Júbilo Iwata

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Júbilo Iwata
ジュビロ磐田
Logo
Full nameJúbilo Iwata
Nickname(s)-
Founded1970
GroundYamaha Stadium,
Iwata, Shizuoka
Capacity16,893
ChairmanHiroshi Ukon
ManagerAdilson Dias Batista (2006 - )
LeagueJ. League Div.1
20065th Place

Júbilo Iwata (ジュビロ磐田, Jubiro Iwata) is a J. League team. The team name Júbilo means 'exultation' in Spanish.

The team's home town is Iwata, Shizuoka prefecture and they play at Yamaha Stadium. For big fixtures such as the Shizuoka Derby with Shimizu S-Pulse or against some of the top teams in the J. League, Jubilo Iwata occasionally play games at the much larger Ecopa Stadium in Fukuroi City, a venue that was built specifically for the 2002 FIFA World Cup finals. They practice at Okubo Ground in Iwata and Iwata Sports Park Yumeria.

The team started out as the company team for Yamaha Motor Corporation in 1970 and played in the Japan Soccer League until it reorganized as the J. League at the end of 1992. 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. Dunga's football philosophy deeply influenced the club, initially as a player and currently as an advisor. Since 1997, the club has won a number of titles by relying on Japanese players instead of foreigners who may leave on a transfer during the middle of the Japanese football season. In 2002, the team won both stages of the championship, a first in J. League history.

The team's inspirational leader and talisman is Masashi Nakayama who is affectionately called Taicho, lit. captain, and Gon.

Titles

  • 1992 - Japan Football League 1st division championship (as the company team)
  • 1997 - J1 2nd stage championship, J1 championship
  • 1998 - J1 1st stage championship, J. League Cup Winners
  • 1999 - J1 1st stage championship, J1 championship, Asia Club Team championship, Asia Super Cup championship
  • 2000 - Xerox Super Cup
  • 2001 - J1 1st stage championship
  • 2002 - J1 1st stage championship, J1 2nd stage championship, J1 championship
  • 2003 - Emperor's Cup Winners, Xerox Super Cup
  • 2004 - Xerox Super Cup

Team Record

J.League

Season League Place GP Pts Win Draw Lose Average Crowd
1994 J1 1st stage 7 / 12 22 - 9 - 13 14,497
J1 2nd stage 7 / 12 22 - 11 - 11
J1 Total 8 / 12 44 - 20 - 24
1995 J1 1st stage 5 / 14 26 45 15 - 11 17,313
J1 2nd stage 9 / 14 26 40 13 - 13
J1 Total 6 / 14 52 85 28 - 24
1996 J1 4 / 16 30 62 20 - 10 13,792
1997 J1 1st stage 6 / 17 16 26 9 - 7 10,448
J1 2nd stage Champions / 17 16 40 14 - 2
J1 Total Champions / 17 32 66 23 - 9
1998 J1 1st stage Champions / 18 17 39 13 - 4 12,867
J1 2nd stage Runners-up / 18 17 39 13 - 4
J1 Total Runners-up / 18 34 78 26 - 8
1999 J1 1st stage Champions / 16 15 34 12 0 3 12,273
J1 2nd stage 12 / 16 15 15 5 1 9
J1 Total Champions / 16 30 49 17 1 12
2000 J1 1st stage 5 / 16 15 25 9 0 6 12,534
J1 2nd stage 3 / 16 15 30 10 0 5
J1 Total 4 / 16 30 55 19 0 11
2001 J1 1st stage Champions / 16 15 36 13 1 1 16,650
J1 2nd stage Runners-up / 16 15 35 13 0 2
J1 Total Runners-up / 16 30 71 26 1 3
2002 J1 1st stage Champions / 16 15 36 13 1 1 16,564
J1 2nd stage Champions / 16 15 35 13 0 2
J1 Total Champions / 16 30 71 26 1 3
2003 J1 1st stage Runners-up / 16 15 31 9 4 2 17,267
J1 2nd stage 3 / 16 15 26 7 5 3
J1 Total Runners-up / 16 30 57 16 9 5
2004 J1 1st stage Runners-up / 16 15 34 11 1 3 17,126
J1 2nd stage 13 / 16 15 14 3 5 7
J1 Total 5 / 16 30 48 14 6 10
2005 J1 6 / 18 34 51 14 9 11 17,296
2006 J1 5 / 18 34 58 17 7 10 18,002
2007 J1

Other Domestic Competitions

See other domestic competitions record

Major International Competitions

Season Competition Result Average Crowd
1998-99 AFC Champions League Champions ?
1999 Asian Super Cup Champions ?
1999-00 AFC Champions League Runners-up ?
2000-01 AFC Champions League Runners-up ?
2001 FIFA Club World Cup Cancelled ?
2003 A3 Champions Cup 4th ?
2004 AFC Champions League Round 1 ?
2005 AFC Champions League Round 1 ?

Players

Current Squad

As of January 28, 2007 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 Yoshikatsu Kawaguchi
2 DF Japan JPN Hideto Suzuki
3 DF Japan JPN Takayuki Chano
4 DF Japan JPN Kentaro Ohi
5 DF Japan JPN Makoto Tanaka
6 MF Brazil BRA Marquinhos Parana
7 MF Japan JPN Yoshiaki Ohta
9 FW Japan JPN Masashi Nakayama (captain)
10 MF Japan JPN Sho Naruoka
11 MF Japan JPN Norihiro Nishi
13 DF Japan JPN Shun Morishita
14 MF Japan JPN Shinji Murai
15 DF Japan JPN Kenichi Kaga
16 FW Japan JPN Takenori Hayashi
17 MF Japan JPN Yusuke Inuzuka
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 FW Japan JPN Ryoichi Maeda
19 DF Japan JPN Takashi Okada
20 MF Japan JPN Ryosuke Nakajima
21 GK Japan JPN Yohei Sato
22 FW Japan JPN Robert Cullen
24 MF Japan JPN Yakuya Matsuura
25 MF Brazil BRA Fabricio De Sousa
26 MF Japan JPN Tohru Morino
27 MF Japan JPN Kota Ueda
28 MF Japan JPN Keisuke Funatani
29 MF Japan JPN Ryohei Yamazaki
30 GK Japan JPN Naoki Hatta
31 GK Japan JPN Kenya Matsui
32 MF Japan JPN Kosuke Yamamoto

Notable Players

World Cup Players

World Cup 1998

World Cup 2002

World Cup 2006

Managers

Manager Nat. Tenure
Kazuaki Nagasawa  Japan 1993
Hans Ooft  Netherlands 1994-1996
Luiz Felipe Scolari  Brazil 1997
Takashi Kuwahara  Japan 1997
Valmir  Brazil 1998
Takashi Kuwahara  Japan 1999
Hadzievski Gjokica Template:MKDf 2000
Masakazu Suzuki  Japan 2000-2002
Masaaki Yanagishita  Japan 2003
Takashi Kuwahara  Japan 2004
Masakazu Suzuki  Japan 2004
Masakuni Yamamoto  Japan 2004-2006
Adílson Dias Batista  Brazil 2006-

External links

Preceded by Champions of Asia
1999
Succeeded by

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