YOKOHAMA F.C.

(Redirected from Yokohama FC)

are a Japanese football (soccer) club based in the city of Yokohama.

Contents
History
Fight for the promotion
Football tactics
Current players
Season by season results and managers
Former players
Managers
Honors
External link

History


The club was formed in 1999, following the merger of the city's two J. League clubs, Yokohama Flügels and Yokohama Marinos the previous year. Flügels supporters, whose club was essentially dissolved, rejected the suggestion that they should start supporting Marinos, their crosstown rivals. Instead, with money raised through donations from the general public and an affiliation with IMG, the talent management company, the former Flügels supporters founded the Yokohama Fulie Sports Club. Following the ''socio'' model used by FC Barcelona, the Fulie Sports Club created Yokohama F.C., the first professional sports team in Japan owned and operated by its supporters.
For its first season in 1999, Yokohama F.C. hired former West German World Cup star Pierre Littbarski to be the manager and Yasuhiko Okudera, the first Japanese footballer to play professionally in Europe, to be the chairman. Despite attempts to win straight entry into the J. League, the Japan Football Association only permitted the team to enter the Japan Football League. After two seasons as JFL champions, the team was promoted to the J2 Division of the J. League.
The club spent the next 6 seasons in J2, finishing mid-table between 2001 and 2005. However, Yokohama F.C. won the J2 championship in 2006 and gained promotion to J1 in the process. In 2007, Yokohama F.C. will play its first season in the top flight of Japanese football in its ninth year of existence.

Fight for the promotion


Although they had a dire season in 2005, they ended 11th out of 12, they were in the top half of table throughout the 2006 season. On 26 November they finished on the top spot of the J2 league, and hence were finally promoted to division 1.
This success story was so dramatic as to make people somewhat excited in Japan. Yokohama FC's financial situation is so poor that they don't even possess their own football ground or a club house. Players did everything themselves including the carrying the goal posts and washing jerseys.
Some of the main players are veteran stars, such as Kazuyoshi Miura 39, Shoji Jo 31, Motohiro Yamaguchi 37 and Norio Omura 37. These players once played for the the National Team and were later not seen as useful.
They lost all pre-season matches, even against college students, then also the first official match of the year. After this, they suddenly changed the player-manager to a freshman with little experience named Takuya Takagi 38. At the beginning of the season few expected them to become champions.

Football tactics


First, Takagi concentrated on getting the basics right and focused on defense. The team then kept clean sheets in 15 consecutive games. This success gave the young players confidence to be more aggressive on the field. As a result, they didn't lose more than one game in succession and won the title.

Current players


''As of August 11, 2007''

Season by season results and managers


Season League Pld Pt W L D F A GD Place Manager
1999JFL24 55 18 3 3 57 32 +25 Champions Pierre Littbarski
2000 22 61 20 0 2 66 24 +42 Champions
2001J244 43 15 28 1 58 81 -23 9th Yoshikazu Nagai / Yuji Sakakura / Katsuyoshi Shindo
2002 44 35 8 25 11 43 81 -38 12th Katsuyoshi Shindo
2003 44 42 10 22 12 49 88 -39 11th Pierre Littbarski
2004 44 52 10 12 22 42 50 -8 8th
2005 44 45 10 19 15 48 64 -16 11th Yusuke Adachi
2006 48 93 26 7 15 61 32 +29 Champions Yusuke Adachi / Takuya Takagi

Former players




Dirk Lehmann

Steven Tweed

Rudi Vata

Moner

Mathieu Boots

Silvio Spann


Luis Augusto

Alemão

Choi Sung-Yong

Takuya Jinno

Yuji Hironaga

Shingi Ono


Shigeyoshi Mochizuki

Yasunori Takada

Tsuyoshi Yoshitake

Tomotaka Kitamura

Shoji Jo

Managers


ManagerNat.Tenure
Pierre Littbarski 1999-2000
Yoshikazu Nagai 2001
Yuji Sakakura 2001
Katsuyoshi Shinto 2001-2002
Pierre Littbarski 2003-2004
Yusuke Adachi 2005-2006
Takuya Takagi 2006-

Honors



★ 'Japan Football League'


★ Champions:2(1999, 2000)

★ 'J. League Division 2'


★ Champions (2006)

External link



Official Site (Japanese Only)

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