Stats by Nakayama#9.Name: Tsuyoshi Kitazawa
(Roberto Baggio in the backround?

)
Country:

Japan
Club: Yomiuri / Verdy Kawasaki / Tokyo Verdy 1969
Position: *
CMF,
DMFNumber: 8, 13
Side: RF/BS
Age: 25-31 years (10/08/1968)
Height: 170 cm
Weight: 66 kg
Attack:
75Defence:
75Balance:
79Stamina:
91Top Speed:
79Acceleration:
80Response:
83Agility:
81Dribble Accuracy:
75Dribble Speed:
76Short Pass Accuracy:
81Short Pass Speed:
77Long Pass Accuracy:
80Long Pass Speed:
78Shot Accuracy:
75Shot Power:
80Shot Technique:
76Free Kick Accuracy: 72
Curling: 70
Header: 69
Jump:
77Technique:
77Aggression:
75Mentality:
86Goalkeeper Skills: 50
Team Work:
83Injury Tolerance:
BCondition:
7Weak Foot Accuracy:
6Weak Foot Frequency: 5
Consistency:
6Growth type: Standard/Lasting
CARDS:P04: Anchor Man
SPECIAL ABILITIES: -
Attack/Defence Awareness Card: Balanced
INFOHe was a midfielder known for his tireless work load and was capped 58 times for Japan. He is currently working on television as a football commentator.
When he was a junior high student, he played for Yomiuri Junior Youth. After being rejected by the club to advance to club's Youth team, he entered Shutoku High School and played for the school club. After graduating, he joined Japan Soccer League side Honda in 1987. He was the top scorer of the league in the 1990-1991 season.
He moved to Yomiuri Club (later Verdy Kawasaki, now Tokyo Verdy 1969) in 1991. Kitazawa, together with his teammates Kazuyoshi Miura, Ruy Ramos, Nobuhiro Takeda, Tetsuji Hashiratani and Bismarck made the early 90's the golden era of Verdy who won the J. League Division 1 Championship (1993 and 1994) and J. League Cup (1992, 1993, and 1994). He finished his playing career as a Verdy player in 2002.
He was capped 58 times and scored 3 goals for the Japanese national team between 1991 and 1999.[1] He made his international debut on 2 June 1991 in a friendly against Thailand in Tendō, Yamagata under national coach Kenzo Yokoyama. He was a member of the Japan team for the 1992 AFC Asian Cup that Japan won. He scored his first international goal on 6 November 1992 in the semifinal against China at Hiroshima Stadium.
He took part in Japan's unsuccessful campaign to qualify for the 1994 FIFA World Cup. He was a member of the Asian final qualification stage that was held centrally in Qatar and played two games. He was on the bench when the Iraqi's injury-time equaliser dashed Japan's qualification hope in the last qualifier, the match that the Japanese fans now remember as the Agony of Doha.
Kitazawa was short-listed for the 1998 World Cup finals, but national coach Takeshi Okada dropped him along with Kazuyoshi Miura and Daisuke Ichikawa at the final training camp in Nyon, Switzerland.
http://www.the-rising-sun-news.com/fame/2002/kitazawa.html