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FC Machida Zelvia

Japanese football club

FC Machida Zelvia

Summary

Japanese football club

FieldValue
clubnameMachida Zelvia
町田ゼルビア
imageFC Machida Zelvia logo.svg
upright0.80
altcrest used since 2008
fullnameFootball Club Machida Zelvia
nicknameZelvia
foundedas FC Machida
groundMachida GION Stadium
Machida, Tokyo
capacity15,489
ownerCyberAgent
chairmanTakehisa Otomo
managerGo Kuroda
league
season
position
current2025 FC Machida Zelvia season
website
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pattern_ra1_FC Machida Zelvia 2026 HOME FP
pattern_sh1_FC Machida Zelvia 2026 HOME FP
pattern_so1_FC Machida Zelvia 2026 HOME FP
leftarm1000022
body1000066
rightarm1000022
shorts1000022
socks1000022
pattern_la2_FC Machida Zelvia 2025 AWAY FP
pattern_b2_FC Machida Zelvia 2025 AWAY FP
pattern_ra2_FC Machida Zelvia 2025 AWAY FP
pattern_sh2_FC Machida Zelvia 2025 AWAY FP
pattern_so2_FC Machida Zelvia 2025 AWAY FP
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町田ゼルビア Machida, Tokyo Football Club Machida Zelvia commonly known as Machida Zelvia is a Japanese professional football club based in Machida, Tokyo. They currently play in the J1 League, following promotion as J2 League champions in 2023.

History

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

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)

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) thus renaming themselves as Machida Zelvia.

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. 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)

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), 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. At the end of this season the club acquired a J1 license.

In 2020, Zelvia finished in 19th. While they were able to conclude their 2021 campaign by finishing in 5th position, no promotion play-offs were held in this season, mainly because no relegation in the previous season due to COVID-19 pandemic, so Zelvia remain in J2. In 2022 season, Zelvia once again fell far below their position of the previous campaign by finishing in the 15th position.

Go Kuroda's era, First silverware of professional era and J1 League debut (2023–present)

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. The club also confirmed their status as champions of second division on 28 October 2023 after Kumamoto defeated Shimizu S-Pulse 3–1.

AFC Champions League Elite debut

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 historic 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, one draw and zero lost with 10 points. Zelvia then went on to finished in third place in their debut season where they also qualified for the 2025–26 AFC Champions League Elite. On 16 September 2025, Zelvia played their first continental match in a 1–1 draw to Korean club FC Seoul and they secured their first away win by a score of 2-0 win against the Chinese club, Shanghai Port.

Emperor's Cup winner

On 22 November 2025, Machida Zelvia secure champions of Emperor's Cup for the first time in their history after defeat Vissel Kobe 3–1 in Japan National Stadium with goal brace Shōta Fujio and Yūki Sōma.

Home Stadium

Machida GION Stadium

Zelvia currently competes at Machida GION Stadium, also known as Nozuta Stadium. Until 2011, the stadium's capacity was 6,200, including grassy areas, and it has featured lighting for night games since 2009. The stadium underwent renovations between the 2010 and 2011 seasons and now offers all-seated accommodations. Although the J2 League requires a minimum seating capacity of 10,000, Nozuta initially did not meet this criterion. Nonetheless, an agreement with J-League officials allows for home games expecting large crowds to be held at alternative stadiums rented for such occasions. Meanwhile, Nozuta Stadium was upgraded to fulfill the 10,000-seat minimum. Its current capacity stands at 15,489. In the 2024 season, the club's inaugural season in the top division of Japanese football, they hosted four matches at the new Japan National Stadium.

Kit and colours

Sponsors

Season(s)Kit ManufacturerMain Shirt Sponsorcolspan="2"Collarbone Sponsorcolspan="3"Additional Sponsor(s)
2019svolme
2020AQUA RESORT (Left)
2021ABEMA
TV Video & Entertainment
2022AQUA RESORT (1st)
BEST LAND (2nd)
2023Adidas
2024Rudel

Kit evolution

Home kit - 1st
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{{Football kitfiletype=png
{{Football kitfiletype=png
{{Football kitfiletype=png
Away kit - 2nd
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{{Football kitfiletype=png
{{Football kitfiletype=png
{{Football kitfiletype=png
Special kit - 3rd
{{football kit
{{Football kitfiletype=png

Current squad

Out on loan

Club officials

Club officials for 2025 season.

PositionName
ManagerJapan Go Kuroda
Assistant managerJapan Kenji Arima
First-team coachJapan Shin Yamanaka
Japan Hikaru Mita
JPN Daiki Ueda
Goalkeeping coachJapan Yukiya Hamano
Fitness coachJapan Shunsuke Otsuka
Interpreter and first-team coachBrazil Leonardo Moreira
Analytics coach and Head of analystsJapan Yasuhiko Nishimura
Analytical coachJapan Yoshiro Akano
Technical staffJapan Sota Kinoshita
Japan Ryang Yoon-ho
InterpreterJapan Go Murakami
Japan Ken Takahashi
South Korea Lee Seong-ang
Chief trainerJapan Yasuyuki Sasaki
TrainerJapan Yuta Hamada
Japan Shin Osawa
Japan Takashi Imai
PhysiotherapistJapan Takuro Yoshitake
Medical coordinatorJapan Akihisa Yamamoto
Chief managerJapan Naoya Watanabe
Sub managerJapan Ryota Kiyofuji
Kit managerJapan Hiroyuki Kawakita
Japan Yuto Suzuki
Nutrition management advisorJapan Jun Hamano
Chief doctorJapan Takahiro Fujisawa
Japan Keisuke Irako

Managerial history

ManagerNationalityTenureStartFinishWDLW %--
Sadao ShigetaJapan Japan19911995
Shoji Komoda19962002
url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304074521/http://magazine.tokyofootball.com/04/tokyofootballmagazine-04.pdfdate=4 March 2016 }}. Tokyo Football Magazine. Retrieved on 2010-12-17.20032007
Tetsuya Totsuka1 February 200831 January 2010
Naoki Soma1 February 201031 January 2011
Ranko PopovićSerbia Serbia1 February 201131 January 2012
Osvaldo ArdilesArgentina Argentina1 February 201217 November 2012
Yutaka AkitaJapan Japan26 November 201225 June 2013
Naoki Kusunose25 June 201331 January 2014
Naoki Soma1 February 201431 January 2020
Ranko PopovićSerbia Serbia1 February 202031 January 2023
Go KurodaJapan Japan1 February 2023present

League and cup record

ChampionsRunners-upThird placePromotedRelegated
SeasonDiv.TierTeamsPos.PWDLFAGDPtsAttendance/GJ. League CupEmperor's
CupACL
Elite
2009JFL3186th341412838308541,886Not eligible
2010183rd3419411714427613,5033rd round
2011183rd331878612833613,5152nd round
2012J222222nd42711243467-33323,6274th round
2013JFL3184th34187951447613,174
2014J3123rd332085592337683,134
2015132nd362394521834783,7664th round
2016J22227th4218111353449655,1231st round
20172216th4211171453530504,0562nd round
2018224th4221138624418764,9153rd round
20192218th42916173659-23434,7182nd round
2020 2219th421213174152-11491,302Did not qualify
2021 225th42201210643826722,5772nd round
20222215th421491951501513,2432nd round
2023221st422697793544877,426Round of 16
2024J11203rd38199105434206817,610Quarter-finals2nd round
2025206th38179125238146014,0183rd round**Winners**TBD
202610TBD18N/AN/A
2026–2720TBD38TBDTBD

;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

HonourNo.YearsKanto Soccer League Division 2Kanto Soccer League Division 1Japanese Regional Football Champions LeagueTokyo Metropolitan Football TournamentJ2 LeagueEmperor's Cup
12006
12007, 2008
12008
22011, 2015
12023
12025

Notes

References

References

  1. "FC Machida Zelvia Profile, Results, Players, Stats, Stadium". Japan Professional Football League.
  2. "D.C. United to partner with FC Machida Zelvia".
  3. McKirdy, Andrew, "[http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/sj20120306a1.html Ardiles ready to face new challenge] {{Webarchive. link. (10 March 2012 ", ''[[Japan Times]]'', 6 March 2012, p. 18.)
  4. (22 October 2023). "Machida Zelvia clinches first-ever promotion to J1". Japan Professional Football League.
  5. (30 October 2023). "FC Machida Zelvia cap amazing season with J2 title". Japan Professional Football League.
  6. (21 March 2024). "FC Machida Zelvia Excelling in Debut Season in the J.League's Top Flight".
  7. "PLAYER & STAFF".
  8. [http://magazine.tokyofootball.com/04/tokyofootballmagazine-04.pdf Interview Minoru Moriya] {{Webarchive. link. (4 March 2016 . Tokyo Football Magazine. Retrieved on 2010-12-17.)
  9. (24 January 2022). "黒田剛 監督就任のお知らせ". FC Machida Zelvia.
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