Teikō Junior High (帝光中学校 Teikō Chūgakkō) is a school in Tokyo. Their basketball club is exceptionally strong and has over 100 members. They have a lot of successive championships titles on their name.[1]
The school had a strong winning-philosophy and they taught their players that winning is everything and that losing is not accepted. The Generation of Miracles became so strong that a quota of 20 points per player had to be reached and if not, punishment training will follow.
Teikō Junior High School is mostly known for the strongest team that ever played there: the Generation of Miracles.
Structure
Being an elite school with a high-leveled basketball club, many students apply for a position in this reputed team. As such, the club has three separate strings, labelled the first, second and third string. The first string is the main team of the club, the strongest and most important one. The club's captain is always a player from the first string. The second string can be considered reserves for the first string, even though they play their own matches too. The third string is somewhat a dumpster where the players end up in after being rejected from both the first and the second string. It is unknown if the third string even play in their own matches, it seems that it is only created to keep low quality members in the club. It is encouraged for them to improve and advance to the second string, but this is unlikely to happen.
Each string has their own coach, but the entire team is overseen by the head coach, this being Kōzō Shirogane.
Matches
1st string
These matches are unlocated in terms of championship or league.
- Teikō Junior High vs Nambara Junior High (81 – 50)
- Haranishi Junior High vs Teikō Junior High (55 – 71)
- Teikō Junior High vs Kadooka Junior High (Unknown (at least 91 - 32)
- Teikō Junior High vs Yōmi Junior High (173 – 51)
- Yoneya Junior High vs Teikō Junior High (31 – 203)
- Teikō Junior High vs Shōei Junior High (148 – 51)
Nationals (2 years ago)
Group stage
- Teikō Junior High vs Kōen Junior High (78 – 59)
- Kazami Junior High vs Teikō Junior High (59 – 78)
Playoffs
- Eighth-finals: Teikō Junior High vs Kamizaki Junior High (169 – 81)
- Quarter-finals: Teikō Junior High vs Yano Kōgyō Junior High (97 – 39)
- Finals: Teikō Junior High vs Kamata West Junior High (81 – 51)
Nationals (1 year ago)
Prelimenaries
Group stage
Playoffs
- Semi-finals: Teikō Junior High vs Kamata West Junior High (at least 89 – 45)
- Finals: Teikō Junior High vs Meikō Junior High (111 – 11)
2nd string
These matches are unlocated in terms of championship or league.
- Teikō Junior High vs Komagi Junior High (83 – 81)
Team
Former Players
Ejected
Stats
Offense | 10/10 | ||
---|---|---|---|
Defense | 10/10 | ||
Bench Strength | 10/10 | ||
Height | 10/10 | ||
Teamwork | 2/10 | ||
Trivia
- Kanji 帝 (Tei) means emperor while 光 (Kō) means ray/light.
- Their motto is "Ever-Victorious" (百戦百勝 Hyakusenhyakushō).
- Akashi and Nijimura both wore the number 4 jersey, as it is reserved for the team's captain. When Nijimura was still active as captain, Akashi wore the number 9. Likewise, the other members too wore different jersey numbers initially with Aomine, Midorima, Murasakibara, Haizaki and Kuroko wearing numbers 10, 11, 12, 13 and 16 respectively. After Akashi became captain, Nijimura began to use number 9.
- The school was founded during the rainy season, as stated in the light novel.
- During their second year in Teikō Junior High, Daiki Aomine and Shintarō Midorima were classmates, as well as Ryōta Kise and Atsushi Murasakibara.
References
- ↑ Kuroko no Basuke chapter 1, page 1
v - e - t | Teikō Junior High |
---|---|
Generation of Miracles | Ryōta Kise • Shintarō Midorima • Daiki Aomine • Atsushi Murasakibara • Seijūrō Akashi |
Other players | Tetsuya Kuroko • Shōgo Haizaki • Shūzō Nijimura • Masaya Kubota • Tōru Sekiguchi |
Staff | Naoto Sanada (head coach) • Kōzō Shirogane (former head coach) • Daigo Matsuoka (3rd string coach) • Satsuki Momoi (manager) |