Miguel Rodrigo

Miguel Rodrigo
Personal information
Full name Miguel Rodrigo Conde Salazar
Date of birth (1970-07-15) 15 July 1970
Place of birth Valencia, Spain
Height 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Playing position Manager (association football)
Club information
Current team
Thailand national futsal team (Head coach)
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1986–1991 Banco de Granada
1991–1992 Almunecar Perez Casket
Teams managed
1992–1998 Banco de Granada
1998–1999 Nazareno de Sevilla
1999–2000 Jaén Paraíso Interio
2000–2003 Spanesi Padova
2003–2004 Dinamo Moscow
2004 Luparense Padova
2004–2009 Caja Segovia
2009–2016 Japan
2016– Thailand

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.



Miguel Rodrigo (born 15 July 1970) is a Spanish Futsal coach who is currently coaching Thailand national futsal team. Miguel Rodrigo had successful spell between 2009 to 2016 with Japan which won two titles of AFC Futsal Championship under his guidance. Due to his depth of tactics and formations, he was dubbed by the Japanese media and fans as The Magician (Japanese : 魔法使 - Mahōtsukai).[1]

Career

Japan

In June 2009, Japan Football Association (JFA) has appointed Miguel Rodrigo as the national Futsal trainer with one-year contract.[2] In 2010, Rodrigo guided Japan to the semi-finals of 2010 AFC Futsal Championship. Japan lost to Iran in the semi but secured the third-place after the win over China in the third-place playoff match. He got the two-years contract extension from JFA after the tournament.

In 2012 AFC Futsal Championship at United Arab Emirates, Miguel Rodrigo led Japan to their second title of Asian Championship after the win 6-1 over Thailand in the final.

In 2012 FIFA Futsal World Cup at Thailand, Japan was in Group C along with Brazil, Portugal and Libya in the group stage. Rodrigo guided Japan to the next round by finishing third-place in the group with 4 points. Japan later lost 3-6 to Ukraine in Round of 16.[3] His most notable moment in the tournament was in the group stage when Rodrigo led Japan to draw 5 – 5 against Portugal after being downed 2 – 5 in the first half. In February 2013, he got contract extension to 2016.

In 2014 AFC Futsal Championship at Vietnam, Rodrigo guided Japan to their third and two-in-a-row Asian championship title after won the penalty shoot-out over Iran after 2-2 draw in time.[4]

In 2016 AFC Futsal Championship at Uzbekistan, Rodrigo failed to lead Japan to 2016 FIFA Futsal World Cup after the defeat by penalty shoot-out to Vietnam in the Quarterfinals and the loss to Kyrgyzstan in 5th – 8th place play-off match. Miguel Rodrigo has stepped down from his position after the tournament.[5]

Thailand

On 1 July 2016, Football Association of Thailand announced the appointment of Miguel Rodrigo as the national trainer of Thailand with a-year-long-contract.[6] His official managerial debut for Thailand was on 20 August 2016, the game of 2016 Thailand Five's against his former side Japan which ended as 2–2 draw. He managed to win 7–5 over Asian champion Iran and draw 3–3 against third-place from UEFA Futsal Euro 2016, Kazakhstan in other two matches of the tournament.

Miguel Rodrigo led Thailand to 2016 FIFA Futsal World Cup in Colombia. Thailand was placed in Group B along with Russia, Egypt and Cuba. Thailand played first match against the third place in World Ranking, Russia and lost by 4–6 with the impressive performance. Rodrigo lead Thailand to win other two games in the group stage against Cuba and Egypt and qualified for round of 16 as the runner-up of Group B behind Russia who fully collected 9 points. This is the first time in the history that Thailand could collect more than 3 points in the group stage. Rodrigo guided Thailand to the round of 16 and defeated to Azerbaijan with a 8–13 result in the extra-time after a 7–7 draw in 40 minutes.

Managerial statistic

As of 23 September 2016
Nat. Team From To Record
G W D L Win %
Japan Japan June 2009 29 February 2016 92 46 13 33 50.00
Thailand Thailand 1 July 2016 Present 8 3 2 3 37.50
Career totals 100 49 15 36 49.00

1 A win or loss by the penalty shoot-out is regarded as the draw in time.

Achievements

Manager

Japan Japan

Certification

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.