Information about J. League
| J.LEAGUE |
|---|
| Founded |
| 1992 |
| Inaugural season |
| 1993 |
| Nation |
| Relegation To |
| Japan Football League (promotion only) |
| Number of Teams |
| J1: 18 clubs J2: 13 clubs |
| Asian Qualification |
| Asian Champions League A3 Champions Cup |
| Domestic Cups |
| Yamazaki Nabisco Cup Emperor's Cup |
| Defending Champions (2006) |
| J1: Urawa Reds J2: Yokohama F.C. |
| Website |
| Official Website {English} Official Website {Japanese} |
The League history
Phases of the League
Before the formation of J.LEAGUE (-1992)
Before the J.LEAGUE was created, the highest level of club football in Japan was the Japan Soccer League (JSL), and consisted of amateur teams. Fans were few, the grounds were not of the highest quality, and the Japanese national team was not on a par with the Asian powerhouses. To raise the level of play domestically, to attempt to garner more fans, and to strengthen the national team, the Japan Football Association (JFA) decided to form a professional league.The professional football league, J.LEAGUE was formed in 1992, with ten clubs drawn from the JSL. At this point the JSL changed its name and became the Japan Football League (former), a semi-professional league. Although the J.LEAGUE did not officially launch until 1993, the Yamazaki Nabisco Cup competition was held between the ten clubs in 1992.
The inaugural season, and the J.LEAGUE boom (1993-1995)
J.LEAGUE kicked-off its first season with ten clubs on May 15, 1993 as Verdy Kawasaki (current, Tokyo Verdy 1969) played host to Yokohama Marinos (current, Yokohama F. Marinos) at the Kasumigaoka National Stadium. It made a huge impact on the Japanese sports culture as professional baseball, golf, and sumo were the only well-supported and widely-watched sports in the country. Many famous and post-peak foreign players were brought into the clubs and the stadiums were filling in. On every matchday, at least one game was broadcast live on national TV, and it seemed the league was a huge success. In the second season (1994), the league recorded its highest average attendance of 19,598, which is yet to be broken.An era after the J.LEAGUE boom (1996-1999)
Despite the success in the first three years, many financial experts knew that "the boom" would soon dissipate, and the league would be in terrible shape as the clubs continued paying high wages to the foreign players. In fact, the phenomenon began in early 1996 as the league attendance declined rapidly. In 1997 the average attendance was 10,131, almost half of that in 1995. Many claimed that the sudden decline in popularity was also due to rapid expansions; A total of eight clubs were added in five years since the inaugural season. With high paychecks and low attendance, money was bleeding from the clubs, and the league sponsors were becoming very worried. It seemed that there was no way out from the losses.Although J-League had moved away from the Japanese baseball's model of corporate-owned teams and clubs were their own independent entities, clubs still depended heavily on support from sponsors, who were essentially parent companies. When the Japanese economy took a turn for the worse, clubs suffered when their sponsors were affected. In 1998, Sato Kogyo, a general contractor and primary co-sponsor of Yokohama Flügels, announced that it was experiencing financial difficulties, and it would be pulling its support from the club. The other primary co-sponsor, All Nippon Airways, who could not support the club on its own, met with Nissan Motors, the primary sponsor of Yokohama Marinos, the Flügels' cross-town rival, and decided to merge their clubs. Under the agreement, the Flügels were dissolved, and the Marinos were renamed Yokohama F. Marinos, the "F." representing the Flügels. Around the same time, Fujita, the sponsors of Bellmare Hiratsuka (currently, Shonan Bellmare), also did not want to finance the club any more.
It would be just a matter of time before the league collapsed.
Change of the League's infrastructure (1999-present)
Gamba Osaka warming up before a match against Yokohama F. Marinos.
The league acquired nine clubs from the semi-professional JFL (former) and one club from J.LEAGUE to create a two division system. The topflight became the J.LEAGUE Division 1 (J1) with 16 clubs while J.LEAGUE Division 2 (J2) was launched with ten clubs in 1999.
The criteria for becoming a J2 club were not as strict as the top division and this allowed smaller cities and towns to maintain a club successfully from the grass-root level, without investing as much as the clubs in J1. Clubs in J2 were well supported from their hometown crowd and government, and the clubs took time to build the team for J1 promotion as they also tried to gradually improve financially. The best examples of successful clubs are Oita Trinita, Albirex Niigata, and Ventforet Kofu. All these clubs originally started as J2 in 1999 and were comparatively small, but as these club grew stronger each year, they eventually earned J1 promotion in 2002, 2003, and 2005. Now they are all established in the topflight.
The league also began to more closely follow European game formats as time went on. Originally, due to the cultural unease of neither side coming out as the winner of a game, extra time, golden goal rules, and penalty shoot-outs were employed for regular league matches. Penalty shoot-outs were abolished in the beginning of the 1999 season, and extra time was abolished in 2002 for J2 and 2003 for J1.
Also until 2004 (with the exception of 1996 season), the J1 season was divided into two. At the end of each full season, the champion from each half played a two-legged series to determined the overall season winner. Jubilo Iwata in 2002, and Yokohama F. Marinos in 2003, won both "halves" of the respective seasons, thus eliminating the need for the playoff series. This was the part of the reason for the league to abolish the split-season system beginning in 2005.
Future plans (2007 and beyond)
At the beginning of the 2006 season, the J.LEAGUE excutives announced that the league would expand J2 to 18 clubs by 2010, and 22 clubs by 2016. In the past there has been some mention of creating a third division (J3); however, this plan has been postponed for now. Several Japan Football League teams have announced intentions of being promoted to J2; however, the presence of strong company teams (which are ineligible for promotion) makes the task difficult. Due to this, as of the 2007 season, clubs with J.LEAGUE Associate Memberships finishing in the top 4 of the JFL are eligible for promotion.Timetable
- 1989
- JFA forms a professional league assessment committee.
- 1990
- The committee decides the criteria for clubs (a home town, a home stadium, sponsors, etc.)
- Fifteen to twenty clubs from JSL applies for professional league membership
- 1991
- The official announcement was made to the public
- 1992
- The professional league, J.LEAGUE forms with 10 clubs
- Kashima Antlers
- Urawa Red Diamonds
- JEF United Ichihara (current JEF United Ichihara Chiba)
- Verdy Kawasaki (current Tokyo Verdy 1969)
- Yokohama Marinos (current Yokohama F. Marinos)
- Yokohama Flügels
- Shimizu S-Pulse
- Nagoya Grampus Eight
- Gamba Osaka
- Sanfrecce Hiroshima
- JSL becomes JFL (former)
- J.LEAGUE hosts the first domestic league cup competition with the original ten clubs
- 1993
- The J.LEAGUE officially kicks off its first season with ten clubs
- 1994
- Two clubs were promoted from JFL (former). The league now has 12 clubs.
- Júbilo Iwata
- Bellmare Hiratsuka (current Shonan Bellmare)
- 1995
- Two clubs were promoted from JFL (former). The league now has 14 clubs.
- Kashiwa Reysol
- Cerezo Osaka
- The points system was in effect. (3pts for a win, 1pt for a PK loss, 0pts for a regulation or extra time loss)
- 1996
- Two clubs were promoted from JFL (former). The league now has 16 clubs.
- Kyoto Purple Sanga (current Kyoto Sanga)
- Avispa Fukuoka
- Changed to the single season format from the double season format
- 1997
- One club was promoted from JFL (former). The league now has 17 clubs.
- Vissel Kobe
- Went back to the split season format again (however, only one round-robin per stage)
- Change in the points regulation (3pts for a regulation win, 2pts for a extra time win, 1pt for a PK win, and 0pts for a loss)
- 1998
- One club was promoted from JFL (former) The league now has 18 clubs.
- Consadole Sapporo
- 1999
- The Yokohama merger
- The league was divided into two divisions, J1 and J2, as nine more clubs from JFL (former) joined the J2.
- Montedio Yamagata
- Vegalta Sendai
- Omiya Ardija
- Kawasaki Frontale
- Ventforet Kofu
- Sagan Tosu
- FC Tokyo
- Albirex Niigata
- Oita Trinita
- Consadole Sapporo was relegated from J1 to J2
- The league now has 16 clubs in J1 and 10 clubs in J2.
- Penalties were scratched in both divisions (3pts for a regulation win, 2pts for an extra time win, and 1pt for a tie)
- JFL (former) was also restructured as well, and it became the new Japan Football League (JFL). To distinguish between the former and new JFL, the new JFL is pronounced Nihon Football League in Japanese.
- 2000
- One club was promoted from JFL to J2. The league now has 16 J1 clubs and 11 J2 clubs.
- Mito HollyHock
- 2001
- One club was promoted from JFL to J2. The league now has 16 J1 clubs and 12 J2 Clubs.
- Yokohama F.C. (the unofficial successor of Yokohama Flügels)
- 2002
- Extra time was scratched in J2 (3pts for a win, 1pt for a tie, 0pts for a loss)
- J1 still had extra time (3pts for a regualtion win, 2pts for an extra time win, and 1pt for a tie)
- 2003
- Extra time was scratched in J1 (3pts for a win, 1pt for a tie, 0pts for a loss)
- 2004 (Go to 2004 J.LEAGUE Season)
- 2005 (Go to 2005 J.LEAGUE Season)
- Two clubs were promoted from JFL to J2. The league now has 18 J1 clubs and 12 J2 clubs.
- Thespa Kusatsu
- Tokushima VORTIS
- The league starts the single season format (double round robin) for J1
- 2006 (Go to 2006 J.LEAGUE Season)
- One club was promoted from JFL to J2. The league now has 18 J1 clubs and 13 J2 clubs.
- Ehime FC
- Away goals rule is adopted in Yamazaki Nabisco Cup and Promotion/Relegation Series
The League structure
Promotion to J2 from the JFL has tended to be more ad-hoc in nature, given the disparity in nature between the two leagues. In 2000, 2001, and 2006 the JFL league champion was promoted to J2; in 2005 two teams were promoted (as explained below). There is no provision as of 2006 for relegation from J2 to the JFL.
For the 2006 season, the top two J2 teams and bottom two J1 teams in 2005 again were automatically promoted/relegated. In the playoff, the third place J2 team Ventforet Kofu defeated Kashiwa Reysol, the third-worst J1 team, sending three J1 teams down to J2 for the first time.
J.LEAGUE Division 1 (J1)
Until 2004 season, the J1 season was divided into two halves, with a separate championship for each half (with exception of the 1996 season). Each half was 15 games long and each team played each other once, then again in the second half; playing away games against all the teams they had played at home in the first half of the season and vice versa. When a single team won both half seasons (ie. posted the best record over each 15-game half), then that team was declared the overall champion of the J1.The 2007 season
Eighteen clubs will play in double round-robin (home and away) format, a total of 34 games each. A club receives 3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, and 0 points for a loss. The clubs are ranked by points, and tie breakers are, in the following order: goal differential, goals scored, head-to-head results. If they are still tied, the clubs will be ranked the same in the standings, meaning multiple clubs can win championships. The bottom two clubs will be relegated to J2, while the 16th placed club plays a two-legged Promotion/Relegation Series.Clubs in J1 (2007)
Championship history
| Year | 1st Stage | 2nd Stage | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 (detail) | Kashima Antlers | Verdy Kawasaki | |
| 1994 (detail) | Sanfrecce Hiroshima | Verdy Kawasaki | |
| 1995 (detail) | Yokohama Marinos | Verdy Kawasaki | |
| 1996† (detail) | Kashima Antlers | ||
| 1997 (detail) | Kashima Antlers | Jbilo Iwata | |
| 1998 (detail) | Jbilo Iwata | Kashima Antlers | |
| 1999 (detail) | Jbilo Iwata | Shimizu S-Pulse | |
| 2000 (detail) | Yokohama F. Marinos | Kashima Antlers | |
| 2001 (detail) | Jbilo Iwata | Kashima Antlers | |
| 2002‡ (detail) | Jbilo Iwata | ||
| 2003‡ (detail) | Yokohama F. Marinos | ||
| 2004 (detail) | Yokohama F. Marinos | Urawa Red Diamonds | |
| 2005† (detail) | Gamba Osaka | ||
| 2006† (detail) | Urawa Red Diamonds | ||
* The season champions are bolded
† Unifed Season
‡ Single club won both stages
Best performance teams
| # | Club | Winners | Runners-up |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kashima Antlers | 4 | 2 |
| 2 | Jbilo Iwata | 3 | 3 |
| 3 | Yokohama F. Marinos | 3 | 2 |
| 4 | Tokyo Verdy 1969 | 2 | 1 |
| 5 | Urawa Red Diamonds | 1 | 2 |
| 6 | Gamba Osaka | 1 | 0 |
| 7 | Nagoya Grampus Eight | 0 | 1 |
| 7 | Kawasaki Frontale | 0 | 1 |
| 7 | Sanfrecce Hiroshima | 0 | 1 |
| 7 | Shimizu S-Pulse | 0 | 1 |
Relegation history
In 1998 J.LEAGUE official decided that there will be two divisions and Division 1 will be reduced from 18 clubs to 16. In end of 1998 season, the Yokohama Marinos merged with Yokohama Flugels. The league had to relegate one more club from the top flight. They took the results from 1997 and 1998 season and choose the bottom four clubs to participate in the end of season tournament with Kawasaki Frontale from JFL (former). Out of these five clubs, three will be allowed to stay at J1 and two will be dropped to division 2. JEF United Ichihara, Vissel Kobe, and Avispa Fukuoka survived, while Kawasaki Frontale failed to win J1 promotion and Consadole Sapporo became the first club in J.LEAGUE history to relegate to J2. These two clubs and other eight clubs from JFL (former) were brought up to create the division 2.From 1999 to 2003 season, two bottom (15th and 16th) clubs were dropped. Even though, Division 1 had two stages in one season, to determine the relegating clubs, overall standing were used.
At end of the 2004 season, J1 again expanded from 16 clubs to 18 clubs. No clubs were relegated, however, last-placed (16th) club had to play Promotion/Relegation Series against 3rd placed club from J2.
From 2005 season, two bottom (17th and 18th) clubs were relegated, while 16th-placed club had to play Promotion/Relegation Series against 3rd placed club from J2.
| Year | 15th Place | 16th Place | 17th Place | 18th Place |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1998 (detail) | JEF United Ichihara | Consadole Sapporo | Vissel Kobe | Avispa Fukuoka |
| 1999 (detail) | Urawa Reds | Bellmare Hiratsuka | ||
| 2000 (detail) | Kyoto Purple Sanga | Kawasaki Frontale | ||
| 2001 (detail) | Avispa Fukuoka | Cerezo Osaka | ||
| 2002 (detail) | Sanfrecce Hiroshima | Consadole Sapporo | ||
| 2003 (detail) | Vegalta Sendai | Kyoto Purple Sanga | ||
| 2004 (detail) | Cerezo Osaka | Kashiwa Reysol † | ||
| 2005 (detail) | Shimizu S-Pulse | Kashiwa Reysol ‡ | Tokyo Verdy 1969 | Vissel Kobe |
| 2006 (detail) | Ventforet Kofu | Avispa Fukuoka ‡ | Cerezo Osaka | Kyoto Purple Sanga |
* Relegated clubs are bolded
† Won the Promotion/Relegation Series
‡ Lost the Promotion/Relegation Series and relegated
J. League Division 2 (J2)
Since the inception in 1999, format of J2 has been very consistent. The clubs play a quadruple round-robin (two home and away) format in a single season. Until 2001, the clubs played extra time if they were tied after regulation and the clubs received 3pts for a regulation win, 2pts for an extra time win, 1pt for a tie, and 0pts for loss (there were no penalties). However, since 2002, the league got rid of the extra time and set the points system to the normal 3-1-0 system.The 2007 season
Thirteen clubs will play in quadruple round-robin format, a total of 48 games each. A club receives 3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, and 0 points for a loss. The clubs are ranked by points, and tie breakers are, in the following order: goal differential, goals scored, head-to-head results. If they are still tied, the clubs will be ranked the same in the standings, meaning multiple clubs can win championships. The top two clubs will be promoted to J1, while the 3rd placed club plays a two-legged Promotion/Relegation series.Clubs in J2 (2007)
| Club Name | Year Joined | Home Town(s) | Home Stadium(s) | Capacity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Avispa Fukuoka | 1996 | Fukuoka, Fukuoka | Hakata no mori stadium | 22,563 |
| Cerezo Osaka | 1995 | Osaka, Osaka | Nagai Stadium | 50,000 |
| Kyoto Sanga F.C. | 1996 | Kyoto, Kyoto | Nishikyogoku Athletic Stadium | 20,242 |
| Sagan Tosu | 1999 (J2) | Tosu, Saga | Tosu Stadium | 25,000 |
| Vegalta Sendai | 1999 (J2) | Sendai, Miyagi | Sendai Stadium | 19,694 |
| Consadole Sapporo | 1998 | Sapporo, Hokkaidō | Sapporo Atsubetsu Park Stadium Sapporo Dome | 20,005 42,831 |
| Tokyo Verdy 1969 | 1993 | All cities/towns in Tokyo | Ajinomoto Stadium | 50,000 |
| Montedio Yamagata | 1999 (J2) | All cities/towns in Yamagata | Yamagata Park Stadium | 20,315 |
| Ehime F.C. | 2006 (J2) | All cities/towns in Ehime | Ehime Prefectural General Athletics Park | 20,000 |
| Mito HollyHock | 2000 (J2) | Mito, Ibaraki | Kasamatsu Stadium | 22,022 |
| Shonan Bellmare | 1994 | Central cities/towns in Kanagawa | Hiratsuka Athletics Stadium | 18,500 |
| Thespa Kusatsu | 2005 (J2) | All cities/towns in Gunma | Shikishima Stadium | 10,050 |
| Tokushima Vortis | 2005 (J2) | All cities/towns in Tokushima | Naruto Athletic Stadium | 20,000 |
Championship/Promotion history
The top two clubs receive promotion. From the 2004 season, the 3rd placed club plays Promotion/Relegation Series against 16th-placed club in J1.* Bold type designates the promoted club
† Lost the Promotion/Relegation Series
‡ Won the Promotion/Relegation Series and promoted
J.LEAGUE Associate Membership
Competitions hosted by the J.LEAGUE
Other than J1 and J2, these are the competitions and tournaments held by J.LEAGUE:- Yamazaki Nabisco Cup (1992-present, excluding 1995)
- XEROX Super Cup (1994-present)
- JOMO All-Stars Soccer (1993-present)
- Promotion/Relegation Series (2004-present)
- Suntory Championship (1993-2004, excluding 1996)
- Sanwa Bank Cup (1994-1997)
- Emperor's Cup (2005-present)†
- A3 Champions Cup (2003-present)‡
‡ Hosted along with K-league and CSL
Non-J.LEAGUE competition that J.LEAGUE club participate in:
J-League awards
Player of the Year
See List of J-League Player of the YearTop scorer
See List of J-League Top ScorersTeam of the Year
SeeYoung Player of the Year
See List of J-League Young Player of the YearManager of the Year
See List of J-League Manager of the YearNotable current players
-
Yuki Abe (Urawa Reds)
- Magno Alves (G Osaka)
- Bare (Gamba Osaka)
-
Alvin Ceccoli (Avispa Fukuoka)
- Cho Jae-Jin (Shimizu)
- Danilo (Kashima)
-
Yoichi Doi (FC Tokyo)
- Nenad Đorđević (JEF United Ichihara Chiba)
-
Yasuhito Endo (G Osaka)
- Fábio (Kashima)
- França (Kashiwa Reysol)
-
Toshiya Fujita (Nagoya)
-
Takashi Fukunishi (FC Tokyo)
-
Frode Johnsen (Nagoya)
-
Akira Kaji (G Osaka)
-
Yoshikatsu Kawaguchi (Iwata)
- Kim Jin-Kyu (Iwata)
- Kim Jung-Woo (Nagoya)
-
Yuichi Komano (Hiroshima)
-
Yasuyuki Konno (FC Tokyo)
- Lopes (Vegalta Sendai)
-
Seiichiro Maki (Chiba)
-
Teruyuki Moniwa (FC Tokyo)
- Marquinhos (Shimizu)
-
Kazuyoshi Miura (Yokohama FC)
-
Masashi Nakayama (Iwata)
-
Yuji Nakazawa (Yokohama FM)
-
Shinji Ono (Urawa)
- Robson Ponte (Urawa)
-
Hisato Sato (Hiroshima)
- Marek Spilar (Nagoya)
- Ilian Stoyanov (JEF United Chiba)
-
Takayuki Suzuki (Yokohama FM)
-
Keiji Tamada (Nagoya)
-
Marcus Tulio Tanaka (Urawa)
-
Makoto Tanaka (Iwata)
- Emerson Thome (Kobe)
-
Keisuke Tsuboi (Urawa)
-
Paulo Wanchope (FC Tokyo)
- Washington (Urawa)
-
Atsushi Yanagisawa (Kashima)
- Yoon Jung-Hwan (Tosu)
Notable players from each region
- Notable J-League Players from Japan
- Notable J-League Players from AFC
- Notable J-League Players from CAF
- Notable J-League Players from CONCACAF
- Notable J-League Players from CONMEBOL
- Notable J-League Players from OFC
- Notable J-League Players from UEFA
Current well-known coaches
- Adílson Dias Batista -Júbilo Iwata
- Pericles Chamusca -Oita Trinita
- Levir Culpi -Cerezo Osaka
-
Hiromi Hara -FC Tokyo
-
Akira Nishino -Gamba Osaka
-
Holger Osieck -Urawa Red Diamonds
-
Ruy Ramos -Tokyo Verdy 1969
- Robert Verbeek -Omiya Ardija
- Sef Vergoossen -Nagoya Grampus Eight
- Oswaldo de Oliveira -Kashima Antlers
-
Pierre Littbarski -Avispa Fukuoka
Former coaches
- Osvaldo Ardiles - Shimizu S-Pulse (1996-1998), Yokohama F. Marinos (2000-2001), Tokyo Verdy 1969 (2003-2005)
- Paulo Autuori -Kashima Antlers (2006)
- Nelsinho Baptista - Verdy Kawasaki (1994-1995), Nagoya Grampus Eight (2003-2005)
-
Stuart Baxter -Sanfrecce Hiroshima (1992-93), Vissel Kobe(1995-97,2006)
- José Oscar Bernardi - Kyoto Purple Sanga (1995-1996)
-
Guido Buchwald - Urawa Reds (2004-2006)
- João Carlos - Kashima Antlers (1996-1998), Nagoya Grampus Eight (1999-2001), Cerezo Osaka (2001), Consadole Sapporo (2003)
- Toninho Cerezo - Kashima Antlers (2000-2005)
- Hugo Fernandez - Consadole Sapporo (1997-1998)
-
Benito Floro Sanz - Vissel Kobe (1998)
- Alexandre Gallo -FC Tokyo(2006)
-
Ivan Hašek - Vissel Kobe (2004)
-
Siegfried Held - Gamba Osaka (1995)
- Wim Jansen - Sanfrecce Hiroshima (1995-1996)
-
Kunishige Kamamoto - Gamba Osaka (1991-1994)
-
Shu Kamo - Yokohama Flügels (1991-1994), Japan national football team(1995-1997), Kyoto Purple Sanga (1999-2000)
-
Horst Köppel - Urawa Red Diamonds (1997)
-
Josip Kuže - Gamba Osaka (1996-1997)
- Émerson Leão - Shimizu S-Pulse (1992-1994), Verdy Kawasaki (1996), Vissel Kobe (2005)
-
Pierre Littbarski - Yokohama FC (1998-1999, 2003-2004)
-
Gordon Milne -Nagoya Grampus Eight(1994)
-
Takeshi Okada -Japan national football team(1997-98), Consadole Sapporo (1999-2001), Yokohama F. Marinos(2003-2006)
- Marius Johan Ooft - Japan national team(1992-1993), Júbilo Iwata (1994-1996), Kyoto Purple Sanga (1998), Urawa Reds (2002-2003)
- Ivica Osim -JEF United Ichihara Chiba(2003-2006), Japan national football team(2006-)
-
Pavel Řehák - Vissel Kobe (2005)
- Rivelino - Shimizu S-Pulse (1994)
-
Steve Perryman - Shimizu S-Pulse (1998-2000), Kashiwa Reysol (2001-2002)
-
Carles Rexach - Yokohama Flügels (1998)
- Joel Santana -Vegalta Sendai (2006)
- Luiz Felipe Scolari - Júbilo Iwata (1997)
- Eddie Thomson - Sanfrecce Hiroshima (1997-2000)
- Jozef Vengloš - JEF United Ichihara (2002)
- Pim Verbeek - Omiya Ardija (1998-1999), Kyoto Purple Sanga (2003)
- Zdenko Verdenik - JEF United Ichihara (2001), Nagoya Grampus Eight (2002-2003), Vegalta Sendai (2003-2004)
-
Arsène Wenger - Nagoya Grampus Eight (1995-1996)
-
Carlos Queiroz - Nagoya Grampus Eight (1996-1997)
-
Masakuni Yamamoto -Júbilo Iwata(2004-2006), U-23 Japan national team at the 2004 Summer Olympics(2002-2004)
J. League records
See J. League recordsSee also
- J. League contracts – policies for athlete contracts
- Winning Eleven — the official video game of J. League.
- List of sports attendance figures — the J. League in a worldwide context
External links
This article or section contains information about a sporting event or team.
It is likely to contain information of a speculative nature and the content may change as the event approaches and more information becomes available.
..... Read more.
It is likely to contain information of a speculative nature and the content may change as the event approaches and more information becomes available.
..... Read more.
19th century - 20th century - 21st century
1960s 1970s 1980s - 1990s - 2000s 2010s 2020s
1989 1990 1991 - 1992 - 1993 1994 1995
Year 1992 (MCMXCII
..... Read more.
1960s 1970s 1980s - 1990s - 2000s 2010s 2020s
1989 1990 1991 - 1992 - 1993 1994 1995
Year 1992 (MCMXCII
..... Read more.
19th century - 20th century - 21st century
1960s 1970s 1980s - 1990s - 2000s 2010s 2020s
1990 1991 1992 - 1993 - 1994 1995 1996
Year 1993 (MCMXCIII
..... Read more.
1960s 1970s 1980s - 1990s - 2000s 2010s 2020s
1990 1991 1992 - 1993 - 1994 1995 1996
Year 1993 (MCMXCIII
..... Read more.
Editing of this page by unregistered or newly registered users is currently disabled due to vandalism.
If you are prevented from editing this page, and you wish to make a change, please discuss changes on the talk page, request unprotection, log in, or .
..... Read more.
If you are prevented from editing this page, and you wish to make a change, please discuss changes on the talk page, request unprotection, log in, or .
..... Read more.
Sport Football
Founded 1999
No. of teams 18
Country(ies) Japan
Most recent champion(s) Honda F.C.
The Japan Football League (
..... Read more.
Founded 1999
No. of teams 18
Country(ies) Japan
Most recent champion(s) Honda F.C.
The Japan Football League (
..... Read more.
Founded
2002
Continent
Asia (AFC)
Number of Teams
28+1 Group Stage
Current Champions (2006)
Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors
Most successful clubs
Al-Hilal and Esteghlal (2 times champions and 2 times runners-up each)
..... Read more.
2002
Continent
Asia (AFC)
Number of Teams
28+1 Group Stage
Current Champions (2006)
Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors
Most successful clubs
Al-Hilal and Esteghlal (2 times champions and 2 times runners-up each)
..... Read more.
A3 Champions Cup (also known as East Asian Champions Cup) is an annual football (soccer) event involving the league champions of China, Japan and South Korea. The host nation also invites an additional team, making this a four team tournament.
..... Read more.
..... Read more.
Founded
1992
Number of Teams
18
Current Champions
JEF United
Country
Japan
Most successful clubs
Kashima Antlers and
Tokyo Verdy
(3 times winners)
J.
..... Read more.
1992
Number of Teams
18
Current Champions
JEF United
Country
Japan
Most successful clubs
Kashima Antlers and
Tokyo Verdy
(3 times winners)
J.
..... Read more.
The Emperor's Cup All-Japan Soccer Championship Tournament (天皇杯全日本サッカー選手権大会
..... Read more.
..... Read more.
Urawa Red Diamonds
浦和レッドダイヤモンズ
Full name Urawa Red Diamonds
Nickname(s) Urawa Reds
Founded 1950
Ground
..... Read more.
浦和レッドダイヤモンズ
Full name Urawa Red Diamonds
Nickname(s) Urawa Reds
Founded 1950
Ground
..... Read more.
Yokohama F.C.
横浜FC
Full name Yokohama F.C.
Nickname(s) Fulie
Founded 1998
Ground Mitsuzawa Stadium
Kanagawa-ku, Yokohama
Capacity 15,046
Chairman Yasuhiko Okudera
..... Read more.
横浜FC
Full name Yokohama F.C.
Nickname(s) Fulie
Founded 1998
Ground Mitsuzawa Stadium
Kanagawa-ku, Yokohama
Capacity 15,046
Chairman Yasuhiko Okudera
..... Read more.
Association football, commonly known as football or soccer, is a team sport played between two teams of 11 players. It is the most popular sport in the world.
..... Read more.
..... Read more.
Editing of this page by unregistered or newly registered users is currently disabled due to vandalism.
If you are prevented from editing this page, and you wish to make a change, please discuss changes on the talk page, request unprotection, log in, or .
..... Read more.
If you are prevented from editing this page, and you wish to make a change, please discuss changes on the talk page, request unprotection, log in, or .
..... Read more.
Japan Soccer League (日本サッカーリーグ
..... Read more.
..... Read more.
The Japan Football Association (日本サッカー協会
..... Read more.
..... Read more.
Japan Football League (ジャパンフットボールリーグ
..... Read more.
..... Read more.
Founded
1992
Number of Teams
18
Current Champions
JEF United
Country
Japan
Most successful clubs
Kashima Antlers and
Tokyo Verdy
(3 times winners)
J.
..... Read more.
1992
Number of Teams
18
Current Champions
JEF United
Country
Japan
Most successful clubs
Kashima Antlers and
Tokyo Verdy
(3 times winners)
J.
..... Read more.
May 15 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
..... Read more.
Events
- 1252 - Pope Innocent IV issues the papal bull ad exstirpanda
..... Read more.
19th century - 20th century - 21st century
1960s 1970s 1980s - 1990s - 2000s 2010s 2020s
1990 1991 1992 - 1993 - 1994 1995 1996
Year 1993 (MCMXCIII
..... Read more.
1960s 1970s 1980s - 1990s - 2000s 2010s 2020s
1990 1991 1992 - 1993 - 1994 1995 1996
Year 1993 (MCMXCIII
..... Read more.
Tokyo Verdy 1969
東京ヴェルディ1969
Full name Tokyo Verdy 1969
Nickname(s) -
Founded 1969
Ground Ajinomoto Stadium
Chōfu, Tokyo
Capacity 50,100
..... Read more.
東京ヴェルディ1969
Full name Tokyo Verdy 1969
Nickname(s) -
Founded 1969
Ground Ajinomoto Stadium
Chōfu, Tokyo
Capacity 50,100
..... Read more.
Tokyo Verdy 1969
東京ヴェルディ1969
Full name Tokyo Verdy 1969
Nickname(s) -
Founded 1969
Ground Ajinomoto Stadium
Chōfu, Tokyo
Capacity 50,100
..... Read more.
東京ヴェルディ1969
Full name Tokyo Verdy 1969
Nickname(s) -
Founded 1969
Ground Ajinomoto Stadium
Chōfu, Tokyo
Capacity 50,100
..... Read more.
Yokohama F. Marinos
横浜F・マリノス
Full name Yokohama F. Marinos
Nickname(s) -
Founded 1972
Ground Nissan Stadium (International Stadium Yokohama)
..... Read more.
横浜F・マリノス
Full name Yokohama F. Marinos
Nickname(s) -
Founded 1972
Ground Nissan Stadium (International Stadium Yokohama)
..... Read more.
Yokohama F. Marinos
横浜F・マリノス
Full name Yokohama F. Marinos
Nickname(s) -
Founded 1972
Ground Nissan Stadium (International Stadium Yokohama)
..... Read more.
横浜F・マリノス
Full name Yokohama F. Marinos
Nickname(s) -
Founded 1972
Ground Nissan Stadium (International Stadium Yokohama)
..... Read more.
..... Read more.
Yokohama Flügels (横浜フリューゲルス
..... Read more.
..... Read more.
NH ICAO
ANA Callsign
ALL NIPPON
Founded 1952 (as Nippon Helicopter)
Hubs Narita International Airport
Tokyo International Airport(Haneda)
Kansai International Airport
Osaka International Airport
..... Read more.
ANA Callsign
ALL NIPPON
Founded 1952 (as Nippon Helicopter)
Hubs Narita International Airport
Tokyo International Airport(Haneda)
Kansai International Airport
Osaka International Airport
..... Read more.
Nissan Motor Company, Limited
Nissan Jidosha Kabushiki-gaisha
日産自動車株式会社
Public (TYO: 7201 ; NASDAQ: NSANY )
Founded 1932
Headquarters HQ in Chūō-ku, Tokyo, Japan
..... Read more.
Nissan Jidosha Kabushiki-gaisha
日産自動車株式会社
Public (TYO: 7201 ; NASDAQ: NSANY )
Founded 1932
Headquarters HQ in Chūō-ku, Tokyo, Japan
..... Read more.
Yokohama F. Marinos
横浜F・マリノス
Full name Yokohama F. Marinos
Nickname(s) -
Founded 1972
Ground Nissan Stadium (International Stadium Yokohama)
..... Read more.
横浜F・マリノス
Full name Yokohama F. Marinos
Nickname(s) -
Founded 1972
Ground Nissan Stadium (International Stadium Yokohama)
..... Read more.
Fujita (藤田) is a common family name in Japan. It may also refer to the following.
..... Read more.
- Fujita zaibatsu: An Osaka-based zaibatsu.
- Kazuyuki Fujita (born 1970): A mixed martial arts fighter.
- Kyohei Fujita (1921-2004), a Japanese glass artist.
..... Read more.
Shonan Bellmare
湘南ベルマーレ
Full name Shonan Bellmare
Nickname(s) -
Founded 1968
Ground Hiratsuka Athletics Stadium
Hiratsuka, Kanagawa
..... Read more.
湘南ベルマーレ
Full name Shonan Bellmare
Nickname(s) -
Founded 1968
Ground Hiratsuka Athletics Stadium
Hiratsuka, Kanagawa
..... Read more.