FC Tokyo joined J3 League in 2016 along with the reserve teams of neighbours Gamba Osaka and Cerezo Osaka. None of these clubs are eligible for promotion to J2 League additionally they can only field 3 players over the age of 23.
Venue: Sagamihara Gion Stadium
Open: 2019 Feb. 16 (Sat) 10:00
Notes:
A video shot for use in a game broadcast etc. in a stadium (including concourse) by a person designated by the J-League or the J-League (production of portraits, banners, flags, chants, etc. of individual visitors). All or part of it (including objects etc.) (including still images) will be broadcasted on the venue by a large video device, official media of J. League and clubs, television news, etc. Depending on the purpose of use, it may be used for various sales items including video works produced by Aro Media, etc., and those designated by J League or J League (including partner companies). In addition, it is considered that they agreed in advance without charge (in the case of minors, they are regarded as consent of the parents).
※ For pre-primary school children (preschoolers), one adult per ticket holder can enter for free, but please watch on your lap. Please purchase a ticket if you wish to sit in the seat.
※ Please purchase a ticket for [Home B free seat].
※ If you are traveling with a single person, you do not need a ticket. Please purchase a ticket for Home B free seat after 2nd person.
※ The watching area is the "main stand wheelchair seating area". On the day of the match, please have a ticket and come to the main stand 1st floor receptionist.
※ If you are arriving by car please call us 2 weeks to 2 days before the match. We will secure a parking lot. The number is limited and may not be available.
Limited number of tickets: You can book up to 15 tickets per an application. Application limit 4 times.
Type of seats and fees:
S reserved seat (adult): ¥ 2,500
S reserved seat (small and middle): ¥ 1,500
A free seat (adult): ¥ 2,200
A free seat (small and middle): ¥ 1,000
Home B free seat (adult): ¥ 1,800
Home B free seats (small and middle): ¥ 800
Visitor B free seats (adult): ¥ 1,800
Visitor B free seats (small and middle): ¥ 800
Payment methods:
Credit card: It will be settled when the application is completed.
Convenience store / ATM: Please pay by at that time of display of application.
Seven-Eleven
Family mart
Lawson Ministop
Page compatible ATM
Internet Banking: Please pay by the deadline of display of application.
Delivery 【Delivery service】: We will deliver in about a week after payment is completed.
Seven-Eleven: Please receive at the cash register after Saturday, 2019 February.
FamilyMart: Please receive it from the store's Fami port terminal after 20/19/16 (Saturday).
2016 was promoted to the JFL. Breakthrough year for us.
I put the "This is the challenge the high stage as a new battlefield than ever before," such a feeling.
Is a challenge = challenge, but to us that the challenge in football (soccer) with the word "recoil" pronounced "Korea".
2016, please look forward to the "跳戦" of Buriobekka Urayasu. Buriobekka Urayasu official Web site
It participated in the Kanto league since 2000. Than Japan Futsal Federation and Japan futsal league, it is approved as F League associate member. Win all the Kanto League entrants game to decide the Kanto futsal league promotion.
Home Arena Urayasu Gymnasium. Pescadola Machida (ペスカドーラ町田 ) is a Japanese professional futsal club, currently playing in the F. League. Nagoya Oceans (名古屋オーシャンズ ) is a Japanese professional futsal club, currently playing in the F. League.
(府中アスレティックフットボールクラブ ) is a Japanese professional futsal club, currently playing in the F. League. They are participating in the Japan futsal league. At the moment is a professional team Nagoya Oceans is the only league.
2001, was formed by the Tokyo Metropolitan Komaba High School soccer team OB, including Koji Kimura as BOTSWANA, also joined shortly Hyosung High School soccer club OB. Inaugurated in 2007, according to the participation Japan Futsal League (F League), change the club name to Barudoraru Urayasu. Nicknamed "F.LEAGUE (F league)."
The team is located in Machida; their main arena is Machida Municipal Gymnasium. The same year, achieving the Kanto futsal league third straight. Vasagey Oita (バサジィ大分 ) is a Japanese professional futsal club, currently playing in the F. League.
Shriker Osaka (シュライカー大阪 , Shuraikā Ōsaka) is a Japanese professional futsal club, currently playing in the F. League.
Albirex Niigata (アルビレックス新潟 , Arubirekkusu Nīgata) is a Japanese J2 League association football club based in Niigata. In 2003, while still playing in the second tier of Japanese football (J2), Albirex attracted the best average crowd in the country of over 30,000. Since promotion to J1 in 2004 they have recorded an average crowd of over 38,000, and in 2005 Albirex were the first ever club in Japan to record an average gate of over 40,000.
For many years it had been a local autonomous amateur club, Niigata 11, that could never hope to see the light of day in an old Japan Soccer League dominated almost entirely by company teams. The creation of the J. League spurred the club to rise, and in the 1990s it began climbing fast through the divisions.
In 1998, Albirex Niigata joined the Japan Football League, and was merged into the J2 league after its creation in 1999. The team gradually became competitive and on 2001 and 2002 it came close to getting promoted to J1 and in 2003, it became the champion of J2 and finally joined the top flight.
The team name is made from combining the star Albireo of the constellation Cygnus (the Swan) and the Latin word Rex meaning 'king'. In 1997, due to copyright issues, the team name was changed from Albireo Niigata to the current Albirex Niigata.
In 2007, the uniform color will change. Until 2006, the color was orange – blue – orange, but from 2007 the color will be orange – orange – orange. This coordinate has not been adopted since 1996 when the team professionalized.
The success in Albirex Niigata gave a big impact to the entire Japanese sporting world including the professional baseball. It is because commercial correctness of structure of professional sports, and a regional sticking (effectiveness in Japan) was proven also in the local mainstay city. Moreover, it came for clarifying the possession of energy that it was farther larger than the expectation of the sports market in the local city without the population of the metropolitan area in the past, and local city citizens' localism feelings are very bigger to influence other a lot of sports and municipality.
Yokohama F. Marinos (横浜F・マリノス Yokohama Efu Marinosu) is a Japanese association football team that participates in the J1 League.
Having won the J-League title three times and finishing second twice, they are one of the most successful J-League clubs. The team is based in Yokohama and was founded as the company team of Nissan Motors. The club was formed by the merger of Yokohama Marinos and Yokohama Flügels in 1999. The current name is intended to reflect both Marinos and Flügels. The team name Marinos means "sailors" in Spanish. Yokohama F. Marinos is the longest serving team in the top flight of Japanese football, having played at the top level since 1982, also making them, along with Kashima Antlers, one of only two teams to have competed in Japan's top flight of football every year since its inception.
n 1972, the team started as the Nissan Motors F.C. based in Yokohama, and were promoted to the Japan Soccer League Division 2 in 1976. They took necessary steps like building a friendly relationship with local high schools and universities and starting junior teams for school kids to be a winning team. Under the first paid or professional team manager in Japan Shu Kamo, the team won championships in 1988 and 1989 as well as the JSL Cup and Emperor's Cup winning all three major tournaments in Japan at that time.
In 1991, it was one of the founding members of the J.League. In 1998, after losing one of their primary sponsors, it was announced that crosstown rivals Yokohama Flügels would merge with Marinos. Since then, an F was added to the name to represent the Flügels half of the club. Many Flügels fans rejected the merger, rather believing their club to have been dissolved into Marinos. As a result, they refused to follow F. Marinos and instead created Yokohama FC, F. Marinos' new crosstown rivals. In 2010, Shunsuke Nakamura made a comeback to Yokohama F. Marinos.
Since Naoki Matsuda left the team, F. Marinos' number 3 has been retired. Naoki Matsuda had participated 385 matches as a member of F. Marinos. On 2 August, in the year after he left the club, he collapsed during training due to a cardiac arrest after finishing a 15-minute warmup run. Doctors diagnosed his condition as "extremely severe". Two days later, he died at the age of 34. As a result, his ex-number, 3 has been a retired as an active number for this team. On 23 July 2013, Yokohama F. Marinos faced Manchester United in a 3–2 win for a friendly match
Yokohama F. Marinos won the Emperor's Cup on New Years Day 2014, their first in twenty-one years. On 20 May 2014, it was announced that City Football Group, the holding company of Manchester City F.C., had invested in a minority share of Yokohama F. Marinos, creating a partnership with both the football club and car manufacturer Nissan.[4] The investment is designed to offer an integrated approach to football, marketing, media, commercial, training and medical care consistent with other City Football Group investments such as Manchester City F.C., Melbourne City FC and the New York City FC. City Football Group holds 19.95 percent of Yokohama F. Marinos' existing shares,[5] but through the establishment of a Japan-based subsidiary may seek to eventually own a controlling stake in the club.