V-Varen Nagasaki

V-Varen Nagasaki (V・ファーレン長崎, Vi Fāren Nagasaki) is a Japanese J2 League football club based in Nagasaki. The club was established in 1985 as Ariake SC till they merged with Kunimi FC in 2004 and adopted the present name in 2005.

V-Varen Nagasaki
Full nameV-Varen Nagasaki
Nickname(s)VVN
Founded2004 (2004)
StadiumTranscosmos Stadium Nagasaki,
Isahaya, Nagasaki
Capacity20,246
OwnerJapanet Holdings
ChairmanHaruna Takata
ManagerHiroshi Matsuda
LeagueJ2 League
2021J2 League, 4th of 22
WebsiteClub website

The club gained promotion into the J. League Division 2 in 2012 for the first time in their history after finishing as the champions in the 2012 Japan Football League and hired Nagasaki native Takuya Takagi to coach the club for the 2013 season.[1]

On 11 November 2017, the club clinched promotion to the J1 League for the first time in their history after a 3-1 home win over Kamatamare Sanuki.[2]

History

V-Varen Nagasaki, since 2006, had been contending for the Kyūshū Soccer League championship and thus a place in the Japan Football League, but they only won it in November 2008, as second place in the Regional League promotion series.

In January 2009, they applied for J. League Associate Membership and their application was accepted at the J. League board meeting in February. In 2012, they won the Japan Football League title and thus promotion to the J. League Division 2.[1] Five years later they won promotion to the J1 League for the first time after finishing runners-up in the 2017 season.

J. League: 2013 –

In preparation for the club's first season in the J. League Division 2 the club hired local-born Takuya Takagi as their coach for the season.[1] On 3 March 2013 V-Varen Nagasaki played in their first ever J. League Division 2 match against Fagiano Okayama at the Kanko Stadium in Okayama in which the club drew the match 1–1 with Kōichi Satō scoring the first J. League Division 2 goal for V-Varen Nagasaki in the 25th minute. The club then played their first home match in the J. League Division 2 on 10 March 2013 at the Nagasaki Athletic Stadium against former J. League champions Gamba Osaka in which V-Varen Nagasaki lost 3–1 in front of a huge crowd of 18,153.

Financial troubles

After facing dire financial difficulties, on 8 March 2017 the club was purchased by Japanet Holdings, the parent company of Japanese television shopping giant Japanet Takata Co.,Ltd., becoming a fully owned subsidiary. Japanet have invested significant sums into the club, securing promotion to the top tier of Japanese football and publishing plans to build a new football-specific stadium on the former site of Mitsubishi's Nagasaki shipbuilding operations, opening in 2023.[3]

Club name

The "V" in the club's name comes from the Portuguese word vitória (meaning 'victory') as well as the Dutch word vrede (meaning 'peace'), while varen is the Dutch verb meaning 'to sail', relating to Nagasaki's heritage as port of call of Portuguese and Dutch traders during the sakoku period in the Tokugawa shogunate (see Dejima).[4]

League and cup record

Champions Runners-up Third place Promoted Relegated
LeagueJ League
Cup
Emperor's
Cup
SeasonDivTeamsPos.PWDLFAGDPtsAttendance/G
2009 JFL1811th34128143843-5442,763Not eligible2nd round
2010 185th3415811503812532,5252nd round
2011 185th3315117614417561,5132nd round
2012 171st342075572433673,6562nd round
2013 J2226th421991448408666,1672nd round
2014 2214th4212161445423524,839Round of 16
2015 226th4215151242339604,9312nd round
2016 2215th421017153951-12475,2252nd round
2017 222nd4224810594118805,9412nd round
2018 J11818th3486203959-203011,225Group stage3rd round
2019 J22212th42175205761-4567,737Not eligibleSemi-final
2020 223rd4223118663927803,714Did not qualify
2021 224th4223910694425784,9564th round
2022 22TBA42
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

Honours

Runner-up (1): 2017
Winners (1): 2012
Runners-up (1): 2008
Runners-up (1): 2008

Coaching Staff

Position Staff
Head coach Hiroshi Matsuda
Assistant coach Kazuki Sato
Assistant coach Yusuke Murakami
First Team Coach Takuma Deguchi
Goalkeeper coach Daishi Ide
Physical coach Toshiki Yoshimitsu
Fitness coach Naoki Hayakawa
Trainer Yuta Kobayashi
Trainer Kazuya Tamagawa
Trainer Toshiki Okuno
Trainer Ryota Suzuki
Interpreter Tonaki Jefferson Youei
Interpreter Alessio Mariani
Interpreter Ken Takahashi
Chief manager Takashi Yonetani
Manager Nobuaki Endo
Kit Keita Kusunoki
Keito Nozaki
Shinpei Nohara

Current squad

As of 11 March 2022.[5] [6] [7]

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 Masaya Tomizawa
5 DF  JPN Ryo Okui
6 MF  JPN Yuya Kuwasaki
7 FW  BRA Cristiano
9 FW  JPN Asahi Uenaka
10 FW  BRA Caio César
11 FW  BRA Edigar Junio
13 MF  JPN Masaru Kato
15 DF  JPN Hijiri Kato
16 FW  JPN Kota Muramatsu
17 MF  JPN Hiroki Akino
18 FW  JPN Ryohei Yamazaki
19 MF  JPN Takashi Sawada
20 MF  JPN Yohei Otake
21 GK  JPN Takashi Kasahara (on loan from Omiya Ardija)
22 MF  JPN Koya Okuda
No. Pos. Nation Player
23 DF  JPN Shunya Yoneda
24 DF  JPN Yusei Egawa
25 DF  JPN Kazuki Kushibiki
26 DF  JPN Hiroshi Futami
27 FW  JPN Ken Tokura
28 DF  JPN Shunki Takahashi
30 GK  JPN Suguru Asanuma
31 GK  JPN Gaku Harada
32 FW  COL Víctor Ibarbo
33 MF  JPN Tsubasa Kasayanagi
34 MF  JPN Seiya Satsukida
35 MF  JPN Taisei Abe
DF  JPN Haruki Shirai DSP
DF  JPN Toya Furuta Type 2
FW  JPN Aoto Nanamure Type 2

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
MF  JPN Takumi Nagura (at Vegalta Sendai)

Manager history

ManagerNationalityTenure
StartFinish
Fumiaki Iwamoto Japan1 February 200531 January 2008
Yoshinori Higashikawa Japan1 February 200813 June 2009
Takeshi Okubo Japan4 June 200930 June 2009
Fumiaki Iwamoto Japan1 July 200931 January 2010
Tōru Sano Japan1 February 201031 January 2013
Takuya Takagi Japan1 February 201331 January 2019
Makoto Teguramori Japan1 February 201931 January 2021
Takayuki Yoshida Japan1 February 20213 May 2021
Kazuki Satō Japan4 May 20216 May 2021
Hiroshi Matsuda Japan4 May 2021Current

Kit evolution

FP 1st
2005 - 2006
2007 - 2008
2009 - 2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021 -
FP 2nd
2005 - 2006
2007 - 2008
2009 - 2010
2011
2012
2013
2014 - 2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021 -
FP other
2015
peace prayer
2016
peace prayer
2017
peace prayer
2018
peace prayer
2019
peace prayer

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.