Takashi shimoda biography

Takashi Shimoda

Japan
Goalkeeping Coach17/18 (Apr 12, 2018)-17/18 (Apr 12, 2018) /
-2502 Days-----0.00 : 0.000.00-Goalkeeping Coach of: Hajime Moriyasu (88 Games), Akira Nishino (7 Games)Japan
Goalkeeping Coach17/18 (Jan 1, 2018)21/22 (Aug 7, 2021)17/18 (Jan 1, 2018) /
21/22 (Aug 7, 2021)1314 Days-----0.00 : 0.000.00-Goalkeeping Coach of: Hajime Moriyasu (6 Games)Sanf. Hiroshima
Goalkeeping Coach10/11 (Feb 1, 2011)17/18 (Jan 31, 2018)10/11 (Feb 1, 2011) /
17/18 (Jan 31, 2018)2556 Days-----0.00 : 0.000.00-Goalkeeping Coach of: Hajime Moriyasu (265 Games), Michael Petrovic (36 Games), Jan Jönsson (18 Games), Akinobu Yokouchi (4 Games)

Takeshi Shimoda Sensei

O-sensei’s most talented student

(Takeshi Shimoda (right) and O-sensei Funakoshi (left))

Takeshi Shimoda was Gichin Funakoshi’s assistant and instructor and was the most talented of O-sensei’s students (in Shigeru Egami’s words) in the early thirties. He traveled around Japan together with Egami among other Funakoshi followers giving demonstrations of Karate. He was an expert in Kendo of the Nen-ryu school and also studied Ninjutsu.He became seriously ill after one of the demonstrations and died soon afterwards, he was still in his thirties.
Shigeru Egami recounts:
“He wasn’t a big man, and he kept a low posture; he didn’t seem to hit the striking-post very powerfully. I was amazed to find out that he practiced a thousand punches with one fist everyday, and when it rained, he would practice anyway with an umbrella over his head. I was even more amazed when I was made to stand before him and receive his punch. Although his blows were light, I simply could not ward him off, no matter how hard I tried”

Takashi Shimoda

Takashi Shimoda (下田 崇, Shimoda Takashi, born November 28, 1975) is a former Japanesefootball player. He played for the Japan national team.

Biography

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Shimoda was born in Hiroshima on November 28, 1975. After graduating from Hiroshima Minami High School, he joined J1 League club Sanfrecce Hiroshima in 1994. He did not play many matches until the mid 1990s, as he was behind Kazuya Maekawa and Kazumasa Kawano. Kawano left the club in 1997 and Maekawa was injured in 1998; Shimoda then became a regular goalkeeper in 1998. Although he played as the regular goalkeeper until 2007, he sustained a knee injury that same year. He did not play from 2008 and retired at the end of the 2010 season.

In April 1995, Shimoda was selected to the Japan U-20 national team for the 1995 World Youth Championship. He played two matches including the quarterfinal. In July 1996, he was also selected to the Japan U-23 national team for the 1996 Summer Olympics. However he did not play in any matches behind Yoshikatsu Kawaguchi. Although Japan won two matche

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