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The All Japan High School Soccer Tournament (全国高等学校サッカー選手権大会, Zenkoku kōtō gakkō sakkā senshuken taikai, 全国高校サッカー選手権大会, Zenkoku kō kō sakkā senshuken taikai) of Japan, commonly known as "Winter Kokuritsu" (冬の国立 Fuyu no Kokuritsu), is an annual nationwide high school association football tournament.
Tokyo's qualifiers is the only to qualify two teams to the competition, as they have the largest amount of registered high schools affiliated with the All-Japan High School Soccer Federation. Teams playing at higher-level leagues earns a bye from the early stages of their respective qualifiers, getting automatically seeded in more advanced ...
The majority of Fukuoka High School students attend four-year universities after graduating from FHS. This school has one of the top reputations among public high schools in Fukuoka Prefecture (along with Shuyukan Senior High School and Chikushigaoka High School) because a large number of graduates continue on to Kyushu University, one of the top public universities in Japan.
Yamaguchi: Takagawa Gakuen High School (23) Tokushima: Tokushima Ichiritsu High School (15) Kagawa: Takamatsu Shogyo High School (22) Ehime: Matsuyama Kita High School (5) Kōchi: Meitoku Gijuku High School (7) Fukuoka: Higashi Fukuoka High School (18) Saga: Saga Higashi High School (9) Nagasaki: Nagasaki IAS High School (4) Kumamoto: Luther ...
The men's tournament was held for the first time on 1966, with Fujieda Higashi winning the first edition, held in the Aomori Prefecture. [5] [6]To qualify for the tournament, high schools across the country plays prefectural qualifications, structured very similarly as the All Japan High School Soccer Tournament's prefectural qualifications. [7]
Nishikawa was born in Fukuoka Prefecture on June 12, 1974. After graduating from high school, he joined Yokohama Marinos in 1993. However he could not play at all in the match until 1994. On September 6, 1995, he debuted as forward against Sanfrecce Hiroshima.
Born in the Ōita Prefecture, [3] Shigemi started playing football at his local high school in Ōita, specifically at Ōita High School, and featured in the All Japan High School Soccer Tournament during his second and third years.
In the Regional Leagues, first divisions equal to Japanese fifth tier of league football, while second divisions equal to the sixth tier. So, regional leagues who only have one single division, such as Shikoku, have teams going straight from the prefectural top divisions to the fifth tier in case of a promotion.