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Kashiwa Reysol

 
Wikipedia: Kashiwa Reysol
Kashiwa Reysol
柏レイソル
Reysol's Logo
Full name Kashiwa Reysol
Nickname(s) "Sun Kings"
Founded 1940
Ground Hitachi Kashiwa Soccer Stadium
Kashiwa no Ha Park Stadium
Kashiwa, Chiba
(Capacity: 15,900
20,000)
Chairman Shigeyuki Onodera
Manager Nelsinho Baptista(2009 - )
League J. League Div.1
2008 11th place
Home colours
Away colours

Kashiwa Reysol (柏レイソル Kashiwa Reisoru?) is a J. League team. The name Reysol comes from the Spanish words rey ('king') and sol ('sun') and reflect the fact that the team had originally been a company team of Hitachi in the Japan Soccer League. Its home town is Kashiwa, Chiba, about an hour northeast of Tokyo.

Contents

History

Founded in 1940 as Hitachi, Ltd. Soccer Club in Koganei, Tokyo, the team was a founding member of the Japan Soccer League. It had some success during the mid-1970s, winning several Emperor's Cup and JSL titles and contributing several players to the Japanese national team.

In 1986, the team relocated from Koganei to Kashiwa, but it took a while to adapt to the new town, as they were relegated to the JSL Division 2 at the season's closing. They made it back to the top flight in 1989, only to drop back in 1990 and return in 1991. As the J. League advent had come too soon for them, Hitachi chose to relegate itself in the last JSL season.

The team joined the Japan Football League in 1992 and added Careca of the Brazil national football team with the aim of winning the JFL champion for promotion to the J1 league in 1993. The quest was unsuccessful and the team barely managed to come in at the fifth spot. In 1994 the team secured the second spot in the JFL and earned the promotion to the top league. From 1995, it was in the J1 and in 1998, the team welcomed the former manager for Japan's Olympic team, Akira Nishino as its manager. In 1999, it won its first title, the Nabisco Cup championship. The 1999 and 2000 seasons marked the highpoint in the club's recent history.

Over the next two seasons, management changes, in particular the tenure of English coach Steve Perryman, unsettled the team and they lost ground. Things got worse still. Following a 16th place out of 18 finish in the 2005 standings, Kashiwa Reysol lost the promotion/relegation play-offs against the 3rd place J2 team Ventforet Kofu. For the first time, three J1 teams were sent down to J2.

Following relegation the team lost all its former players. It began 2006 with both a new coach, Nobuhiro Ishizaki, and an almost entirely new squad. Kashiwa lead J2 for much of 2006, but a series of poor performances in the later stages saw them slip down the table. It was only in the final game of the season that the team secured automatic promotion to J1 as first placed runners up.

Team Record

J.League

Season League Place GP Pts Win Draw Lose Average Crowd
1995 J1 1st stage 14 / 14 26 22 7 - 19 16,102
J1 2nd stage 5 / 14 26 43 14 - 12
J1 Total 12 / 14 52 65 21 - 31
1996 J1 5 / 16 30 60 20 - 10 13,033
1997 J1 1st stage 3 / 17 16 32 11 - 5 8,664
J1 2nd stage 10 / 17 16 20 7 - 9
J1 Total 7 / 17 32 52 18 - 14
1998 J1 1st stage 10 / 18 17 22 9 - 8 9,932
J1 2nd stage 8 / 18 17 25 9 - 8
J1 Total 8 / 18 34 47 18 - 16
1999 J1 1st stage 4 / 16 15 29 10 0 5 10,122
J1 2nd stage 4 / 16 15 29 10 1 4
J1 Total 3 / 16 30 58 20 1 9
2000 J1 1st stage 4 / 16 15 26 10 0 5 10,037
J1 2nd stage Runners-up / 16 15 32 11 1 3
J1 Total 3 / 16 30 58 21 1 8
2001 J1 1st stage 6 / 16 15 22 8 0 7 12,477
J1 2nd stage 7 / 16 15 21 6 3 6
J1 Total 6 / 16 30 43 14 3 13
2002 J1 1st stage 14 / 16 15 11 4 0 11 11,314
J1 2nd stage 9 / 16 15 21 6 3 6
J1 Total 12 / 16 30 32 10 3 17
2003 J1 1st stage 9 / 16 15 21 6 3 6 10,873
J1 2nd stage 11 / 16 15 16 3 7 5
J1 Total 12 / 16 30 37 9 10 11
2004 J1 1st stage 15 / 16 15 12 3 3 9 10,513
J1 2nd stage 15 / 16 15 13 2 7 6
J1 Total 16 / 16 30 25 5 10 15
2005 J1 16 / 18 34 35 8 11 15 12,492
2006 J2 Runners-up / 13 48 88 27 7 14 8,328
2007 J1 8 / 18 34 50 14 8 12 12,967
2008 J1 11 / 18 34 46 13 7 14 12,308
 
Key to colors
          Played in 1st division league
          Played in 2nd division league

Other Domestic Competitions

See other domestic competitions record

Titles

Hitachi

  • Japan Soccer League: (1) 1972
  • Japan Soccer League Division 2: (1) 1990/91
  • JSL Cup: (1) 1976
  • Emperor's Cup: (2) 1972, 1975

Kashiwa Reysol

Managers

Manager Nat. Tenure
Zé Sérgio  Brazil 1995
Antoninho  Brazil 1995
Nicanor  Brazil 1996-1997
Akira Nishino  Japan 1998-2001
Steve Perryman  England 2001-2002
Marco Aurelio  Brazil 2002-2003
Tomoyoshi Ikeya  Japan 2004
Hiroshi Hayano  Japan 2004-2005
Nobuhiro Ishizaki  Japan 2006-2008
Shonichiro Takahashi  Japan 2009
Nelsinho Baptista  Brazil 2009-

Players

Current Squad

As of October 7, 2009

No. Position Player
1 Japan GK Kazushige Kirihata
2 Japan DF Jiro Kamata
3 Japan DF Naoya Kondo
5 Japan DF Masahiro Koga
6 South Korea DF Park Dong-Hyuk
7 Japan MF Hidekazu Otani (captain)
8 Japan FW Masakatsu Sawa
9 Japan FW Hideaki Kitajima
10 Brazil FW França
13 Japan DF Yuzo Kobayashi
15 Japan MF Minoru Suganuma
18 Japan MF Iwao Yamane
21 Japan GK Yuta Minami
22 Japan DF Wataru Hashimoto
No. Position Player
23 Japan DF Yohei Kurakawa
24 Japan MF Jun Yanagisawa
25 Japan DF Yusuke Murakami
27 Japan MF Yuki Otsu
28 Japan MF Ryoichi Kurisawa
29 Japan MF Kohei Higa
33 Japan GK Takanori Sugeno
34 Japan MF Kota Sugiyama
35 Japan MF Ren Sengoku
36 Japan FW Masato Kudo
37 Japan MF Masato Yamazaki
38 Nigeria DF Adebayo Adigun
39 Japan MF Akimi Barada
40 Japan MF Yoshiyuki Kobayashi
41 Japan FW Junya Tanaka
Brazil MF Alceu (Injured)

Out on loan

No. Position Player
Japan GK Shinya Kato (to Ehime F.C.)
Japan DF Ryo Kobayashi (to Montedio Yamagata)
Japan DF Naoki Ishikawa (to Consadole Sapporo)
Japan DF Hiroki Sakai (to Mogi Mirim Esporte Clube)
Japan DF Takahiro Oshima (to AC Nagano Parceilo)
Japan MF Shu Abe (to Avispa Fukuoka)
Japan MF Kosuke Taketomi (to Mogi Mirim Esporte Clube)
Japan MF Shunta Nagai (to Ehime F.C.)
Japan MF Tatsuya Suzuki (to F.C. Tokyo)
Japan FW Tomoki Ikemoto (to Yokohama FC)
Japan FW Yu Hasegawa (to Montedio Yamagata)

For recent transfers, see List of Japanese football transfers winter 2009-10.

Notable Players

World Cup Players

World Cup 2002

External links


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Naoya Kondo
Hitachi Kashiwa Soccer Stadium
Jiro Kamata

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