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FC Tokyo

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 61.117.150.6 (talk) at 04:23, 7 March 2014 (→‎History: FC Tokyo could not have been formed as a "club team" in 1935. Prior to the war there was no such thing. Though there were some groups that played each other informally. The first organized amateur league (non-scholastic) was formed in1947). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

F.C. Tokyo
FC東京
logo
Full nameTokyo Football Club
Founded1935; 89 years ago (1935) as Tokyo Gas F.C.
1999 as F.C. Tokyo
GroundAjinomoto Stadium
Chōfu, Tokyo
Capacity50,100
ChairmanYutaka Murabayashi
ManagerMassimo Ficcadenti
LeagueJ. League Division 1
20138th
WebsiteClub website
Current season

F.C. Tokyo (FC東京, Efushī Tōkyō) is a Japanese association football club playing in J. League Division 1. Its hometown is Tokyo prefecture. The team is one of only four in the J. League to be simply called Football Club without an extended name.

History

File:TokyoGasFC.png
Tokyo Gas F.C.

The team started as a company team, Tokyo Gas Football Club (東京ガスFC). Their first appearance in the national leagues was in 1991, the last season of the old Japan Soccer League.[1] With addition of the Brazilian football player Amaral and the manager Kiyoshi Okuma at the helm, the team gradually became competitive and in 1997, the team finished second, winning the JFL championship the next year. However, at the time the team lacked the necessary qualifications for a promotion to the J1 league and so stayed in J2.

Following this, on October 1, 1998, companies like Tokyo Gas, TEPCO, ampm, TV Tokyo, and Culture Convenience Club, set up a joint company Tokyo Football Club Company with the aim of making the team eligible for joining the J. League. In 1999, the same year the team became eligible, they won the J2 championship and joined the J1 league beginning in the 2000 season. Despite a widespread belief that the team would barely win enough to stay in the J1, the team won four games in a row since its opening game and managed to finish at the 7th spot.

Tokyo Dorompa, the club's mascot

Helped by its winning record, the attendance shot up and it is still above that of well-known Tokyo Verdy 1969 that moved its home town from Kawasaki, Kanagawa in 2001. Since 2002, the team welcomed Hiromi Hara as its manager and aimed for a championship with a strong offense. The 2003 season had the team finish in 4th, its highest ever. In August of the same year, it held a friendly match against one of the greatest football clubs, Real Madrid losing three–nil but gaining valuable experiences both on and off the field for what it takes to be a great football club.

Long-time leader Amaral, nicknamed The King of Tokyo by his fans, departed the team to join Shonan Bellmare in 2004. He was replaced by Athens Olympics national football team player Yasuyuki Konno from Consadole Sapporo. In November of the same year, it won the J. League Yamazaki Nabisco Cup for its first major title since joining the J. League.

After 10 years of participation in the J. League without a mascot character, the team adopted Tokyo Dorompa, a tanuki-like figure, as its mascot in January, 2009.

On December 4, 2010 FC Tokyo had to win their final game of the season away to already relegated Kyoto Sanga FC. FC Tokyo lost 2-0 and went back down to the second tier for the first time in 11 years. Nevertheless, they bounced back at the first attempt, winning the J2 title in November 2011.

Before their 2011 Emperor's Cup win, FC Tokyo reached the semifinals of the competition three times: in 1997 (as Tokyo Gas), 2008, and 2010. Their 2011 win was remarkable in that the club was a second division team during the season. They became the first J2 champions, and third second-tier champions overall (after NKK S.C. in 1981 and Júbilo Iwata in 1982), to accomplish the feat.

Stadium

F.C. Tokyo uses Ajinomoto Stadium as its home ground (the official name of this stadium is Tokyo Stadium). For a long time it did not have a home stadium of its own and played at various football fields such as the National Yoyogi Stadium, the National Nishigaoka Football Field, the Edogawa Special Ward Stadium, and the Komazawa Olympic Park Stadium, but in 2001 it finally found a permanent home. Club's training grounds are Sarue Ground in Koto, Tokyo and Kodaira Ground in Kodaira, Tokyo.

Players

Current squad

As of February 6, 2014 Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Japan JPN Hitoshi Shiota
2 DF Japan JPN Yuhei Tokunaga
3 DF Japan JPN Masato Morishige (captain)
4 MF Japan JPN Hideto Takahashi
5 DF Japan JPN Kenichi Kaga
6 DF Japan JPN Kosuke Ota
7 MF Japan JPN Takuji Yonemoto
8 MF Japan JPN Hitotaka Mita
9 FW Japan JPN Kazuma Watanabe
10 MF Japan JPN Yohei Kajiyama
11 FW Brazil BRA Edu
13 FW Japan JPN Sota Hirayama
14 MF Japan JPN Yoshinori Muto
15 MF Japan JPN Daishi Hiramatsu
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 MF Japan JPN Hiroki Kawano
18 MF Japan JPN Naohiro Ishikawa
19 MF Japan JPN Tasuka Hiraoka
20 GK Japan JPN Shūichi Gonda
21 GK Japan JPN Ryotaro Hironaga
22 MF Japan JPN Naotake Hanyu
25 DF Brazil BRA Matheus Ferraz
28 MF Japan JPN Shuto Kono
29 DF Japan JPN Kazunori Yoshimoto
31 GK Japan JPN Kentaro Kakoi
33 DF Japan JPN Kenta Mukuhara
34 MF Japan JPN Hideyuki Nozawa
38 MF Japan JPN Keigo Higashi
50 DF Japan JPN Riku Matsuda

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
16 DF Japan JPN Yuichi Maruyama (to Shonan Bellmare)
23 FW Japan JPN Yohei Hayashi (to Fagiano Okayama)
27 MF Japan JPN Sotan Tanabe (to CE Sabadell)
37 MF Japan JPN Kento Hashimoto (to Roasso Kumamoto)

2012 Season Transfers

International Players

Japan
AFC
CONCACAF
CONMEBOL

World Cup players

World Cup 2006

World Cup 2010

Managers

Manager Nat. Tenure
Kiyoshi Okuma  Japan Jan 1, 1995–Dec 31, 2001
Tahseen Jabbary  Netherlands 1998
Hiromi Hara  Japan Jan 1, 2002–Dec 19, 2005
Alexandre Gallo  Brazil Dec 20, 2005–Aug 14, 2006
Hisao Kuramata  Japan Aug 15, 2006–Dec 6, 2006
Hiromi Hara  Japan Dec 7, 2006–Dec 31, 2007
Hiroshi Jofuku  Japan Jan 1, 2008–Sept 19, 2010
Kiyoshi Okuma  Japan Sept 20, 2010–Jan 2, 2011
Ranko Popović  Serbia Jan 2, 2012–Dec 31, 2013
Massimo Ficcadenti  Italy Jan 2, 2014–present

Record as J. League member

Season Div. Tms. Pos. Attendance/G J. League Cup Emperor's Cup Asia
1999 J2 10 2 3,498 Semi-final 4th Round - -
2000 J1 16 7 11,807 2nd Round 3rd Round - -
2001 J1 16 8 22,313 2nd Round 3rd Round - -
2002 J1 16 9 22,173 Quarter-final 3rd Round - -
2003 J1 16 4 24,932 Quarter-final 4th Round - -
2004 J1 16 8 25,438 Winner Quarter-final - -
2005 J1 18 10 27,101 Group Stage 5th Round - -
2006 J1 18 13 24,096 Group Stage 5th Round - -
2007 J1 18 12 25,290 Group Stage Quarter-final - -
2008 J1 18 6 25,716 Quarter-final Semi-final - -
2009 J1 18 5 25,884 Winner 4th Round - -
2010 J1 18 16 25,112 Quarter-final Semi-final - -
2011 J2 20 1 17,562 - Winner - -
2012 J1 18 10 23,955 Semi-final 2nd Round CL Round of 16
2013 J1 18 8 25,073 Group Stage Semi-final - -
2014 J1 18 - -
Key
  • Tms. = Number of teams
  • Pos. = Position in league
  • Attendance/G = Average league attendance

Honours

See also

References