoshi}}
Category:Chuo University alumni
Category:Japanese men's footballers
Category:Japan Soccer League players
Category:Japan Football League (1992–1998) players
Category:Japanese football managers
Category:Omiya Ardija managers
Category:Cerezo Osaka managers
Category:Men's association football defenders
Category:Association football people from Saitama (city)
Category:20th-century Japanese sportsmen
{{Japan-footy-defender-1960s-stub}}