
Coach retains job, school says it does not think attacks by other students constituted bullying.
While it’s become common knowledge that many Japanese talent agencies prohibit idol singers from dating, there are similar rules in place at some Japanese high schools. The logic is that teens should be focusing on their studies and wholesome extra-curricular activities, as opposed to squandering their precious youth trying to get a date (when exactly they are supposed to become interested in romantic companionship is a question anti-dating schools quietly sidestep in its entirety).
Tochigi Prefecture’s Ashikaga High School isn’t so strict as to have a blanket ban on dating, but its boys volleyball team, a regular competitor at national championship tournaments, does set internal limits on its members’ love lives. Players aren’t allowed to date anyone else involved with the volleyball program, such as the equipment managers, who in Japan are usually female students, so as to prevent jealousy and animosity from breeding among teammates.
However, young love isn’t always so easily contained, and one boy on the team, a 17-year-old second-year student, began dating a first-year female student equipment manager. Their tryst was discovered, though, and it’s now come to light that on June 29, the 66-year-old coach confronted the boy about violating the team’s internal rule. After telling the boy to kneel on the floor in the traditional Japanese style, he began to berate the teen for his actions, kicking him in the chest repeatedly and striking him on the back when he toppled over, angrily declaring “This is corporal punishment.”
Ashikaga High School principal Shigekazu Matsushita relayed all this at a press conference held on November 30. In addition to the above incident, the boy was assaulted multiple times by his teammates both in the dormitory in which he lived and in the school gymnasium.
Sadly, real life doesn’t always operate like a feel-good youth sports movie, and despite the deplorable actions of the coach and players involved in the attacks, it’s been another successful year for Ashikaga’s volleyball team, which once again earned entry to the national high school tournament, scheduled to take place between January 4 and 8. Matsushita announced that the coach will not be travelling with the team to the venue, Tokyo’s Metropolitan Gymnasium.
Startlingly, the coach will not be fired for the incident, though the school says he regrets his actions. Instead, he’ll be allowed to serve out his current contract until its end at the conclusion of the school year in spring (the school has said his contract will not be renewed). Matsushita also said that the attacks on the boy by his teammates “are not recognized as incidents of bullying” by the school, one of the more reprehensible denials of bullying in recent memory.
Making things even more troubling is that in 2008, in a separate incident, a pair of third-year students who were members of Ashikaga’s volleyball team were expelled after months of assaulting their underclassmen teammates, including punching them and scalding one student’s face with hot water in the dorm’s shower facility, because they “had been playing poorly” or “had bad attitudes.” The two third-year students were subsequently expelled (it’s unclear whether the team’s current coach was also in charge of the team at the time).
However, there is a happy ending, of sorts, in that both the recently assaulted boy and the manager have since left the team, apparently having the mature wherewithal to realize that some people, no matter how many games they win, are losers who it’s not worth spending time with.
Source: Livedoor News/Sankei News via Jin, Eduon
Top image: Wikipedia/あばさー

Japanese high school kendo coach caught forcing students to pay birthday-tribute money
Foreign student who punched Japanese basketball referee returns to home country, coach suspended
Former schoolgirl sues Tokyo high school that made her drop out for breaking no-dating rule
Baseball star Ichiro Suzuki to coach champion high school baseball team in Japan
What are the worst things about living in the Japanese countryside?[Survey]
Second-generation sumo burger coming to Burger King Japan with return of Baby Body Burger
What’s up with the “mosquito buzz” noise at Shibuya Station?
Japanese sweets souvenirs don’t get more beautiful than this
Nagasaki high school students collab with sweets veteran to release carrot nama dorayaki
An interview with Evangelion’s composer, Shiro Sagisu
This Mother’s Day, why not give the gift of a single, really expensive, never-picked mango?
Japanese film studio Toei announces first three video games from newly created Toei Games
Sailor Moon celebrates 30 years with beautiful purse, accessory lines from Samantha Group【Pics】
Deceptive strawberry milk package angers 7-Eleven customers following banana scandal
Japan’s 5.3 million beautiful Hitachi Nemophila flowers are now in full bloom[Photos]
New Kyoto Converse sneakers celebrate Japan with traditional kimono fabrics for your feet
Studio Ghibli launches huge new anime movie T-shirt collection with special design details
Tifa’s Final Fantasy VII bar is going to pop up in real-world Tokyo
Brand-new Square Enix Cafe to open in Tokyo…and in Los Angeles too!
Japanese convenience store gives away free ice cream with creative ad at Shinjuku Station
Japan is so hungry for workers it used up its five-year visa quota in record time
Tsujihan sushi bowl restaurant goes viral with foreign tourists, but is it worth the hype?
7-Eleven Japan releases Uji matcha smoothies… but only at select locations
7-Eleven Japan’s cooked-in-store takoyaki is here! How does it fare against the street food king?
Japan reportedly adding Japanese language skill requirement to most common foreigner work visa
Pokémon and Ikea Japan cross over into each other’s worlds with collaboration events
Wisteria season starts early with blooming of Japan’s Great Wisteria in its beautiful garden
Japan’s best conveyor belt sushi restaurant of seven years ago has now, finally, come to Tokyo
Brand-new Pokémon manhole covers coming to help the recovery of a disaster-stricken part of Japan
Japan’s awesomely beautiful Alpen Route snow corridor is now open
Injuries on stairs in Tokyo highlight an overlooked design flaw
Mt. Fuji decorated with a 500,000-flower pink carpet is Japan’s ultimate spring view
Survey asks foreign tourists what bothered them in Japan, more than half gave same answer
Japan’s human washing machines will go on sale to general public, demos to be held in Tokyo
Starbucks Japan releases new drinkware and goods for Valentine’s Day
We deeply regret going into this tunnel on our walk in the mountains of Japan
Starbucks Japan releases new sakura goods and drinkware for cherry blossom season 2026
Japan’s newest Shinkansen has no seats…or passengers [Video]
Major Japanese hotel chain says reservations via overseas booking sites may not be valid
Put sesame oil in your coffee? Japanese maker says it’s the best way to start your day【Taste test】
No more using real katana for tourism activities, Japan’s National Police Agency says
Studio Ghibli releases Kodama forest spirits from Princess Mononoke to light up your home
The only woman managing a high school baseball team in Osaka does things a little differently
119-year-old Japanese high school stops forcing baseball players to shave their heads
Japanese high schools abolish old rules, provide freedom with underwear, hair and dating
Japanese middle school teacher kisses her student at Tokyo Disneyland during date, gets fired
Survey shows drop in Japanese highschoolers who’ve kissed someone, girls still more experienced
Upskirt photos lead Japanese high school to redesign cheerleader uniforms
Sega begins Puyo Puyo Boot Camp to help bring eSports into more Japanese high schools
Japanese TV issues heatstroke alert, says to avoid exercise, keeps showing high school baseball game
Sneak Peek Into Japanese All-Boys High Schools: 50 Surprising and Unsurprising Things You’d See
Japanese medical school textbook surprises with questions on patient-doctor romance