Júbilo Iwata

Júbilo Iwata
ジュビロ磐田
Full name Júbilo Iwata
Nickname(s) Júbilo
Founded 1972 (1972)
Ground Yamaha Stadium,
Iwata, Shizuoka
Ground Capacity 15,165[1]
Owner Yamaha
Chairman Yoshirou Takahira
Manager Hiroshi Nanami
League J1 League
2016 J1 League, 13th
Website Club home page

Júbilo Iwata (Japanese: ジュビロ磐田 Hepburn: Jubiro Iwata) is a professional Japanese association football team that will play in the J1 League. The team name Júbilo means 'joy' in Portuguese. The team's hometown is Iwata, Shizuoka prefecture and they play at Yamaha Stadium. For big fixtures such as the Shizuoka Derby with Shimizu S-Pulse and against some of the top teams in J1, Júbilo play at the much larger Ecopa Stadium in Fukuroi City, a venue built specifically for the 2002 FIFA World Cup finals. They practice at Okubo Ground in Iwata and Iwata Sports Park Yumeria.[2]

One of the most successful teams in the J.League, Júbilo have three times won the J.League title and three times finished as runners up. Júbilo hold the distinction of being Japan's most successful team in international club football, making three successive appearances in the Asian Club Cup final, being champions once and runners up twice.[1]

History

Origins and rise to the top

The team started out as the company team for Yamaha Motor Corporation in 1970. After making its way through the Shizuoka and Tōkai football leagues, it played in the Japan Soccer League until it reorganized as the J.League at the end of 1992.

Their first glory happened when they won both the Emperor's Cup and promotion as champions of the JSL Division 2 in 1982. They won their first Japanese league title in the 1987/88 season. Due to problems in the upcoming professionalization, Yamaha decided to relegate themselves and not be one of the J.League founder members.

They finished in 2nd place of the JFL 1st division, a division below the top flight, in 1993 and were promoted to the J1 league for 1994. The team welcomed Marius Johan Ooft as its manager, as well as the Brazilian national team captain Dunga and a number of foreign players to build a winning team.[3] Dunga's football philosophy deeply influenced the club, initially as a player and currently as an advisor.

Glory Years

In a seven-year period between 1997 and 2003, the club won a number of titles relying on Japanese players instead of foreigners who may leave on a transfer during the middle of the season. Within this period Júbilo won the J.League title three times, finished second three more and won each of the domestic cup competitions once. In 1999 they were also crowned Champions of Asia after winning the first of three successive Asian Club Cup final appearances, the competition which has since been reformatted as the AFC Champions League.[4]

In one of the most fruitful periods in J.League history, Júbilo broke several records and created some new ones. Amongst these are the most goals scored in a season (107 in 1998); the fewest goals conceded in a season (26 in 2001); the biggest goal difference (plus 68 goals in 1998); and the largest win (9–1 against Cerezo Osaka in 1998).[5] In 2002, the team won both stages of the championship, a first in J.League history, and the same year the team had a record seven players selected for the J.League Team of the Year. All of these records still stand today.

Today

Since their last cup triumph in the 2003 Emperor's Cup, the squad which took them to such heights began to age. Without similarly skilled replacements coming through the youth team or from outside, Júbilo's power started to fade, and in 2007 the club ended the season in a record worst position of 9th. Perhaps more concerning to Júbilo supporters is their eclipse in recent seasons by bitter local rivals Shimizu S-Pulse who, in ending the season above Júbilo every year since 2006, have become Shizuoka prefecture's premier performing team. In 2008 they finished 16th out of 18 – their lowest position in the 18-club table – but kept their J1 position by defeating Vegalta Sendai in the promotion/relegation playoff.

In 2013 season, it took them until 8th week to make their first win in the league matches, and never move up higher than 16th since they were ranked down to 17th as of the end of 5th week. Then eventually suffered their first relegation to 2014 J.League Division 2 after they were defeated by Sagan Tosu at their 31st week match. Júbilo were promoted back to J1 in 2015 after finishing runners-up.

Honours

Domestic

Júbilo Iwata (Professional era)

Yamaha (Amateur era)

 

International

Rivalries

Júbilo's closest professional rivals are S-Pulse from Shizuoka.[6] Júbilo also has rivalries with Kashima Antlers and Yokohama Marinos, with whom they traded the Japanese league championship since the late 1980s. During the Japan Soccer League days they had a more local derby with Honda, across the Tenryu in Hamamatsu, but as Honda has long resisted professionalism, competitive matches between them since 1994 are a rarity.

Record as J.League member

Season Div. Tms. Pos. Attendance/G J.League Cup Emperor's Cup Asia
1994 J1 12 8 14,497 Final 1st Round
1995 J1 14 6 17,313 2nd Round
1996 J1 16 4 13,792 Group Stage 3rd Round
1997 J1 17 1 10,448 Final Semi-final
1998 J1 18 2 12,867 Winner Quarter-final
1999 J1 16 1 12,273 Quarter-final Quarter-final CC Winner
2000 J1 16 4 12,534 Quarter-final Quarter-final CC Final
2001 J1 16 2 16,650 Final 4th Round CC Final
2002 J1 16 1 16,564 Quarter-final Quarter-final
2003 J1 16 2 17,267 Semi-final Winner
2004 J1 16 5 17,126 Group Stage Final CL Group Stage
2005 J1 18 6 17,296 Quarter-final Quarter-final CL Group Stage
2006 J1 18 5 18,002 Quarter-final Quarter-final
2007 J1 18 9 16,359 Group Stage 5th Round
2008 J1 18 16 15,465 Group Stage 5th Round
2009 J1 18 11 13,523 Group Stage 4th Round
2010 J1 18 11 12,137 Winner 4th Round
2011 J1 18 8 11,796 Quarter-final 3rd Round
2012 J1 18 12 13,122 Group stage 4th Round
2013 J1 18 17 10,895 Group stage Quarter-final
2014 J2 22 4 8,774 3rd Round
2015 J2 22 2 10,041 2nd Round
2016 J1 18 13 14,611 Group Stage 3rd Round
Key

Players

Current Squad

As of 8 February 2016.[7]

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

No. Position Player
1 Japan GK Naoki Hatta
2 Japan DF Taisuke Nakamura
3 Japan DF Kentaro Ohi
4 Japan MF Yuki Kobayashi
5 Japan DF Nagisa Sakurauchi
7 Japan MF Kota Ueda
8 England FW Jay Bothroyd
9 Japan MF Yoshiaki Ota
11 Japan MF Takuya Matsuura
13 Japan MF Tomohiko Miyazaki
14 Japan DF Kazumichi Takagi
15 Brazil FW Adaílton
16 Japan FW Kazuki Saito
17 Japan MF Takafumi Shimizu
18 Japan FW Koki Ogawa
19 Japan DF Ryu Okada
20 Japan FW Yasuhito Morishima
No. Position Player
21 Poland GK Krzysztof Kamiński
22 Japan MF Daisuke Matsui
23 Japan MF Kosuke Yamamoto
24 Japan DF Daiki Ogawa
25 Japan DF Takuma Ominami
27 Japan DF Daigo Araki
28 Japan DF Ryoma Ishida
30 Japan MF Rikiya Uehara
31 Japan GK Ko Shimura
32 Japan FW Ryu Olivier Iwamoto
33 Japan DF Yoshiaki Fujita
34 Japan FW Yuki Nakamura
35 Japan DF Shun Morishita
36 Japan GK Tatsuro Okuda
40 Japan MF Hayao Kawabe
44 Greece DF Avraam Papadopoulos

Out on loan

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

No. Position Player
Japan GK Ayumi Niekawa (at Sagan Tosu)
Japan MF Hiroto Tanaka (at V-Varen Nagasaki)
Japan MF Misaki Uemura (at Imabari)

World Cup players

The following players have been selected by their country in the World Cup, while playing for Júbilo Iwata:

Award winners

The following players have won the awards while at Júbilo Iwata:

Former players

Players with senior international caps:

JFA.
AFC/ CAF/ OFC.
UEFA.
CONMEBOL.

Managers

References

  1. 1 2 "Club guide: Jubilo Iwata". J.League. Retrieved January 24, 2015.
  2. ヤマハ大久保グラウンド [Yamaha Okubo Ground] (in Japanese). Jubilo Iwata. Retrieved January 24, 2015.
  3. "Brazilian Players: A Long Association with Japanese Soccer". nippon.com. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  4. "J-League Club Profile: Jubilo Iwata". goal.com. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  5. "J. League Date Site". J. League Official Site. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  6. "DERBY DAY DRAMAS IN THE J.LEAGUE". oneworldsports.com. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  7. "2016 Players". Júbilo Iwata. Retrieved 8 February 2016.
  8. "磐田黄金時代の社長・荒田氏が死去" [Former Iwata chairman Tadanori Arata dies] (in Japanese). Sankei Sports. 13 November 2013. Retrieved 8 February 2016.
  9. "Ryuichi SUGIYAMA". Japan Soccer Archive. Retrieved 8 February 2016.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Júbilo Iwata.
Achievements
Preceded by
Pohang Steelers
South Korea
Champions of Asia
1998–99
Succeeded by
Al Hilal
Saudi Arabia
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