F.C. Tokyo
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Full name | F.C. Tokyo |
---|---|
Founded | 1935 |
Ground | Ajinomoto Stadium |
Capacity | 50,100 |
Chairman | Kenji Akune |
Manager | Massimo Ficcadenti |
League | J. League 1 |
2015 | J. League 1, 5th |
F.C. Tokyo (FC東京, Efushī Tōkyō)[1] is a Japanese professional football club[2] in Tokyo.[3]
History[change | change source]
The club was founded in 1935.[3]
- 1935-1998 Tokyo Gas S.C.
- 1999-present F.C. Tokyo
League title[change | change source]
- Japan Football League : 1
- 1998
- Emperor Cup : 2011
League position[change | change source]
- 2001 : J. League 1 - 8th
- 2002 : J. League 1 - 9th
- 2003 : J. League 1 - 4th
- 2004 : J. League 1 - 8th
- 2005 : J. League 1 - 10th
- 2006 : J. League 1 - 13th
- 2007 : J. League 1 - 12th
- 2008 : J. League 1 - 6th
- 2009 : J. League 1 - 5th
- 2010 : J. League 1 - 16th
- 2015 : J. League 1 - 6th
Former position[change | change source]
- 1991/92 : JSL Division 2 - 7th
- 1992 : Football League - 7th
- 1993 : Football League - 8th
- 1994 : Football League - 7th
- 1995 : Football League - 3rd
- 1996 : Football League - 3rd
- 1997 : Football League - 2nd
- 1998 : Football League - Champions
- 1999 : J. League 2 - 2nd
- 2000 : J. League 1 - 7th
Notable achievement[change | change source]
The team has some notable achievements.
In 2012, Kazuma Watanabe made three goals in one game against Sagan Tosu.[4]
In 2009, Naohiro Ishikawa scored three times in one game against Omiya Ardija.[4]
Related pages[change | change source]
References[change | change source]
- ↑ FC is an acronym. FC stands for "Football Club". In the J-League, the team is one of seven with FC in the club name.
- ↑ Jsoccer.com, "Japan J.League Teams"; retrieved 2012-7-5.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Soccerway.com, "FC Tokyo"; retrieved 2012-3-2.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 WorldFootball.net, "3 Goals in one game"; retrieved 2012-7-5.
Other websites[change | change source]
Media related to FC Tokyo at Wikimedia Commons