FC Machida Zelvia

(Redirected from Machida Zelvia)

Football Club Machida Zelvia (フットボールクラブ町田ゼルビア, Futtobōru Kurabu Machida Zerubia) commonly known as FC Machida Zelvia (FC町田ゼルビア, Efu Shi Machida Zerubia) is a Japanese football club based in Machida, Tokyo. They are currently play in J1 League following promotion as J2 League champions in 2023.

FC Machida Zelvia
町田ゼルビア
crest used since 2008
Full nameFootball Club Machida Zelvia
Nickname(s)Zelvia
Founded1989; 35 years ago (1989) as FC Machida
GroundMachida GION Stadium
Machida, Tokyo
Capacity15,489
OwnerCyberAgent
ChairmanTakehisa Otomo[1]
ManagerGo Kuroda
LeagueJ1 League
2023J2 League, 1st of 22 (promoted)
WebsiteClub website
Current season

History edit

Formation and election to the Prefectural League (1989–2002) edit

FC Machida is known as the "Brazil of Tokyo" due to the popularity of football in the city; in fact, it has produced the second-largest number of J. League players through its football school. Originally formed in 1977, this school is well known for its development of young talents into professional players. In 1989, in order to retain talent, Machida founded its own top team, which at that time played in the Tokyo Prefectural League.

From non-League to Japan Football League (2002–2011) edit

In 2003, they became a multi-sport club under the name Athletic Club Machida, and in 2005 were promoted to the Kanto League, having won the Tokyo Prefectural League (First Division). They came first in the Kanto league (Second Division) the following year and were promoted to First Division, where they stayed until promotion to the Japan Football League as champions of the Regional Promotion Playoff Series in 2008.

In 2009, they adopted the current nickname "Zelvia", a portmanteau of the Portuguese words zelkova (Machida city's official tree) and salvia (Machida city's official flower).

The same year, the club declared its intent to be promoted to J. League's 2nd division, and its status of semi-affiliate was officially approved by the J. League. However, its home stadium capacity and light specifications did not meet the J. League's requirements, average attendance did not reach 3,000, and the team's final position of 6th place did not allow for Zelvia's promotion to the J. League.

In 2010, Zelvia appointed Naoki Soma, a former star player who played in the 1998 FIFA World Cup, as its new head coach. The stadium's lighting was renewed, and the club added several J. League players to its roster. Zelvia also announced its partnership with Major League Soccer's D.C. United, which became the first historic partnership between a Japanese and American club.[2] The reborn team beat Tokyo Verdy, its arch-rival from the J. League, in the 2010 Emperor's Cup, but was knocked out by Albirex Niigata in the third round. Soma left at the end of the season and was replaced by Ranko Popović, former coach of Oita Trinita.

Yo-yo years (2012–2022) edit

The stadium's capacity and conditions were still short of fulfilling J. League criteria, so the club completed another renovation between the end of the 2010 and the start of the 2011 seasons. Zelvia finished the 2011 season in third place after beating Kamatamare Sanuki in the final match of that season, thereby granting them promotion to J. League (Second Division),[3] but were relegated after a bottom-placed finish. They became one of the original J3 clubs after finishing in 4th place in the 2014 JFL season and returned to J2 as 2015 runners-up by beating Oita Trinita in the promotion/relegation play-off. In the first return to J2 in the 2016 season, Machida were able to finish in 7th position, only four points short of the play-offs spot.

In 2017, Zelvia fell off more than a half place down to 15th with fifty points, twelve points up of relegation zone. In the 2018 season, while Zelvia culminated a great campaign by finishing inside the promotion play-offs zone of 4th place, Zelvia were unable to participate in the phase because they did not have a J1 League-level license. The 2019 season also saw the club fell down far on the table as they finished in 18th position, three points up from relegation places occupied by Kagoshima United and FC Gifu.

In 2020, Zelvia finished in 19th. While they were able to conclude their 2021 campaign by finishing in 5th position, Zelvia were once again unable to enter the promotion play-offs because the club still did not have a J1 League club license yet at that time. In 2022 season, Zelvia once again fell far below their position of the previous campaign by finishing in the 15th position.

First silverware in club history and first promotion to J1 League (2023–present) edit

On 22 October 2023, after a seven-year run in J2 League, Machida eventually achieved promotion to the J1 League for the first time in the club history with manager Go Kuroda guiding Zelvia to the 2023 J2 League title with 87 points following their 3–0 away win against Roasso Kumamoto in matchweek 39.[4] The club also confirmed their status as champions of second division on 28 October 2023 after Kumamoto defeated Shimizu S-Pulse 3–1.[5]


Zelvia started off their debut 2024 J1 League season on 24 February 2024 against Gamba Osaka in a 1–1 draw with Junya Suzuki scoring their first top tier league goal for the club. Zelvia went on to have a magnificent run in the first few matches leading at the top of the J1 League table with three wins, 1 draw and 0 lost with 10 points.

Home Stadium edit

 
Machida GION Stadium

Zelvia currently plays at Machida GION Stadium (Nozuta Stadium). Capacity until 2011 was 6,200, including grassy areas, and has had lighting for night games since 2009. Between the 2010 and 2011 seasons, the stadium was upgraded and is now all-seated. Although the minimum seating requirement for J2 is 10,000, Nozuta fell short of that number. However, under an agreement made with J-League officials, home games where a large attendance is expected will be played at other stadia leased specifically for the purpose, and upgrades to Nozuta were made to meet the 10,000-capacity requirement. The current capacity of the stadium is 15,489.

Kit and colours edit

Sponsors edit

Season(s) Kit Manufacturer Main Shirt Sponsor Collarbone Sponsor Additional Sponsor(s)
2019 svolme AbemaTV EAGLE KENSO (Right) odakyu TERADA
株式会社寺田電機製作所
Tamagawa University
2020 AQUA RESORT (Left) 25th Anniversary[a] (Right)
2021 ABEMA
TV Video & Entertainment
EAGLE KENSO (Right)
2022 AQUA RESORT (1st)
BEST LAND (2nd)
TERADA
株式会社寺田電機製作所
Tamagawa University
2023 Adidas CyberAgent TERADA
株式会社寺田電機製作所
Tamagawa University
2024 Rudel

Kit evolution edit

Home kit - 1st
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2010
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2011
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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2021
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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2024 -
Away kit - 2nd
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2010
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2011
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2012
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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2024 -

Current squad edit

As of 19 April 2024.[6]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK   JPN Kosei Tani (on loan from Gamba Osaka)
2 DF   JPN Masayuki Okuyama (vice-captain)
3 DF   JPN Gen Shoji (captain)
4 DF   JPN Jurato Ikeda
5 DF   KOS Ibrahim Drešević
6 DF   JPN Junya Suzuki
7 FW   JPN Yu Hirakawa
8 MF   JPN Keiya Sento (vice-captain)
9 FW   JPN Shota Fujio
10 FW   KOR Na Sang-ho
11 FW   BRA Erik
13 DF   JPN Kai Miki
14 DF   KOR Jang Min-gyu
15 FW   AUS Mitchell Duke
16 MF   JPN Zento Uno
17 MF   JPN Shuto Inaba
18 MF   JPN Hokuto Shimoda (vice-captain)
19 FW   JPN Takaya Numata
22 FW   JPN Kazuki Fujimoto
No. Pos. Nation Player
26 DF   JPN Kotaro Hayashi
28 GK   JPN Louis Yamaguchi
30 FW   JPN Yuki Nakashima
33 DF   JPN Henry Heroki Mochizuki
36 MF   JPN Yohei Okuyama
37 MF   JPN Kosei Ashibe
38 MF   JPN Tenshiro Takasaki
39 MF   CHI Byron Vásquez
41 MF   JPN Takuya Yasui
42 GK   JPN Koki Fukui
44 DF   JPN Yoshitaka Aoki
45 MF   JPN Kai Shibato (on loan from Urawa Reds)
46 MF   JPN Ken Higuchi
47 FW   JPN Shunta Araki
49 FW   JPN Kanji Kuwayama DSP
50 GK   JPN Anton Burns
55 DF   JPN Daisuke Matsumoto
90 FW   KOR Oh Se-hun (on loan from Shimizu S-Pulse)
99 MF   JPN Daigo Takahashi

Out on loan edit

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
29 DF   JPN Takumi Narasaka (at Kamatamare Sanuki)
32 MF   JPN Atsushi Kurokawa (at Mito HollyHock)
DF   JPN Mizuki Uchida (at Kamatamare Sanuki)
No. Pos. Nation Player
DF   JPN Soichiro Fukaminato (at Kamatamare Sanuki)
MF   JPN Sho Fuseya (at Kataller Toyama)
FW   JPN Daiki Sato (at Blaublitz Akita)

Club official edit

Position Name
Manager   Go Kuroda
Assistant manager   Kim Myung-hwi
First-team coach   Shin Yamanaka
  Hikaru Mita
  Yuto Kurimoto
  Daiki Ueda
Goalkeeping coach   Nobuyuki Furo
Physical coach   Toru Yamazaki
Interpreter and coach   Leonardo Moreira
Analytics coach and Head of analysts   Yasuhiko Nishimura
Analytical coach   Yoshiro Akano
Technical staff   Sota Kinoshita
  Ryang Yoon-ho
Interpreter   Go Murakami
  Ken Takahashi
  Lee Seong-ang
Chief trainer   Yasuyuki Sasaki
Trainer   Yuta Hamada
  Shin Osawa
  Takashi Imai
Physiotherapist   Takuro Yoshitake
Medical coordinator   Akihisa Yamamoto
Chief manager   Naoya Watanabe
Sub manager   Ryota Kiyofuji
Kit manager   Hiroyuki Kawakita
  Yuto Suzuki
Nutrition management advisor   Jun Hamano
Chief doctor   Takahiro Fujisawa
  Keisuke Irako

Honours edit


Managerial history edit

Manager Nationality Tenure
Start Finish
Sadao Shigeta   Japan 1991 1995
Shoji Komoda 1996 2002
Minoru Moriya[7] 2003 2007
Tetsuya Totsuka 1 February 2008 31 January 2010
Naoki Soma 1 February 2010 31 January 2011
Ranko Popović   Serbia 1 February 2011 31 January 2012
Osvaldo Ardiles   Argentina 1 February 2012 17 November 2012
Yutaka Akita   Japan 26 November 2012 25 June 2013
Naoki Kusunose 25 June 2013 31 January 2014
Naoki Soma 1 February 2014 31 January 2020
Ranko Popović   Serbia 1 February 2020 31 January 2023
Go Kuroda[8]   Japan 1 February 2023 present

League and cup record edit

Champions Runners-up Third place Promoted Relegated
Season Div. Teams Pos. P W D L F A GD Pts Attendance/G J. League Cup Emperor's
Cup
2009 JFL 18 6th 34 14 12 8 38 30 8 54 1,886 Not eligible
2010 18 3rd 34 19 4 11 71 44 27 61 3,503 3rd round
2011 18 3rd 33 18 7 8 61 28 33 61 3,515 2nd round
2012 J2 22 22nd 42 7 11 24 34 67 -33 32 3,627 4th round
2013 JFL 18 4th 34 18 7 9 51 44 7 61 3,174
2014 J3 12 3rd 33 20 8 5 59 23 37 68 3,134
2015 13 2nd 36 23 9 4 52 18 34 78 3,766 4th round
2016 J2 22 7th 42 18 11 13 53 44 9 65 5,123 1st round
2017 22 16th 42 11 17 14 53 53 0 50 4,056 2nd round
2018 22 4th 42 21 13 8 62 44 18 76 4,915 3rd round
2019 22 18th 42 9 16 17 36 59 -23 43 4,718 2nd round
2020 22 19th 42 12 13 17 41 52 -11 49 1,302 Did not qualify
2021 22 5th 42 20 12 10 64 38 26 72 2,577 2nd round
2022 22 15th 42 14 9 19 51 50 1 51 3,243 2nd round
2023 22 1st 42 26 9 7 79 35 44 87 7,426 Round of 16
2024 J1 20 TBD 38 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TBD TBD
Key
  • Pos. = Position in league; P = Games played; W = Games won; D = Games drawn; L = Games lost; F = Goals scored; A = Goals conceded; GD = Goals difference; Pts = Points gained
  • Attendance/G = Average home league attendance
  • 2020 & 2021 seasons attendances reduced by COVID-19 worldwide pandemic
  • Source: J. League Data Site

Notes edit

  1. ^ EAGLE KENSO

References edit

  1. ^ "FC Machida Zelvia Profile, Results, Players, Stats, Stadium". J.LEAGUE. Retrieved 20 March 2024.
  2. ^ "D.C. United to partner with FC Machida Zelvia". Archived from the original on 28 March 2010. Retrieved 15 October 2010.
  3. ^ McKirdy, Andrew, "Ardiles ready to face new challenge Archived 10 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine", Japan Times, 6 March 2012, p. 18.
  4. ^ "Machida Zelvia clinches first-ever promotion to J1". JLeague.co. Japan Professional Football League. 22 October 2023. Retrieved 27 October 2023.
  5. ^ "FC Machida Zelvia cap amazing season with J2 title". JLeague.co. Japan Professional Football League. 30 October 2023. Retrieved 30 October 2023.
  6. ^ "PLAYER & STAFF". zelvia.co.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 12 April 2024.
  7. ^ Interview Minoru Moriya Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine. Tokyo Football Magazine. Retrieved on 2010-12-17.
  8. ^ "黒田剛 監督就任のお知らせ". zelvia.co.jp (in Japanese). FC Machida Zelvia. 24 January 2022. Retrieved 24 January 2022.

External links edit