Avispa Fukuoka

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Avispa Fukuoka
アビスパ福岡
logo
Full name Avispa Fukuoka
Nickname(s) Avi, Hachi(Bee, in Japanese)
Founded 1982(moved in Fukuoka 1995)
Ground Hakata no Mori Stadium
Hakata-ku, Fukuoka
Capacity 22,563
Chairman Koh Tsuzuku (April 2006-)
Manager Pierre Littbarski (2007-)
League J. League Div.2 (2007-)
J1 2006 16th Place (relegated to J2)
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

Avispa Fukuoka (アビスパ福岡 Abisupa Fukuoka?) is a Japanese professional football (soccer) club, currently playing in the J-league Division 2. The team is located in Hakata, Fukuoka. "Avispa" means "wasp" in Spanish.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] In Fujieda

The club was founded as Chūō Bōhan F.C. in 1982 by the workers of security company Chuo Bohan in Fujieda, Shizuoka. They were promoted to the Japan Soccer League Division 2 in 1991. They participated in the newly founded former Japan Football League Division 2 in 1992 and were promoted to Division 1 in 1993. They changed their name to Chūō Bōhan F.C. Fujieda Blux with intention to be a J. League member. However, with difficulties to have a stadium that met the J. League requirement, they decided to move to Fukuoka where the community was eager to have a J. League club. They adopted new name Fukuoka Blux and became a J. League associate member. [1]

Note: Amateur club Chūō Bōhan F.C. was active in Fujieda until 2006.

[edit] 1995 (JFL)

The first season in Fukuoka saw them win the JFL championship with help from Argentinean Hugo Maradona and they were promoted to J. League.

[edit] 1996 - 1998 (J. League)

They decided to change their name to Avispa Fukuoka to avoid a potential trademark dispute with men's clothier Brooks Brothers. The club acquired experienced players such as former Japanese international Satoshi Tsunami and defender Hideaki Mori but they finished lowly 15th in the 1996 season. They finished bottom of the league two seasons in a row from 1997 to 1998. At the end of the 1998 season, Avispa were involved in the play-offs but they narrowly escaped a relegation. Around this time, forward Yoshiteru Yamashita and midfielder Chikara Fujimoto were chosen for the Japanese national team.

Note: No team was relegated from J. League until 1998. With a view to the foundation of J. League Division 2 in 1999, the relegation/promotion play-offs were held in 1998 for the first time.

[edit] 1999 - 2001 (J1)

In 1999, they again reinforced the squad by acquiring experienced players such as former internationals Nobuyuki Kojima and Yasutoshi Miura as well as Yugoslavian Nenad Maslovar. They won a fierce relegation battle and eventually stayed up. In 2000, Argentinean David Bisconti and Romanian Pavel Badea were transferred to Fukuoka and they finished club record 6th in the second stage. In 2001, the club acquired former Korean international Noh Jung-Yoon and Yoshika Matsubara but they finished 15th and were relegated to J2.

[edit] 2002 - 2005 (J2)

In 2002, they kept experienced players and released younger players such as Daisuke Nakaharai and Yoshiteru Yamashita but they finished 8th out of 10. In 2002, with new manager Hiroshi Matsuda, they decided to recruit and nurture young players who graduated from local high schools instead of acquiring experienced footballers from other clubs. They initially struggled but came back well and finished 4th. In 2004, they finished 3rd and qualified for the play-offs but Kashiwa Reysol dashed their promotion hope by beating them home and away (the scoreline was both 2-0). In 2005, they finished 2nd and gained an automatic promotion to J1. Avispa players Hokuto Nakamura and Tomokazu Nagira represented Japan for the 2005 World Youth Championship in Holland.

[edit] 2006 (J1)

They had been involved in a relegation battle from the beginning of the season. They finished 16th and are relegated to J2 after Vissel Kobe beat them in the promotion/relegation play-offs.

[edit] Current players

As of February 11, 2007

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Japan GK Ryuichi Kamiyama
2 Flag of Japan DF Toru Miyamoto
3 Flag of Brazil MF Alex Antônio de Melo Santos
4 Flag of Japan DF Seiji Kaneko
5 Flag of Japan DF Satoshi Nagano
6 Flag of Japan MF Takanori Nunobe
7 Flag of Japan MF Kohei Miyazaki
8 Flag of Australia DF Alvin Ceccoli
9 Flag of Brazil FW Abraão Lincoln Martins
10 Flag of Japan MF Kiyokazu Kudo
11 Flag of Japan FW Yusuke Tanaka
13 Flag of Japan DF Tomokazu Nagira
14 Flag of Japan MF Seiji Koga
15 Flag of Japan MF Hisashi Jogo
16 Flag of Japan MF Tatsunori Hisanaga
17 Flag of Japan DF Shinya Kawashima
No. Position Player
18 Flag of Japan FW Kyohei Yamagata
19 Flag of Japan FW Hiroyuki Hayashi
20 Flag of Japan DF Tatsunori Yamagata
21 Flag of Japan GK Erikson Noguchipinto
22 Flag of Japan MF Hokuto Nakamura
23 Flag of Japan MF Kazuyuki Otsuka
24 Flag of Japan FW Yasuomi Kugisaki
25 Flag of Japan GK Tomoyasu Naitou
26 Flag of Japan MF Shingo Honda
27 Flag of Japan MF Kengo Takushima
28 Flag of Japan FW Tadaomi Yasuda
29 Flag of Japan FW Yuji Unozawa
30 Flag of Japan GK Yuji Rokutan
31 Flag of Brazil FW Rafael dos Santos de Oliveira
32 Flag of Japan DF Naoya Shibamura

[edit] Season by season results and managers

This table only shows the results after the club moved to Fukuoka. (Played as Fukuoka Brooks in 1995 and as Avispa Fukuoka after 1996)

Year League Played Point Win Draw Loss Place Manager General Manager
1995 JFL (former) 30 72 24 - 6 Champions Flag of ArgentinaJorge Olguín Flag of JapanYoshio Kikukawa
1996 J 30 29 9 2(*1) 19 15th Flag of JapanHidehiko Shimizu
1997 J・1st 16 9 3 - 13 17th Flag of ArgentinaCarlos Pachame
J・2nd 16 10 3 1(*2) 12 15th
1998 J・1st 17 7 2 1(*2) 14 18th Flag of JapanTakaji Mori
J・2nd 17 14 4 1(*3) 12 15th
1999 J1・1st 15 16 4 2(*3) 9 11th Flag of JapanYoshio Kikukawa
J1・2nd 15 12 3 2(*4) 10 15th
2000 J1・1st 15 15 3 3(*3) 9 14th Flag of ArgentinaNestor Omar Piccoli Flag of JapanYoshio Kikukawa
J1.2nd 15 22 6 3(*5) 6 5th
2001 J1・1st 15 14 4 1(*3) 10 12th
J1・2nd 15 13 3 3(*5) 9 15th
2002 J2 44 42 10 12 22 8th Flag of JapanMasataka Imai (Week 1-21)
Flag of JapanTatsuya Mochizuki (Week 22-24, caretaker)
Flag of JapanShigekazu Nakamura (Week 25-44)
2003 44 71 21 8 15 4th Flag of JapanHiroshi Matsuda
2004 44 76 23 7 14 3rd
2005 44 78 21 15 8 2nd
2006 J1 34 27 5 12 17 16th Flag of JapanHiroshi Matsuda (Week 1-12)
Flag of JapanRyoichi Kawakatsu (Week 13-34)
2007 J2 Flag of GermanyPierre Littbarski
  • Note:
    • (*1)=1 PK loss (1 point)
    • (*2)=1 PK win (1 point)
    • (*3)=1 Golden Goal win (2 points)
    • (*4)=1 Golden Goal win and 1 draw (total 3 points)
    • (*5)=1 Golden Goal win and 2 draws (total 4 points)

[edit] Former players

[edit] External links

Logo
J. League Seasons
v  d  e
1993 | 1994 | 1995 | 1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000
2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008
2007 J. League Division 1 (J1)
Kashima Antlers | Omiya Ardija | Urawa Reds | JEF United Ichihara Chiba | Kashiwa Reysol
F.C. Tokyo | Kawasaki Frontale | Yokohama F. Marinos | Yokohama F.C. | Ventforet Kofu
Albirex Niigata | Shimizu S-Pulse | Júbilo Iwata | Nagoya Grampus Eight | Gamba Osaka
Vissel Kobe | Sanfrecce Hiroshima | Oita Trinita
2007 J. League Division 2 (J2)
Consadole Sapporo | Vegalta Sendai | Montedio Yamagata | Mito HollyHock | Thespa Kusatsu
Tokyo Verdy 1969 | Shonan Bellmare | Kyoto Sanga F.C. | Cerezo Osaka | Tokushima Vortis
Ehime F.C. | Avispa Fukuoka | Sagan Tosu
Defunct Club
Yokohama Flügels
Other Domestic Competitions
Emperor's Cup | J. League Cup | Super Cup | Promotion/Relegation Series | JOMO All-Star Soccer
International Competitions
AFC Champions League | A3 Champions Cup
Defunct Competitions
Suntory Championship | Sanwa Bank Cup
J. League Awards
Player of the Year | Top Scorer | Young Player of the Year | Team of the Year | Manager of the Year
See Also

Japanese football league system | J. League records | J. League contracts
Japanese football champions | Notable J. League players