Shunichiro Okano

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Shunichiro Okano
Shunichiro Okano 1953.jpg
Okano in 1953
Personal information
Full nameShunichiro Okano
Date of birth(1931-08-28)August 28, 1931
Place of birthTaito, Tokyo, Japan
Date of deathFebruary 2, 2017(2017-02-02) (aged 85)
Place of deathTokyo, Japan
Playing positionForward
Youth career
YearsTeam
1947–1949Koishikawa Secondary Education School
1950–1957University of Tokyo
National team
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1955Japan2(0)
Teams managed
YearsTeam
1961Japan U-20
1970–1971Japan

Biography

Playing career​

Okano was born in Taito, Tokyo on August 28, 1931. His parents ran a well-established confectionery shop in Tokyo’s Ueno district. During the war his family escaped from the American air raids to Gunma Prefecture, but Okano stayed to attend a high school. In April 1949 he enrolled to the University of Tokyo and joined a football club there. In 1953 his team won the first national university championships. In 1955, he was selected the Japan national team. He played 2 games for Japan in 1955.

Coaching career​

 
Manager Ken Naganuma (left) and coach Dettmar Cramer (right)

In March 1957, Okano graduated in psychology from the Faculty of Letters, and in early 1961 spent three months in West Germany to train as a football coach. Upon return he was appointed as a Japan national team assistant coach under manager Ken Naganuma, he also served as an interpreter for German coach Dettmar Cramer. In 1968 Summer Olympics, Japan won the bronze medals. In 2018, this team was selected Japan Football Hall of Fame. In 1970, he was promoted to the manager as successor Naganuma. He managed at 1970 Asian Games. However, at 1972 Summer Olympics qualification in 1971, following Japan's failure to qualify for 1972 Summer Olympics, Okano resined.

In October 1974 he joined the Japan Football Association (JFA). Soon after that he became executive director of the Japanese Olympic Committee (JOC); in 1977 he was appointed as its general secretary and in 1989 as its executive director. In September 1990 he became a member of the IOC, and in 1995 of the FIFA Olympic Tournaments' Organizing Committee. He also served as 9th president of JFA (1998-2002) and 1st president of East Asian Football Federation (2004-2006).

In 2005, Okano was selected Japan Football Hall of Fame. On February 2, 2017, Okano died of lung cancer in Tokyo Metropolis at the age of 85.

Statistics

[1]

Japan national team
YearAppsGoals
1955 2 0
Total 2 0

References

Other websites