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Takayuki Nishigaya

Takayuki Nishigaya (西ヶ谷 隆之, Nishigaya Takayuki, born 12 May 1973) is a Japanese professional manager and former footballer who is currently the head coach of Thailand under-23 national team.

Playing career

Nishigaya was born in Shizuoka on 12 May 1973. After graduating from the University of Tsukuba, he joined J1 League club Nagoya Grampus Eight with teammate Shigeyoshi Mochizuki in 1996. He mostly played as a centre-back during that first season. In 1998, he moved to Avispa Fukuoka. He became a regular player as the left-back of a three back defence. In 1999, he moved to Verdy Kawasaki, where he did not play much. In 2000, he moved to JEF United Ichihara. Here, too, he did not play much. In 2001, he moved to J2 League club Albirex Niigata. There, he played a variety of positions, such as defensive midfielder, centre-back and left-back. He retired at the end of the 2001 season.

Coaching career

After retiring, Nishigaya started his coaching career at his alma mater, the University of Tsukuba, in 2003. In 2004, he signed with Tokyo Verdy. He coached for their youth team until 2009. In 2010, he became a manager for Meiji University.

Nishigaya went on to become assistant coach at Albirex Niigata under Hisashi Kurosaki at 2012, and Mito Hollyhock between 2013 and 2015 under Tetsuji Hashiratani, before being promoted to head coach at the latter, after Hashiratani was sacked. In February 2018, Nishigaya became the head coach of SC Sagamihara before moving on to Matsumoto Yamaga, where he was under-18 head coach, and then becoming first-team assistant under Kei Shibata in 2020.

Singapore

In April 2022, Nishigaya was appointed as the manager of the Singapore national team in a two-year contract. He failed to bring Singapore to qualify for the 2023 AFC Asian Cup after losing to Kyrgyzstan 1–2 and losing to Tajikistan 1–0 despite winning against Myanmar 6–2 in third round of 2023 AFC Asian Cup qualification. Nishigaya also led the team to a disappointing AFF Cup run, despite a narrow win against Laos and Myanmar, a scoreless draw with Vietnam, the Lions failed to qualify to the semi-finals after a heavy 4–1 humiliation against Malaysia. Despite calls for him to be replaced, he has continued as head coach.[citation needed]

In June 2023, Nishigaya only managed to get two draw results in the friendly matches against Oceania countries, Papua New Guinea and Solomon Island. Chants of "Sack the coach" was being chanted so loudly at the National Stadium to the point Nishigaya had to called for security to protect him.

Nishigaya narrowly led Singapore to a 3–1 win on aggregate against Guam in the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualification first round. Nishigaya led Singapore with a disastrous results in the first two matches of the second round of the World Cup qualifiers. As Singapore lost 5–0 to South Korea away and lost 3–1 to Thailand in home ground. On 29 January 2024, Nishigaya was sacked from his duty as Singapore head coach with only 8 wins from 21 matches, thus making him as one of the worst foreign head coach to managed Singapore.[1]

Thailand U23

On 4 September 2024, Nishigaya was appointed as the head coach for the Thailand U-23 team.

Club statistics

Club performance League Cup League Cup Total
Season Club League Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Japan League Emperor's Cup J.League Cup Total
1996 Nagoya Grampus Eight J1 League 13 0 1 0 7 0 21 0
1997 22 0 1 0 7 0 30 0
1998 Avispa Fukuoka J1 League 25 0 3 1 3 1 31 2
1999 Verdy Kawasaki J1 League 3 0 0 0 0 0 3 0
2000 JEF United Ichihara J1 League 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 0
2001 Albirex Niigata J2 League 37 0 0 0 2 0 39 0
Total 100 0 21 1 5 1 126 2

Managerial statistics

As of match played 25 March 2025
Managerial record by team and tenure
Team From To Record
G W D L Win %
Mito HollyHock 27 June 2015 31 January 2018 114 33 42 39 028.95
SC Sagamihara 1 February 2018 31 January 2019 32 12 6 14 037.50
Singapore 25 April 2022 29 January 2024 21 8 5 8 038.10
Thailand U23 4 September 2024 Present 3 0 0 3 000.00
Total 170 53 53 64 031.18

References

  1. ^ "Football Association of Singapore fires head coach Takayuki Nishigaya after poor results". straitstimes.com. Ganesan, Deepanraj. 29 January 2024. Retrieved 30 January 2024.