Hokkaido Consadole Sapporo

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Consadole Sapporo
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Basic data
Surname Hokkaido Consadole Sapporo
(北海道 コ ン サ ド ー レ 札幌)
Seat Sapporo
founding 1935 (as Toshiba Horikawa-chō Soccer-bu )
Colours Red Black
president JapanJapan Yoshiaki Kodama
Website consadole-sapporo.jp
First soccer team
Head coach SerbiaSerbia AustriaAustria Michael Petrović (2018–)
Venue Sapporo Dome
Places 41,484
league J1 League
2019 10th place
home
Away

Consadole Sapporo ( Japanese コ ン サ ド ー レ 札幌 Konsadōre Sapporo ), officially Hokkaidō Consadole Sapporo ( 北海道 コ ン サ ド ー レ 札幌 Hokkaidō Konsadōre Sapporo ) is a Japanese football club from the city of Sapporo on Hokkaidō . He has played in the J1 League since the 2017 season .

Club history

The club was founded in 1935 as Toshiba Horikawa-chō Soccer-bu ( 東芝 堀 川 町 サ ッ カ ー 部 , Eng. "Toshiba Football Club Horikawa"), renamed in 1980 Toshiba Soccer-bu ( 東芝 サ ッ カ ー 部 , Eng. "Toshiba Football Club") and existed in this form until 1995. In 1978 they rose to the second division, two years later even in the first division. Toshiba SC originally played in Kawasaki , where Kawasaki Verdy (now Tokyo Verdy) was also playing at the time . The parent company Toshiba therefore considered moving to another city and decided on Sapporo .

In 1995, the club played its last season under the name Toshiba SC and was renamed Consadole Sapporo for the 1996 season - a suitcase word from backwards the syllables do-sa-n-ko as a proper name for Hokkaidō-born and the exclamation Olé . Under the new name, they made it to the first division in 1997. For the 1999 season play-offs were introduced between the last four teams in the first division and the champions from the second division. Consadole was affected by the fact that the results of the last two years decided who would participate in the play-offs. In these play-offs, you never left the pitch as a winner (4 defeats in 4 games).

In 1999 Consadole was on the verge of bankruptcy . A mountain of debt of 33 million US dollars had been amassed by player transfers. For this reason, the club refrained from further purchases and signed most of the players on loan, as this was significantly cheaper. Thus the bankruptcy could be averted and Consadole rose in 2000 to the J. League Division 1 .

The club stayed there for two years before being relegated from bottom of the table and again in debt in the nine-digit range in 2003. Consadole solved the crisis by selling well paid players.

In 2007 they became champions of J-League 2 and rose to J-League 1, but had to leave the league after only one season in last place. 2011 succeeded the renewed promotion to the first division, in which the team missed relegation again in the following season.

At the beginning of 2016 Consadole expanded its so-called "home town area" to the entire island of Hokkaidō; this was accompanied by an official name change to Hokkaidō Consadole Sapporo and an adaptation of the club's coat of arms. At the end of the same season, he made his fourth promotion to the J1 League .

Stadion

Sapporo Dome

The club plays its home games in the Sapporo Dome in Sapporo . The sports facility has a capacity for football matches of 41,484 spectators. The plant is owned by the city of Sapporo. The stadium is operated by Sapporo Dome Co., Ltd.

Coordinates: 43 ° 0 ′ 54.4 "  N , 141 ° 24 ′ 35.1"  E

Current squad

Status: June 2020

No. position Surname
1 JapanJapan TW Takanori Sugeno
2 JapanJapan FROM Naoki Ishikawa
3 JapanJapan FROM Ryosuke Shindo
4th JapanJapan ST Daiki Suga
5 JapanJapan FROM Akito Fukumori
7th BrazilBrazil MF Lucas Fernandes (on loan from Fluminense FC )
8th JapanJapan MF Kazuki Fukai
9 JapanJapan ST Musashi Suzuki
10 JapanJapan MF Hiroki Miyazawa ( team captain )
11 BrazilBrazil ST Anderson Lopes
14th JapanJapan MF Yoshiaki Komai
15th JapanJapan FROM Taiyo Hama
16 JapanJapan ST Ren Fujimura
17th JapanJapan MF Riku Danzaki
18th ThailandThailand MF Chanathip Songkrasin
19th JapanJapan MF Kosuke Shirai
20th Korea SouthSouth Korea FROM Kim Min-tae
No. position Surname
21st JapanJapan TW Shunta Awaka
23 JapanJapan MF Yoshihiro Nakano
26th JapanJapan MF Ryota Hayasaka
27 JapanJapan MF Takuma Arano
29 ThailandThailand TW Kawin Thamsatchanan (on loan from OH Leuven )
30th JapanJapan MF Takurō Kaneko
31 JapanJapan MF Tomoki Takamine
32 JapanJapan FROM Shunta Tanaka
33 BrazilBrazil ST Douglas Oliveira
34 JapanJapan TW Kojiro Nakano
37 JapanJapan FROM Koki Kanno
38 JapanJapan MF Shuma Kido
39 JapanJapan ST Ren Yamato
40 JapanJapan ST Yosei Sato
48 EnglandEngland ST Jay Bothroyd

Coach chronicle

Trainer nationality from to
Tadao Onishi JapanJapan Japan 1st February 1981 January 31, 1986
Takeo Takahashi JapanJapan Japan February 1, 1987 February 1, 1997
Hugo Fernández Vallejo UruguayUruguay Uruguay February 1, 1997 October 18, 1998
Hajime Ishii JapanJapan Japan October 19, 1998 January 31, 1999
Takeshi Okada JapanJapan Japan February 1, 1999 January 31, 2002
Tetsuji Hashiratani JapanJapan Japan February 1, 2002 May 31, 2002
Radmilo Ivancevic SerbiaSerbia Serbia June 1, 2002 September 16, 2002
Chang Woe-ryong Korea SouthSouth Korea South Korea September 16, 2002 January 31, 2003
João Carlos BrazilBrazil Brazil February 1, 2003 August 4, 2003
Chang Woe-ryong Korea SouthSouth Korea South Korea August 5, 2003 January 31, 2004
Masaaki Yanagishita JapanJapan Japan February 1, 2004 January 31, 2007
Toshiya Miura JapanJapan Japan February 1, 2007 January 31, 2009
Nobuhiro Ishizaki JapanJapan Japan February 1, 2009 January 31, 2013
Keiichi Zaizen JapanJapan Japan 1st February 2013 August 27, 2014
Yoshihiro Natsuka JapanJapan Japan August 28, 2014 September 6, 2014
Ivica Barbaric CroatiaCroatia Croatia Bosnia and HerzegovinaBosnia and HerzegovinaBosnia and Herzegovina  September 7, 2014 July 24, 2015
Shuhei Yomoda JapanJapan Japan July 24, 2015 January 31, 2018
Michael Petrovic AustriaAustria Austria SerbiaSerbiaSerbia  1st February 2018 today

Season placement

season league Teams space spectator J. League Cup Emperor's Cup
1998 J 18th 14th 11,953 Group stage 4th round
1999 J2 10 5. 10,986 1 round 3rd round
2000 J2 11 1.   12,910 1 round 4th round
2001 J1 16 11. 22,228 Group stage 3rd round
2002 J1 16 16.   19,140 Group stage 3rd round
2003 J2 12 9. 10,766 3rd round
2004 J2 12 12. 9,466 Quarter finals
2005 J2 12 6th . 3rd round
2006 J2 13 6th 10,478 Semifinals
2007 J2 13 1.   12.112 3rd round
2008 J1 18th 18.   14,547 Group stage 4th round
2009 J2 18th 6th 10.207 3rd round
2010 J2 19th 13. 10,738 3rd round
2011 J2 20th 3.   10,482 2nd round
2012 J1 18th 18.   12.008 Group stage 2nd round
2013 J2 22nd 8th. 10,075 Quarter finals
2014 J2 22nd 10. 11,060 3rd round
2015 J2 22nd 10. 11,960 3rd round
2016 J2 22nd 1.   14,559 2nd round
2017 J1 18th 11. 18,418 PlayOffs 2nd round
2018 J1 18th 4th 17,222 Group stage 4th round
2019 J1 18th 10. 18,768 2nd place 2nd round
2020 J1 18th

Awards

Top scorer of the year

Young Player of the Year

Eleven of the year

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Consadole announce name change. J. League, November 20, 2015, accessed July 9, 2016 .
  2. J. League Data Site

Web links

Commons : Consadole Sapporo  - Collection of Images, Videos and Audio Files