Yokohama F. Marinos Explained

Nickname:Marinos, Tricolor
Clubname:Yokohama F. Marinos
横浜F・マリノス
Fullname:Yokohama F·Marinos
Founded: as Nissan Motor
Stadium:Nissan Stadium
Capacity:72,327
Chairman:Akihiro Nakayama
Manager:John Hutchinson (interim)
Website:http://www.f-marinos.com/
Pattern La1:_Yokohama F・Marinos 2024 HOME FP
Pattern B1:_Yokohama F・Marinos 2024 HOME FP
Pattern Ra1:_Yokohama F・Marinos 2024 HOME FP
Pattern Sh1:_Yokohama F・Marinos 2024 HOME FP
Pattern So1:_3 stripes white
Leftarm1:0000FF
Body1:0000FF
Rightarm1:0000FF
Shorts1:FFFFFF
Socks1:FF0000
Pattern La2:_Yokohama F・Marinos 2024 AWAY FP
Pattern B2:_Yokohama F・Marinos 2024 AWAY FP2
Pattern Ra2:_Yokohama F・Marinos 2024 AWAY FP
Pattern Sh2:_Yokohama F・Marinos 2024 AWAY FP
Pattern So2:_3 stripes on white
Leftarm2:FFFFFF
Body2:FFFFFF
Rightarm2:FFFFFF
Shorts2:1717FF
Socks2:1717FF
Current: Yokohama F. Marinos season

is a Japanese professional football club based in Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture, part of the Greater Tokyo Area. The club competes in the J1 League, which is the top tier of football in the country.[1] [2] [3]

Having won the J-League title five times and finishing second twice, they are one of the most successful J-League clubs. The team is based in Yokohama and was founded as the company team of Nissan Motor. The club was formed by the merger of Yokohama Marinos and Yokohama Flügels in 1999. The current name is intended to reflect both of the original names. Yokohama F. Marinos is the longest serving team in the top flight of Japanese football, having played at the top level since 1982, also making them, along with Kashima Antlers, one of only two teams to have competed in Japan's top flight of football every year since its inception.

History

As Nissan Motor (1972–1991)

The team traces its origins to 1972 as the Nissan Motor Football Club, based in Yokohama. Nissan Motor won promotion to Division 2 Football League in 1976. Under coach Shu Kamo, the team won Japan Soccer League in 1988 and 1989, as well as the JSL Cup in 1988, 1989 and 1990 and the Emperor's Cup in 1983, 1985, 1988, 1989 and 1991. The 1989 team won the "Triple Crown" - all three major tournaments in Japan - with famous players such as Takashi Mizunuma, Kazushi Kimura and Masami Ihara. At the end of the 1991–92 season, the team won the 1991–92 Asian Cup Winners' Cup.

As Yokohama Marinos (1992–1998)

Nissan Motors obtained registration in the newly formed J.League to acquire professional club status and changed the club's name to Yokohama Marinos, a reference to Yokohama's status as a major port city.[4] In their first seasons as a professional team, Yokohama Marinos continued to win competitions: triumphant in the 1992 Emperor's Cup, a second consecutive 1992–93 Asian Cup Winners' Cup, and their first J.League title in 1995. Matches between Yokohama Marinos and Verdy Kawasaki were known as the National Derby.

As Yokohama F. Marinos (1999–present)

In 1999, the club was renamed Yokohama F. Marinos after the technical and financial merger with Yokohama Flügels, which had declared bankruptcy. An F was added to the name to represent the Flügels half of the club. However, many Flügels fans have rejected the new team, feeling that their team was dissolved into the F. Marinos rather than merged with it. As a result, they refused to follow F. Marinos and instead created Yokohama FC, the new city rival of F. Marinos, with the help of public donations and an affiliation with IMG, a talent agency.

In 2000, Marinos were runner-up in the 2000 J1 League, where Shunsuke Nakamura was named the best player of the season.

On 27 October 2001, Marinos won the J.League Cup, defeating Júbilo Iwata in a 0–0 match where Marinos won the penalty shootout 3–1.

In the 2002 season, Marinos were league runners-up behind Júbilo Iwata.

Back-to-back league champions

In 2003 and 2004, Marinos became back-to-back league champions for the second time, in the professional era, with the stars of the team being South Koreans Ahn Jung-hwan, Yoo sang-chul and Japanese players Daisuke Oku, Tatsuhiko Kubo and Yuji Nakazawa (who was the best player of the year in 2004). Their coach was the Japanese Takeshi Okada, who was named the 'Best Coach of the Year' in 2003 and 2004.

From 2005 to 2008, with notable players Hayuma Tanaka, Hideo Ōshima, Daisuke Sakata and Koji Yamase, Marinos didn't achieve any single honours. The highest they reached during this period was the 2008 Emperor's Cup semi-final where they were knockout by Gamba Osaka in extra time.

In 2010, club legend Shunsuke Nakamura returned to Yokohama F. Marinos after 8 years and stayed until the end of the 2017 J1 League season.

On August 4, 2011, a year after leaving the club, former Marinos player Naoki Matsuda collapsed during training with Matsumoto Yamaga due to cardiac arrest and died at the age of 34. As a result, his former number 3 has been retired.

And after two semi-final defeats in 2011 and 2012, Marinos won the 2013 Emperor's Cup on 1 January 2014, the first after 21 years and in 2013, they were runner-up in the J.League for the second time in their history.

Owned by City Football Group

On 20 May 2014, it was announced that the City Football Group, a subsidiary of Abu Dhabi United Group, had invested in a minority stake in Yokohama F. Marinos, creating a partnership with the football club and the automaker Nissan.

And after consecutive defeats, such as a loss in the 2017 Emperor's Cup Final and in the 2018 J.League Cup Final, the team managed to get a good shape thanks to the direction of the Australian coach Ange Postecoglou, which ended 15 years of drought by winning the 2019 J1 League title, with emphasis on the participation of Teruhito Nakagawa being the 'Best Player of the Season' and top scorer with 15 goals together with Brazilian Marcos Júnior.

In 2020, Marinos made it out of the 2020 AFC Champions League group stage for the first time since the AFC Champions League switched to the current format. The club were drawn in Group H alongside Chinese Shanghai SIPG, South Korean Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors and Australian Sydney FC. Marinos qualified to the knockout stages as group leaders with 4 wins, 1 draw and 1 losses. However the club was bowed out from the tournament in the Round of 16 losing 3–2 to South Korean Suwon Samsung Bluewings.

In 2021, Marinos finished in second place 13 points behind league champions, Kawasaki Frontale where on 18 July 2021, Head coach Ange Postecoglou was signed by Scottish club, Celtic while Hideki Matsunaga will be the caretaker for the club until 18 July 2021, Marinos signed another Australian head coach, Kevin Muscat.

In 2022, Kevin Muscat steered the club to win their fifth J1 League title. The club also finished as group leaders in the 2022 AFC Champions League group stage being placed in Group H alongside South Korean Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors, Vietnamese Hoang Anh Gia Lai and Australian Sydney FC. Marinos qualified to the knockout stages with 4 wins, 1 draw and 1 losses where they faced another Japanese side Vissel Kobe in the Round of 16, however, the club suffered a 3–2 defeat to Vissel Kobe thus crashing out from the competition.

In 2023, Marinos than finished as league runners up with 64 points behind Vissel Kobe who got 71 points. Kevin Muscat than guided the club in the 2023–24 AFC Champions League group stage being drawn in Group G with Chinese Shandong Taishan, South Korean Incheon United and Filipino Kaya–Iloilo. Marinos finished the group tied with 12 points along with Shandong Taishan and Incheon United but qualified to the round of 16 as group leaders.

On 6 December 2023, Kevin Muscat resigned as the head coach in which Harry Kewell were appointed as the new head coach of the club on 31 December 2023 becoming the third consecutive Australian manager in the club history. Harry Kewell than guided the club in the round of 16 fixture against Thai Bangkok United, winning the match 3–2 on aggregate with Anderson Lopes scoring an injury time penalty in the 120th minute of extra time during the second leg sending the team to the quarter-finals. Marinos then faced off against Shandong Taishan again in which Marinos won 3–1 on aggregate thus seeing them to the semi-finals against South Korean Ulsan Hyundai. Marinos suffered a 1–0 defeat away in which the club bounced back in the second leg at home winning the match 3–2 thus seeing both club tied with 3–3 on aggregate sending the match into extra time and than penalties shootout. Marinos went on to win the penalties shootout 5–4 where vice-captain Eduardo scored the winning penalty to send the team to their first-ever Champions League final against Emirati Al Ain. They would start losing 0-1 during the first leg at home, but then came back with two goals from Asahi Uenaka and Kota Watanabe to make it 2–1 at the end of the match, but, unfortunately, they'd lose 5–1 away in the second leg (6–3 on aggregate), thus ending as runners-up of the competition.

Rivalries

Kanagawa Derby

Previously, Verdy Kawasaki and the extinct Yokohama Flügels were Kanagawa Derby rivals. With Verdy moving to Tokyo from Kawasaki, matches between the two clubs are no longer considered Kanagawa derbies.

Yokohama Derby

Kits and crests

Yokohama F. Marinos utilizes a three colour system composed of blue, white and red.

In 2012, Yokohama F. Marinos have unveiled a special edition 20th Anniversary jersey

Slogan

AnoSlogan
2009Enjoy・Growing・Victory
2010ACTIVE
2011ACTIVE 2011
2012All for Win
2013All for Win -Realize
2014All For Win -Fight it out!
2015Integral Goal - All for Win
2016Integral Goal - All for Win
2017Integral Goal - All for Win
2018Brave and Challenging
2019URBAN ELEGANCE TRICOLORE
2020Brave and Challenging BRAVE BLUE
2021Brave and Challenging
2022Brave and Challenging

Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors

Period Kit supplier Shirt sponsor Notes
1992–1996Mizuno (J-League) and Adidas (Emperor's Cup)NissanKodak
1997–2007AdidasANA
2008–2011Nike
2012–AdidasSANEI ARCHITECTURE
MUGEN ESTATE
NISSHIN OILLIO

Stadiums

The team's home stadiums are Nissan Stadium, otherwise known as International Stadium Yokohama, and Mitsuzawa Stadium. The team trained at Marinos Town located in the area of Minato Mirai, but moved to Kozukue Field located next to the home ground in 2016.

Theme song

The club's official theme song is "We Are F. Marinos" by Japanese duo Yuzu. The song was first released in 2005, with the song being used at games up to today, sometimes having mascot Marinos-kun dance to the song on a pedestal on the running track of Nissan Stadium.

Players and staff

Current squad

.[5]

The official club website lists the club mascot as player #0 and the supporters as player #12.

Retired number

Club official

Position[6] Name
Manager (interim) John Hutchinson
Assistant coach Ryo Adachi
Hideo Oshima
Fitness coach Tomoo Tsukoshi
Goalkeeper coach Shigetatsu Matsunaga
Assistant goalkeeper coach Tetsuya Enomoto
Conditioning coach Yusuke Tanaka
Chief analyst Satoru Okada
Analyst Jun Yamaguchi
Performance data analyst Yuki Masui

Managerial history

Manager Nationality Tenure <--!colspan="5"Managerial Record-->
Start Finish -->
1993 1994-->
1995 1995-->
1995 1996-->
1997 August 1998-->
August 1998 1999-->
Jan 1, 2000 Dec 31, 2000-->
2001 2001-->
2001 2002-->
2002 Dec 31, 2002-->
Jan 1, 2003 Aug 24, 2006-->
Aug 25, 2006 Dec 31, 2006-->
Jan 1, 2007 Dec 31, 2007-->
Jan 1, 2008 July 17, 2008-->
July 18, 2008 Dec 31, 2009-->
Feb 16, 2010 Dec 31, 2011-->
Dec 30, 2011 Dec 7, 2014-->
Dec 16, 2014 Jan 1, 2018-->
Jan 1, 2018 June 10, 2021-->
Hideki Matsunaga (caretaker) June 10, 2021 July 18, 2021-->
July 18, 2021 December 13, 2023-->
Dec 31, 2023 July 15, 2024-->
John Hutchinson (interim) July 16, 2024 present-->

Honours

Honour !!scope=col
No. !scope=colYears
In chronological order-->scope=rowAll Japan Senior Football Championship11976
scope=rowEmperor's Cup71983, 1985, 1988, 1989, 1991 1992, 2013
scope=rowJapan Soccer League21988–89, 1989–90
scope=rowJapan Soccer League Cup31988, 1989, 1990, 2001
scope=rowAsian Cup Winners' Cup21991–92, 1992–93
scope=rowJ1 League51995, 2003, 2004, 2019, 2022
scope=rowJ.League Cup12001
scope=rowJapanese Super Cup12023

International players

This list includes players that were called up to their national teams while playing at Yokohama F. Marinos, either to participate in official or friendly competitions, friendly matches or in training camps.

Japan

AFC/OFC/CAF

CONMEBOL

UEFA

CONCACAF

Club captains

Players who played in the FIFA World Cup

The list includes players who were called up to their national teams while playing at Yokohama F. Marinos, to represent their country in the FIFA World Cup .

Record as J.League member

ChampionsRunners-upThird placePromotedRelegated
Season Div. Teams Pos. Attendance/G Asia
1992Group stage Winners Winners
1993J1 10 4th 16,781 Group stage Quarter-finals Withdrew
199412 6th 19,801 Semi-finals Semi-finals
1995||14 ||bgcolor="gold"|1st ||18,326 ||– ||2nd round ||– ||–|-|1996|16 ||8th ||14,589 ||Group stage ||3rd round ||CC ||Group stage|-|1997|17 ||bgcolor="ff6600"|3rd ||9,211 ||Group stage ||Round of 16 ||– ||–|-|1998|18 ||4th ||19,165 ||Group stage ||3rd round ||– ||–|-|1999|16 ||4th ||20,095 ||Quarter-finals ||Quarter-finals ||– ||–|-|2000|16 ||bgcolor="silver"|2nd ||16,644 ||Quarter-finals ||Quarter-finals ||– ||–|-|2001|16 ||13th ||20,595 ||bgcolor="gold"|Winners ||3rd round ||– ||–|-|2002|16 ||bgcolor="silver"|2nd ||24,108 ||Group stage ||Round of 16 ||– ||–|-|2003|16 ||bgcolor="gold"|1st ||24,957 ||Quarter-finals ||Quarter-finals ||– ||–|-|2004|16 ||bgcolor="gold"|1st ||24,818 ||Quarter-finals ||Round of 16 ||CL ||Group stage|-|2005|18 ||9th ||25,713 ||Semi-finals ||Round of 16 ||CL ||Group stage|-|2006|18 ||9th ||23,663 ||Semi-finals ||Quarter-finals ||– ||–|-|2007|18 ||7th ||24,039 ||Semi-finals ||Round of 16 ||– ||–|-|2008|18 ||9th ||23,682 ||Quarter-finals ||Semi-finals ||– ||–|-|2009|18 ||10th ||22,057 ||Semi-finals ||Round of 16 ||– ||–|-|2010|18 ||8th ||25,684 ||Group stage ||Round of 16 ||– ||–|-|2011|18 ||5th ||21,038 ||Quarter-finals ||Semi-finals ||– ||–|-|2012|18 ||4th ||22,946 ||Group stage ||Semi-finals ||– ||–|-|2013|18 ||bgcolor="silver"|2nd ||27,496 ||Semi-finals ||bgcolor="gold"|Winners ||– ||–|-|2014|18 ||7th ||23,088 ||Quarter-finals ||3rd round ||CL||Group stage|-|2015|18 ||7th ||24,221 ||Group stage ||Round of 16 ||– ||–|-|2016|18 ||10th ||24,004 ||Semi-finals ||Semi-finals ||– ||–|-|2017|18 ||5th ||24,180 ||Group stage ||bgcolor="silver"|Runners-up ||– ||–|-|2018|18 ||12th ||21,788 ||Runners-up ||Round of 16 ||– ||–|-|2019|18 ||bgcolor="gold"|1st ||27,010 ||Group stage ||Round of 16 ||– ||–|-|2020 |18 ||9th ||7,968 ||Semi-finals ||Did not qualify ||CL||Round of 16|-|2021 |20 ||bgcolor="silver"|2nd ||8,991 ||Play-off ||2nd round ||–||–|-|2022|18 ||bgcolor="gold"|1st ||19,811 ||Quarter-finals ||3rd round ||CL ||Round of 16|-|2023|18 ||bgcolor="silver"|2nd ||27,716 ||Semi-finals ||3rd round ||CL ||bgcolor="Silver"|Runner-ups|-|2024|20 ||TBD || ||TBD ||TBD || ||TBD|}
Key

Continental record

SeasonCompetitionRoundClubHomeAwayAggregate
1989–90Asian Club ChampionshipQualifying round
(Group 6)
Liaoning0–12nd out of 4
Hap Kuan9–0
Chadongcha2–0
Group A Kuala Lumpur City2–11st out of 3
Fanja1–0
Final Liaoning1–21–12–3
1990–91Asian Club ChampionshipQualifying round
(Group 7)
April 250–13rd out of 3
Liaoning2–3
1991–92Asian Cup Winners' CupQuarter-finals East Bengal4–03–14–1
Semi-finals Pupuk Kaltim2–00–02–0
Final Al-Nassr5–01–16–1
1992–93Asian Cup Winners' CupSecond round Pupuk Kaltim3–11–14–2
Semi-finals SHB Đà Nẵng3–01–14–1
Final Persepolis1–11–02–1
1993–94Asian Cup Winners' CupFirst round Philippine Air Force5–01–06–0
Quarter-finals Semen Padang11–01–212–2
Semi-finals South Chinaw/o
1996–97Asian Club ChampionshipFirst round GD Artilheirosw/o
Second round Johor Darul Ta'zim2–01–13–1
Quarter-finals
(East Asia Group)
Pohang Steelers2–23rd out of 4
Seongnam FC2–3
New Radiant10–0
2004AFC Champions LeagueGroup G Bình Định6–03–02nd out of 4
Persik Kediri4–04–1
Seongnam FC1–21–0
A3 Champions CupTable Seongnam FC0–32nd out of 4
Shanghai Shenhua2–0
Shanghai International2–1
2005AFC Champions LeagueGroup F Shandong Taishan0–11–22nd out of 4
PSM Makassar3–02–0
Police Tero2–02–1
A3 Champions CupTable Pohang Steelers1–13rd out of 4
Shenzhen Jianlibao2–0
Suwon Samsung Bluewings1–3
2014AFC Champions LeagueGroup G Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors2–10–34th out of 4
Guangzhou1–11–2
Melbourne Victory3–20–1
2020AFC Champions LeagueGroup H Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors4–12–11st out of 4
Sydney FC4–01–1
Shanghai Port1–21–0
Round of 16 Suwon Samsung Bluewings2–3
2022AFC Champions LeagueGroup H Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors0–11–11st out of 4
Hoàng Anh Gia Lai2–02–1
Sydney FC3–01–0
Round of 16 Vissel Kobe2–3
2023–24AFC Champions LeagueGroup G Incheon United2–41–21st out of 4
Shandong Taishan3–01–0
Kaya-Iloilo3–02–1
Round of 16 Bangkok United1–0
2–23–2
Quarter-finals Shandong Taishan1–02–13–1
Semi-finals Ulsan Hyundai3–2
0–13–3
Final Al Ain2–11–53–6

Performance in AFC competitions

9 appearances

1989–90: Runners-up

1990–91: Group stage

1996–97: Quarter-finals

2004: Group stage

2005: Group stage

2014: Group stage

2020: Round of 16

2022: Round of 16

2023–24: Runners-up

3 appearances

1991–92: Winners

1992–93: Winners

1993–94: Semi-finals

Awards

J.League MVP Award

J.League Top Scorer

J.League Rookie of the Year

J.League Manager of the Year

J.League Fair Play Award

J.League Monthly MVP :

J.League Best XI

AFC Champions League Best XI

J.League Cup MVP

J.League Cup New Hero

In popular culture

In the manga series – Captain Tsubasa, one of the characters was Yokohama Marinos midfielder Mamoru Izawa.

Base categories

The base category of Yokohama F. Marinos started in 1986, before the opening of the J-League, and it is divided into 3 categories U-12, U-15 and U-18 and these are some of the best players formed at the base of Marinos, Shunsuke Nakamura, Manabu Saito, Jungo Fujimoto, Mike Havenaar, Hiroki Iikura, Takashi Amano, Hiroyuki Taniguchi, Tetsuya Enomoto, Yuzo Kurihara, Hayuma Tanaka, Yuki Kaneko, Daisuke Sakata, Naohiro Ishikawa, Rikizo Matsuhashi, Eitaro Matsuda, Kota Yamada, Keita Endo, Ryo Takano, Takuya Kida, Andrew Kumagai, Yuji Ono, Jun Amano, Sho Matsumoto, Jin Hanato, Kota Mizunuma, Takashi Kanai, Masakazu Tashiro, Yota Akimoto etc. ....[7]

  • All Japan Club Youth Soccer Tournament
  • JFA Prince League Kanto
  • Prince Takamado Trophy
  • J-Youth Cup
  • JFA Championship
  • Danone Nations Cup

External links

References

Notes and References

  1. News: Sanfrecce players shoulder blame for Moriyasu's surprise resignation. The Japan Times. 9 July 2017. 2 January 2018. 12 June 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180612144816/https://www.japantimes.co.jp/sports/2017/07/09/soccer/j-league/sanfrecce-players-shoulder-blame-moriyasus-surprise-resignation/#.Wkts3bZ7G8U. live.
  2. News: Sanfrecce salvage point against in-form Marinos. The Japan Times. 8 July 2017. 2 January 2018. 12 June 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180612144356/https://www.japantimes.co.jp/sports/2017/07/08/soccer/j-league/sanfrecce-salvage-point-form-marinos/#.Wktte7Z7G8V. live.
  3. News: Amano's timely strike leads Marinos past FC Tokyo. The Japan Times. 18 June 2017. 2 January 2018. 23 May 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190523205150/https://www.japantimes.co.jp/sports/2017/06/18/soccer/j-league/amanos-timely-strike-leads-marinos-past-fc-tokyo/#.WktttrZ7G8V. live.
  4. Web site: Club: Team name. f-marinos.com. 2022-07-04. 2022-04-19. https://web.archive.org/web/20220419182206/https://www.f-marinos.com/en/club/. live.
  5. Web site: 選手・スタッフ . 横浜F・マリノス 公式サイト . 3 February 2022 . ja . 29 March 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220329174005/https://www.f-marinos.com/team/player . live .
  6. Web site: Team: Staff . Yokohama F.Marinos . 30 March 2024 . 29 March 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220329174125/https://www.f-marinos.com/en/team/ . live .
  7. Web site: アカデミーについて . 2021-02-10 . 2021-01-19 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210119144402/https://www.f-marinos.com/team/academy/about . live .