Masashi Nakayama
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Masashi Nakayama | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Full name | Masashi Nakayama | |
Date of birth | September 23, 1967 (age 39) | |
Place of birth | Okabe, Shizuoka, Japan | |
Height | 179 cm | |
Nickname | Gon, Taicho | |
Playing position | forward | |
Club information | ||
Current club | Júbilo Iwata | |
Youth clubs | ||
1983-1986 1986-1990 |
Fujieda-Higashi H.S. Tsukuba University |
|
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1990-1992 1993- |
Yamaha Mortors F.C. Júbilo Iwata |
322 (155) |
National team | ||
1992-2003 | Japan | 53 (21) |
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Masashi Nakayama (中山 雅史 Nakayama Masashi?, born September 23, 1967) is a professional footballer for Jubilo Iwata of the J. League, the top professional football league in Japan. Born in Shizuoka, Nakayama attended Fujieda Higashi High School and Tsukuba University before he joined Jubilo Iwata of the Japan Football League, a precursor to the J. League, which consisted of company sponsored teams.
Playing as a forward, Nakayama made his J. League debut on March 11, 1994. Since that time, he has been an ever-present part of the Jubilo lineup as they have consistently been one of the top teams in the J. League since its inception. With a strikerate of more than a goal every two games throughout his career, Nakayama is the inspirational and talismanic leader for both Jubilo Iwata and the Japanese national team.
At the 1998 FIFA World Cup finals in France, Nakayama scored the only goal of the tournament for Japan against Jamaica on June 26, 1998. As of 2003, he has scored 21 goals in 53 appearances for the Japanese national team, which places him 5th all-time among goalscorers for his country.
Nakayama also holds the world record fastest hat-trick at international level. He managed three goals in a FIFA World Cup qualification match against Brunei on 16 February 2000 in only three minutes and three seconds, beating the previous record of Englishman George William Hall set in 1938 (against Ireland) by 27 seconds. This striker becomes a record-holder with other hat-tricks, that he did it in four successive games of J.League, from April 15 to April 29 in 1998. He scored 16 times in these games.
Affectionately known as Gon, Nakayama is a fan favorite among many casual Japanese football fans for his outspoken and humorous nature. Now in the twilight of his career, injuries and age have taken a toll on Nakayama's skills but he still remains a favorite of the Jubilo faithful, as evidenced by the fact that he draws the loudest cheers by far from the home crowd at Yamaha Stadium when his name is announced during warm-ups or when he comes on as a substitute.
Contents |
[edit] National team
[edit] Honors and awards
[edit] Individual Honors
- J-League MVP: 1998
- J-League Top Scorer: 1998, 2000
- J-League Best Eleven: 1997, 1998, 2000, 2002
[edit] Team Honors
- FIFA Confederations Cup Runner-up: 2001
- 1992 Asian Cup (Champions)
- AFC Champions League Champions: 1999
- Asian Super Cup Champions: 1999
- J-League Champions: 1997, 1999, 2002
[edit] Trivia
- Nakayama portrayed himself on television once, performing the voice work for a guest role on the anime Hungry Heart: Wild Striker.
- Nakayama appeared on the front cover of the Japanese releases of Konami's Winning Eleven video game series (WE 6 and WE 6: Final Evolution) in 2002 and 2003.
- He married with an actress, Tomoko Ikuta in 1996, and there is a daughter with her. She acted the voice of Lee Young Ae, main actress of Dae Jang Geum in Japanese version.
[edit] External link
Preceded by![]() |
J-League Player of the Year 1998 |
Succeeded by![]() |
Preceded by![]() |
J-League Top Scorer 1998 |
Succeeded by![]() |
Preceded by![]() |
J-League Top Scorer 2000 |
Succeeded by![]() |
Júbilo Iwata - Current Squad |
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1 Kawaguchi | 2 Suzuki | 3 Chano | 4 Ohi | 5 Tanaka | 6 Marquinhos | 7 Ohta | 8 Kikuchi | 9 Nakayama | 10 Naruoka | 11 Nishi | 13 Morishita | 14 Murai | 15 Kaga | 16 Hayashi | 17 Inuzuka | 18 Maeda | 19 Okada | 20 Nakajima | 21 Sato | 22 Cullen | 24 Matsuura | 25 Fabricio | 26 Morino | 27 Ueda | 28 Funatani | 29 Yamazaki | 30 Hatta | 31 Matsui | 32 Yamamoto | Manager: Adilson |
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Japan squad - 1998 FIFA World Cup | ![]() |
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1 Kojima | 2 Narahashi | 3 Soma | 4 Ihara | 5 Omura | 6 Yamaguchi | 7 Ito | 8 Nakata | 9 Nakayama | 10 Nanami | 11 Ono | 12 Lopes | 13 Hattori | 14 Okano | 15 Morishima | 16 Saito | 17 Akita | 18 Jo | 19 Nakanishi | 20 Kawaguchi | 21 Narazaki | 22 Hirano | Coach: Okada |
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Japan squad - 2002 FIFA World Cup | ![]() |
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1 Kawaguchi | 2 Akita | 3 Matsuda | 4 Morioka | 5 Inamoto | 6 Hattori | 7 H. Nakata | 8 Morishima | 9 Nishizawa | 10 Nakayama | 11 Suzuki | 12 Narazaki | 13 Yanagisawa | 14 Santos | 15 Fukunishi | 16 K. Nakata | 17 Miyamoto | 18 Ono | 19 Ogasawara | 20 Myojin | 21 Toda | 22 Ichikawa | 23 Sogahata | Coach: Troussier |