J.League Division 1 2005
J.League Division 1 2005 | |
master | Gamba Osaka |
Relegation ↓ | Kashiwa Reysol |
Relegated |
Kashiwa Reysol Tokyo Verdy 1969 Vissel Kobe |
Teams | 18th |
Games | 306 |
Gates | 873 (ø 2.85 per game) |
← J.League Division 1 2004 | |
The J.League Division 1 2005 was the thirteenth season of the highest division of the Japanese J.League and the seventh under the name Division 1 . Eighteen clubs took part in it. For the first time since 1996 the competition was held in a real double round tournament. The season began on March 5 and ended on December 3, 2005; No matches were played between May 15 and July 2 due to the FIFA Confederations Cup .
The first title holder of the championship played out in this new mode was Gamba Osaka , which was only able to prevail over four other teams, all of whom still had realistic chances for the title, in the last minutes of the last game day. Direct relegated to Division 2 2006 were Tokyo Verdy 1969 and Vissel Kobe . As in the previous year, Kashiwa Reysol played in the relegation against the third of the J.League Division 2 in 2005 and ultimately failed against opponent Ventforet Kofu - or his striker Baré , who scored seven of a total of eight Ventforet goals, including all six of his team in Return leg.
mode
There have been several fundamental changes compared to the previous season . Although the clubs faced each other twice, once at home and once away, the competition mode was changed permanently with the introduction of a real double round tournament based on the European model. Although this type of competition has already existed in the previous history of the J.League in 1996 , it was carried out rather out of time constraints, as the double round for each semi-series, which had been common up until then - in other words, each team played over the course of a year a total of four times against each opponent - with sixteen teams was simply no longer feasible.
There were three points for a win; in the case of a draw, each team received one point. The final table was therefore created according to the following criteria:
- Number of points scored
- Goal difference
- Goals scored
- Results of the games among themselves
- Decision game or coin toss
The club with the best result at the end of the season won the Japanese championship and qualified for the 2006 AFC Champions League . The two worst teams were relegated directly to the J.League Division 2 2006 , the third from bottom had to play against the third-best team in Division 2 in two relegation games for a place in Division 1 for the coming season. In the event of a tie after the end of these two games, the away goals rule was applied; these no decision would take was one extension , which from now through the abolition of the rule-goal Golden would completely played, and if necessary, a penalty shoot- performed.
Attendees
A total of eighteen teams took part in the season for the first time since 1998, two more than in the previous season. Due to the expansion of the field of participants, there was no relegation to Division 2 after Kashiwa Reysol was able to maintain the league membership in the relegation against Avispa Fukuoka .
The sixteen teams from the preseason was joined by Kawasaki Frontale , the 2004 Division 2 champion an old friend; Frontale played first class for one season in 2000 and failed two years earlier in the preliminary round of the J.League relegation tournament to Avispa Fukuoka. The field of participants was completed by the runner-up Ōmiya Ardija , the city rival of the Urawa Red Diamonds , competed in the top Japanese division for the first time in its history.
Furthermore, after 1999 another team from the J.League changed hometown. In comparison to Tokyo Verdy 1969, however , JEF United stayed in its home prefecture Chiba and only moved from Ichihara to the capital Chiba; this was reflected in the expansion of the previous club name to JEF United Ichihara Chiba .
Clubs of the J.League Division 1 2005 |
society | City / region |
---|---|
Albirex Niigata | Niigata and Seirō , Niigata |
Cerezo Osaka | Osaka , Osaka |
Gamba Osaka | Suita , Osaka |
JEF United Ichihara | Chiba , Chiba |
Júbilo Iwata | Iwata , Shizuoka |
Kashima Antlers | Kashima , Ibaraki |
Kashiwa Reysol | Kashiwa , Chiba |
Kawasaki Frontale | Kawasaki , Kanagawa |
Nagoya Grampus Eight | Nagoya , Aichi |
Ōita Trinita | Ōita , Ōita |
Ōmiya Ardija | Saitama , Saitama |
Sanfrecce Hiroshima | Hiroshima , Hiroshima |
Shimizu S-Pulse | Shizuoka , Shizuoka |
FC Tokyo | Tokyo |
Tokyo Verdy 1969 | Tokyo |
Urawa Red Diamonds | Saitama, Saitama |
Vissel Kobe | Kobe , Hyogo |
Yokohama F. Marinos | Yokohama , Kanagawa |
Trainer
society | Head coach |
---|---|
Kashima Antlers | Toninho Cerezo |
Urawa Reds | Guido Buchwald |
Omiya Ardija | Toshiya Miura |
JEF United Chiba | Ivica Osim |
Kashiwa Reysol | Hiroshi Hayano → Kazuhiko Takemoto |
FC Tokyo | Hiromi Hara |
Tokyo Verdy 1969 | Osvaldo Ardiles → Nobuhiro Ishizaki → Vadão |
Kawasaki Frontale | Takashi Sekizuka |
Yokohama F. Marinos | Takeshi Okada |
Albirex Niigata | Yasuharu Sorimachi |
Shimizu S-Pulse | Kenta Hasegawa |
Júbilo Iwata | Masakuni Yamamoto |
Nagoya Grampus Eight | Nelsinho Baptista → Hitoshi Nakata |
Gamba Osaka | Akira Nishino |
Cerezo Osaka | Shinji Kobayashi |
Vissel Kobe | Hideki Matsunaga → Émerson Leão → Pavel Řehák |
Sanfrecce Hiroshima | Takeshi Ono |
Oita Trinita | Hwangbo Kwan → Arie Schans → Péricles Chamusca |
player
statistics
table
Pl. | society | Sp. | S. | U | N | Gates | Diff. | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Gamba Osaka | 34 | 18th | 6th | 10 | 82:58 | +24 | 60 |
2. | Urawa Red Diamonds | 34 | 17th | 8th | 9 | 65:37 | +28 | 59 |
3. | Kashima Antlers | 34 | 16 | 11 | 7th | 61:39 | +22 | 59 |
4th | JEF United Ichihara Chiba | 34 | 16 | 11 | 7th | 56:42 | +14 | 59 |
5. | Cerezo Osaka | 34 | 16 | 11 | 7th | 48:40 | +8 | 59 |
6th | Júbilo Iwata | 34 | 14th | 9 | 11 | 51:41 | +10 | 51 |
7th | Sanfrecce Hiroshima | 34 | 13 | 11 | 10 | 50:42 | +8 | 50 |
8th. | Kawasaki Frontale | 34 | 15th | 5 | 14th | 54:47 | +7 | 50 |
9. | Yokohama F. Marinos | 34 | 12 | 12 | 10 | 41:40 | +1 | 48 |
10. | FC Tokyo | 34 | 11 | 14th | 9 | 43:40 | +3 | 47 |
11. | Ōita Trinita | 34 | 12 | 7th | 15th | 44:43 | +1 | 43 |
12. | Albirex Niigata | 34 | 11 | 9 | 14th | 47:62 | −15 | 42 |
13. | Ōmiya Ardija | 34 | 12 | 5 | 17th | 39:50 | −11 | 41 |
14th | Nagoya Grampus Eight | 34 | 10 | 9 | 15th | 43:49 | −6 | 39 |
15th | Shimizu S-Pulse | 34 | 9 | 12 | 13 | 40:49 | −9 | 39 |
16. | Kashiwa Reysol | 34 | 8th | 11 | 15th | 39:54 | −15 | 35 |
17th | Tokyo Verdy 1969 | 34 | 6th | 12 | 16 | 40:73 | −33 | 30th |
18th | Vissel Kobe | 34 | 4th | 9 | 21st | 30:67 | −37 | 21st |
Status: end of the season |
After the end of the season: | |
Japanese champion 2005 and qualification for the AFC Champions League 2006 : Gamba Osaka | |
Participation in the relegation games against the third placed in the J.League Division 2 2005 : Kashiwa Reysol | |
Relegated to the J.League Division 2 2006 : Tokyo Verdy 1969, Vissel Kobe |
Crosstab
Relegation
In the relegation for a place in the J.League for the coming season, Kashiwa Reysol met Ventforet Kofu , third in Division 2, in tenth place in the table . One player had a decisive influence on the series: Baré . The Brazilian striker practically took care of the team from Kashiwa single-handedly, had one goal in the first leg followed by six in the second leg and thus played a major role in Ventforet's promotion to Division 1.
First leg
pairing | Ventforet Kofu - Kashiwa Reysol |
Result | 2: 1 |
date | December 7, 2005 |
Stadion |
Kose Sports Park Stadium , Kofu 12,372 spectators |
referee | Jōji Kashihara |
Gates | 0: 1 Reinaldo (11th), 1: 1 Kazuki Kuranuki (25th), 2: 1 Baré (48th) |
Note: The game was interrupted for about 35 minutes in the 89th minute due to a power failure.
Return leg
pairing | Kashiwa Reysol - Ventforet Kofu |
Result | 2: 6 |
date | December 10, 2005 |
Stadion |
Hitachi Kashiwa Soccer Stadium , Kashiwa 12,013 spectators |
referee | Masayoshi Okada |
Gates | 0: 1 and 0: 2 Baré (10th, 27th), 1: 2 Reinaldo (52nd), 1: 3, 1: 4 and 1: 5 Baré (53rd, 68th, 69th), 2: 5 Yūji Unozawa (86th), 2: 6 Baré (87th) |
Individual evidence
- ↑ https://data.j-league.or.jp/SFMS01/search?competition_years=2005&competition_frame_ids=1
- ↑ J.League (Japanese)
- ↑ J. League Division 1 2005: Overall table for the season. (No longer available online.) Formerly in the original ; accessed on July 29, 2016 . ( Page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.