| Medal record |
| Olympic Games |
| Gold |
1972 |
Team competition |
| Silver |
1968 |
Team competition |
| Bronze |
1964 |
Team competition |
| FIVB World Cup |
| Silver |
1969 |
Team competition |
| Silver |
1977 |
Team competition |
| Asian Championships |
| Gold |
1975 |
Team competition |
| Gold |
1983 |
Team competition |
| Gold |
1987 |
Team competition |
| Gold |
1991 |
Team competition |
| Gold |
1995 |
Team competition |
| Gold |
2005 |
Team competition |
| Gold |
2009 |
Team competition |
| Silver |
1989 |
Team competition |
| Silver |
1997 |
Team competition |
| Bronze |
1979 |
Team competition |
| Bronze |
1993 |
Team competition |
| Bronze |
2001 |
Team competition |
The Japan men's national volleyball team is the volleyball national team of Japan. The Asian squad started to play an important role in international competitions in the 1960s, scoring an eighth place at their inaugural World Championship in Brazil in 1960. Japanese Volleyball was in ascendance at that time and the national team went on to place fifth at the next two World Championships in the Soviet Union (1962) and Czechoslovakia (1966).
Japan joined the world elite at the beginning of the next decade, winning the bronze twice at the World Championships in Bulgaria (1970) and Mexico (1974). The then mighty Japan also played a leading role at Olympic tournaments, reaching the podium three times in a row, winning the bronze medal at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, the silver four years later in Mexico and finally triumphing in Munich (1972). The 1984 World Championship in Argentina also saw Japan ending up in fourth place. The country has been waiting for a big success since then.
Results
World Cup
World League
World Grand Champions Cup
Asian Games
- 1958 — 1st place
- 1962 — 1st place
- 1966 — 1st place
- 1970 — 1st place
- 1974 — 1st place
- 1978 — 2nd place
- 1982 — 1st place
- 1986 — 4th place
- 1990 — 3rd place
- 1994 — 1st place
- 1998 — 4th place
- 2002 — 3rd place
- 2006 — 5th place
Squads
- 1998 World Championship — 16th place
- Kentaro Asahi, Nobutaka Hirano, Yoichi Kato, Masayoshi Manabe, Katsuyuki Minami, Norihiko Miyazaki, Yuichi Nakagaichi, Takashi Narita, Koichi Nishimura, Masaji Ogino, Hideyuki Otake, and Minoru Takeuchi. Head Coach: Futoshi Teramawari.
- 2002 World Championship — 9th place (tied)
- Yuta Abe, Nobuyoshi Hosokawa, Nobuhiro Ito, Hiroyuki Kai, Yoichi Kato
, Hiroaki Kawaura, Takeshi Kitajima, Atsushi Kobayashi, Ryu Morishige, Katsutoshi Tsumagari, Makoto Yamaguchi, and Takahiro Yamamoto. Head Coach: Mikiyasu Tanaka.
- 2003 FIVB World Cup — 9th place
- Yuta Abe, Nobuyoshi Hosokawa, Nobuhiro Ito, Atsushi Kobayashi, Yoichi Kato
, Takehiro Kihara, Akira Koshiya, Ryu Morishige, Kenji Onoue, Katsutoshi Tsumagari, Takahiro Yamamoto, and Daisuke Usami. Head Coach: Mikiyasu Tanaka.
- 2006 FIVB World League — 13th place
- Yuta Abe, Shinya Chiba, Yusuke Ishijima, Yu Koshikawa, Keisuke Kurihara, Akira Masuno, Yoshihiko Matsumoto, Ryuji Naohiro, Masaji Ogino, Kenji Onoue, Nobuharu Saito, Yoshifumi Suzuki, Yohei Takasugi, Osamu Tanabe, Kosuke Tomonaga, Katsutoshi Tsumagari, Takahiro Yamamoto, and Kota Yamamura. Head Coach: Tatsuya Ueta.
Current team
Team Manager: Hideo Hagiwara
Head coach: Tatsuya Ueta
Assistant Coach: Yoshito Kubo
Trainer: Hideyuki Otake
See also
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National sports teams of Japan |
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American football · Association Football (F, M, U-20, U-17) · Australian rules football · Baseball · Basketball (F, M) · Beach Soccer · Boxing · Cricket · Field hockey (F, M) · Futsal (F, M) · Handball · Ice hockey (F, M) · Korfball · Rugby Union (F, M) · Rugby league · Softball · Tennis (F, M) · Volleyball (F, M)
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