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Chinese women's volleyball team: Cai Bin's new opponent - twice pushed China's medal-winning Japanese head coach Masayoshi Makoto

author:Linguistics Studies

At the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games, two Asian female head coaches, Lang Ping, head coach of the Chinese women's volleyball team, and Kumi Nakata, head coach of the Japanese women's volleyball team, left the field due to poor records. But what is a historical coincidence is that Cai Bin and Zhen Pot Zhengyi, who were also born in the 60s, played the second pass of the player era, and both served as the head coach of the national team, once again went out to coach the national women's volleyball team.

In the London cycle, the two were both head coaches of the national team, but their fates were very different. Cai Bin defeated Thailand in 2009 and was overshadowed; Zhen Pot was a great success, and three major competitions pushed the Chinese women's volleyball team to win the medal twice: the 2010 World Women's Volleyball Championship and the 2012 London Olympic Games, creating the best record of the Japanese women's volleyball team since the new century.

In the London cycle, the head coach of the iPad in hand, the 2012 London Olympic Games completely suppressed the Chinese women's volleyball team led by Hui Ruoqi and Wang Yimei, which made the Hearts of the Chinese people very broken.

Know each other and know thyself, and never lose a battle. In the Paris cycle, the Sino-Japanese contest between Cai Bin, who lacks the results of international competitions, and the scheming real pot will set sail again, and we will wait and see who kills the deer.

Chinese women's volleyball team: Cai Bin's new opponent - twice pushed China's medal-winning Japanese head coach Masayoshi Makoto

First, a brief introduction to the political righteousness of the real pot

Masayoshi Makoto (1963) is a former Japanese men's volleyball player who played for the Japanese men's national volleyball team from 1985 to 2003 and then as head coach of the Japanese women's national volleyball team from December 2008 to October 2016, during which time he led the Japanese women's volleyball team to win the bronze medal at the 2012 London Olympics.

2. Player era - national team, club, overseas study, postgraduate education

Makoto idolized baseball players when he was a teenager, and originally considered joining the school's baseball team after entering middle school, but changed to main volleyball at the suggestion of the class teacher. In his junior high school years, he was the main attacker on the field, and after entering the first year of the osaka University of Commerce Affiliated High School, he began to play as a second setter, and represented his alma mater in the national high school inter-school competition and won the championship.

In 1981, Makoto was promoted to Osaka University of Commerce. In 1985, as a fourth-year student, he represented the Japanese team at the Summer Universiade in Kobe and joined his teammates in a 3:2 victory over the Soviet Union in the finals, joining the Japanese men's volleyball team in the same year. He then made his debut at the Men's World Cup in November of the same year and teamed up with his teammates to finish 6th for Japan.

In 1986, he joined the New Nippon Iron Volleyball Team. He then contributed to Nippon Steel's three consecutive championships in the 22nd to 24th Japan League. He also played as a second pass for The Japanese team at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, where he finished 10th. In 1993, Makoto began working as a player and team manager for Nippon Steel, coaching and winning the 3rd and 4th Japan V-League championships with the whole team.

In 1999, Makoto quit nippontetsu to join the Italian volleyball first division Iveco Palermo, and after a season of playing, he felt the high level of Italian volleyball, but also realized the importance of professionalism and autonomy. In 2000, he returned to Japan and joined Asahi Kasei Spark Kids.

In 2002, Makoto quit Asahi Kasei and joined the Panasonic Panthers, where he finished 3rd for two consecutive years, returned to Asahi Kasei in 2004, entered osaka Sport University Graduate School to study sports science research in the same year, and the following year, he received a master's degree with an academic thesis.

Chinese women's volleyball team: Cai Bin's new opponent - twice pushed China's medal-winning Japanese head coach Masayoshi Makoto

3. Coach Era - The most successful head coach of the Japanese women's volleyball team in the new century holding an iPad

In May 2005, Makoto officially retired from the army and soon became the coach of the Women's Volleyball Team of Hisamitsu Pharmaceutical Springs. In his first year in office, he coached the team to runner-up in the V League that year. In the 2006–07 season, he coached the team to advance to the final round with a 20-7 defeat and a 3–2 victory over JT Surprise Yangtian to win the championship.

In December 2008, the Japan Volleyball Association officially appointed Makoto as the head coach of the Japanese women's volleyball team in the new season. Subsequently, he set up a new coaching system, and the division of labor between coaches was refined, and 4 coaches guided players in different aspects.

In November 2010, Japan hosted the Women's Volleyball World Championship, in which Makoto coached players with an iPad. In the end, the Japanese team won the three or four competitions and won the medal in the event again after a gap of 32 years.

In 2012, the Japanese women's volleyball team participated in the London Olympics, and shortly before participating in the competition, Makoto changed the jersey numbers of 10 players in order to make it more difficult for opponents to analyze the tactics of the Japanese team. In the preliminary round, the Japanese team qualified with a result of 3 wins and 2 losses, and in the quarterfinals, the Japanese team narrowly defeated the Chinese team by a score of 3:2 to advance to the top 4, and then the Japanese women's volleyball team lost 0:3 to the brazilian team in the semi-finals, and did not qualify for the final. Finally, in the bronze medal match, Japan played against South Korea, and finally Japan defeated the opponent by a score of 3:0, and won the Olympic medal again after a gap of 28 years. On October 3 of the same year, Makoto successfully succeeded as the coach of the Japanese women's volleyball team, and then he boasted at the press conference that Haikou "wants to win the gold medal of the Rio Olympic Games".

In the Women's Volleyball Grand Champions Cup held in November 2013, Makoto tried to use the new tactic "MB1" conceived after the 2011 Women's Volleyball World Cup. In the first match against European champions Russia, the Japanese team used Saori Forced field as a diagonal of the secondary attack Ōtake, and finally Makoto used this tactic to help japan win 3:1. The Japanese team then won the bronze medal in the Grand Champions Cup with a record of 3 wins and 2 losses.

On August 20, 2014, the final of the Fiat Women's Volleyball Grand Prix began in Tokyo, and Makoto revealed the new tactic "Hybrid 6" (Mixed 6) the day before. Japan used this tactic to win the first four matches, and in the fifth match against Brazil, who had also won all four games before, they finally finished second with a 3-0 defeat. At the Women's Volleyball World Championships held from September to October of the same year, the Japanese team only finished 7th]. In 2015, the Japanese team had a poor record. In the final of the World Women's Volleyball Grand Prix that year, the Japanese team lost all 5 battles, ranking the last place in the final group; in the women's volleyball World Cup, when the real pot was told by reporters that his birthday was the same as Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt, he responded that he also wanted to lead the team to win the championship, during the game, he focused on the defense of the players, and finally the Japanese team won 7 wins and 4 losses in the game, ranking 5th.

In August 2016, Makoto appeared for the second time as the coach of the Japanese women's volleyball team at the Olympic Games, and before the game, he set the goal for the team to go further than the 2012 London Olympics. However, Japan's performance during the Rio Olympics was not smooth, and the team's first opponent during the group stage was the Korean team with similar strength, which lost 1-3. After that, the Japanese team only defeated the fish-belly troops Cameroon and Argentina, ranking fourth in the group with a record of 2 wins and 3 losses. In the quarter-finals, Japan played against the United States, who ranked first in another group, and the team lost 3-0, failing to achieve the goal set by Makoto. In October of the same year, Makoto stopped renewing his contract as head coach of the Japanese women's volleyball team and instead served as the manager of the "Victorina Himeji" women's volleyball team, which was established in March 2016.

Chinese women's volleyball team: Cai Bin's new opponent - twice pushed China's medal-winning Japanese head coach Masayoshi Makoto

Fourth, the scholar-type head coach who publishes many books

Masayoshi Manabe (2011) "Precision : The Secret to Revitalizing Japan"

Masayoshi Manabe (2011) "Open The Team - 55 Strategies to Change the Organization, You Can Do It Without Charm"

Masayoshi Manabe (2012) "A Study of the Triumph of Reversing Thought"

Masayoshi Manabe (2012) "Learn Volleyball from Masayoshi!" 》

Masayoshi Manabe (2012) "Management Techniques to Maximize Women's Abilities"

Fumiko Hayashi, Masayoshi Manabe, Haruo Kitamura, Naoko Yamazaki, Kiyoichi Wata (2013) "Problem Solving Skills for Sages"

Fifth, the former captain of the Japanese women's volleyball team returns! 2 times to suppress the Chinese women's volleyball team to win the medal, three competitions 4 times to win the best

Japanese volleyball player Yoshie Takeshita, nicknamed "the world's smallest and strongest second pass", is 159 cm tall and weighs 55 kg.

The Japanese women's volleyball captain, who participated in the three Olympic Games in Athens, Beijing and London, has won the MVP and best second pass at the 2006 World Championships, the best daredevil award in the 2003 World Cup and the best second pass in the 2011 World Cup, and won the podium of the Chinese women's volleyball team at the 2010 World Championships and the 2012 Olympic Games in the London cycle.

The new national team roster of the Japanese women's volleyball team was officially released, and Koga Sarina became the first strong player under Masamune as the captain, and in the coaching team, Masayoshi Masamune also recruited his former beloved apprentice Takeshita Yoshie.

However, Takeshita works as a consultant "supervisory strategy consultant", and Masayoshi Manabe explains: She can't always come to the training camp or the competition, but I want to hear her opinion of the second setter as much as possible.

Chinese women's volleyball team: Cai Bin's new opponent - twice pushed China's medal-winning Japanese head coach Masayoshi Makoto

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