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FC Tokyo

Japanese professional football club


Japanese professional football club

FieldValue
clubnameFC Tokyo
FC東京
imageFC Tokyo Logo.svg
upright1.2
fullnameFootball Club Tokyo
nicknameGas
founded
chairmanNaoki Ogane
managerRikizo Matsuhashi
mgrtitleHead coach
league
season
position
website
stadiumAjinomoto Stadium
Chōfu, Tokyo
capacity49,970
pattern_la1_FC Tokyo 2026 HOME FP
pattern_b1_FC Tokyo 2026 HOME FP
pattern_ra1_FC Tokyo 2026 HOME FP
pattern_sh1_FC Tokyo 2026 HOME FP
pattern_so1_FC Tokyo 2026 HOME FP
leftarm1FFFFFF
body1FFFFFF
rightarm1FFFFFF
shorts10000B8
socks1FF0000
pattern_la2_FC Tokyo 2026 AWAY FP
pattern_b2_FC Tokyo 2026 AWAY FP
pattern_ra2_FC Tokyo 2026 AWAY FP
pattern_sh2_FC Tokyo 2026 AWAY FP
pattern_so2_FC Tokyo 2026 AWAY FP
leftarm2FFFFFF
body2FFFFFF
rightarm2FFFFFF
shorts2000000
socks2FFFFFF
currentFC Tokyo season

FC東京 Chōfu, Tokyo

Football Club Tokyo, commonly known as FC Tokyo, is a Japanese professional football club based in Chōfu, Tokyo. The club plays in the J1 League, the top tier of football in the country.

From 2025, FC Tokyo is one of the few J.League clubs to be simply called Football Club without an extended name or moniker, the others being FC Imabari of J2 League, as well as FC Gifu and FC Osaka in J3 League.

The club have won 1 J2 League titles, 1 Emperor's Cup and 3 J.League Cup. The club also won the 2010 J.League Cup / Copa Sudamericana Championship.

History

Formation and early years (1935–1997)

The team started as a company team, Tokyo Gas Football Club (東京ガスサッカー部) in 1935 The club played in the Tokyo League got promoted to the Kanto League in 1986 and suddenly achieved a good 4th-place finish. Their first appearance in the national leagues was in 1991, the last season of the old Japan Soccer League. With addition of the Brazilian football player Amaral and the manager Kiyoshi Okuma at the helm, the team gradually became competitive and in 1997, the team finished second, winning the JFL championship the next year. However, at the time the team lacked the necessary qualifications for a promotion to the J1 league and so stayed in J2.

Establishment of a new identity (1998–''present'')

Following this, on 1 October 1998, companies like Tokyo Gas, TEPCO, ampm, TV Tokyo, and Culture Convenience Club, set up a joint company Tokyo Football Club Company with the aim of making the team eligible for joining the J.League. In 1999, the team changed its name to FC Tokyo and entered the second division of the J2 League, defeating three J1 League teams in a row in the J.League Cup, which they first participated in, and advancing to the top four. In the same year, FC Tokyo became eligible, they finished second in the J2 league and were automatically promoted to J1 beginning in the 2000 season. Despite a widespread belief that the team would barely win enough to stay in the J1, the team won four games in a row since its opening game and managed to finish at the 7th spot.

Helped by its winning record, the attendance shot up and it is still above that of well-known Tokyo Verdy 1969 that moved its home town from Kawasaki, Kanagawa in 2001. Since 2002, the team welcomed Hiromi Hara as its manager and aimed for a championship with a strong offense. The 2003 season had the team finish in 4th, its highest ever. In August of the same year, it held a friendly match against one of the greatest football clubs, Real Madrid losing 3–0 but gaining valuable experiences both on and off the field for what it takes to be a great football club.

Long-time leader Amaral, nicknamed The King of Tokyo by his fans, departed the team to join Shonan Bellmare in 2004. He was replaced by Athens Olympics national football team player Yasuyuki Konno from Consadole Sapporo. In November of the same year, it won the J.League Cup for its first major title since joining the J.League.

After 10 years of participation in the J.League without a mascot character, the team adopted Tokyo Dorompa, a tanuki-like figure, as its mascot in January, 2009.

On 4 December 2010, FC Tokyo had to win their final game of the season away to already relegated Kyoto Sanga. FC Tokyo lost 2–0 and went back down to the second tier for the first time in 11 years. Nevertheless, they bounced back at the first attempt, winning the J2 League title in November 2011.

Before their 2011 Emperor's Cup win, FC Tokyo reached the semifinals of the competition three times: in 1997 (as Tokyo Gas), 2008, and on 2010. Their 2011 win was remarkably special, as the club won the competition whilst being a J2 team. They became the first J2 team, and third among the second-tier champions overall (after NKK SC in 1981 and Júbilo Iwata in 1982), to accomplish the feat of winning the competition.

Kit and colours

Kit evolution

Home Kit - 1st
{{Football kit/No check
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{{Football kit/No check
{{Football kit/No check
{{Football kitfiletype=png
Away Kit - 2nd
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3rd kit - Other
{{Football kitNo check
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Stadium

[[Ajinomoto Stadium

Main article: Ajinomoto Stadium

FC Tokyo uses Ajinomoto Stadium as its home ground (the official name of this stadium is Tokyo Stadium). It can hold up to 49,970 capacity of fans in the stadium. For a long time it did not have a home stadium of its own and played at various football fields such as the National Olympic Stadium, the National Nishigaoka Football Field, Edogawa Special Ward Stadium, and the Komazawa Olympic Park Stadium, but in 2001 it finally found a permanent home. The club's training grounds are Sarue Ground in Kōtō, Tokyo, and Kodaira Ground in Kodaira, Tokyo.

In order to comply with height limitation close to the airport, the pitch is sunk below the level of the land around the stadium

Players

Current squad

Out on loan

Club officials

Club officials for 2025 season.

PositionName
Head coachJPN Rikizo Matsuhashi
Team coachesJPN Takahsi Okuhara
JPN Minoru Kobayashi
JPN Yu Tokisaki
Goalkeeping coachJPN Hisanori Fujiwara
Assistant goalkeeping coachJPN Shota Yamashita
Head of analysisJPN Hiroaki Fujii
Coach and analystJPN Daisuke Kondo
JPN Seiya Imazaki
AnalystJPN Yuki Shirozu
JPN Keito Asahara
Conditioning directorESP Guillerme
Physical coachJPN Naoki Hayakawa
PhysiotherapistJPN Yukihisa Miyama
Athletic trainerJPN Masato Saegusa
JPN Yusuke Ozawa
JPN Yohei Kojo
TrainerJPN Naofumi Aoki
Chief managerJPN Kenta Hontani
Manager and interpreterJPN Kazunori Iino
Interpreter and equipment managerJPN Ricardo Oyafuso
InterpreterJPN Hiroshi Endo
Kit managerJPN Yukinori Yamakawa
Side manager and equipmentJPN Fumiya Soma
Team performance advisorJPN Shinya Fukutomi

Personnel awards

  • J.League Best Eleven
    • Brazil Tuto (2000)
    • Japan Yoichi Doi (2004)
    • Japan Naohiro Ishikawa (2009)
    • Japan Yuto Nagatomo (2009)
    • Japan Masato Morishige (2013, 2014, 2015, 2019)
    • Japan Kosuke Ota (2014, 2015)
    • Japan Yoshinori Muto (2014)
    • Japan Akihiro Hayashi (2019)
    • Japan Sei Muroya (2019)
    • Japan Kento Hashimoto (2019)
    • Japan Kensuke Nagai (2019)
    • Brazil Diego Oliveira (2019)
  • J.League Cup MVP
    • Japan Yoichi Doi (2004)
    • Japan Takuji Yonemoto (2009)
    • Brazil Leandro (2020)
  • J.League Cup New Hero Award
    • Japan Yukihiko Sato (1999)
    • Japan Takuji Yonemoto (2009)

Players who played in the FIFA World Cup

FIFA World Cup players

The following players have represented their country at the World Cup whilst playing for FC Tokyo:

  • Japan Teruyuki Moniwa (2006)
  • Japan Yoichi Doi (2006)
  • Japan Yasuyuki Konno (2010)
  • Japan Yuto Nagatomo (2010)
  • Japan Shuichi Gonda (2014)
  • Japan Masato Morishige (2014)

Olympic players

The following players have represented their country at the Summer Olympic Games whilst playing for FC Tokyo:

  • Japan Naohiro Ishikawa (2004)
  • Japan Teruyuki Moniwa (2004)
  • Japan Yasuyuki Konno (2004)
  • Japan Yuhei Tokunaga (2004, 2012)
  • Japan Yōhei Kajiyama (2008)
  • Japan Yuto Nagatomo (2008)
  • Japan Shuichi Gonda (2012)
  • Japan Sei Muroya (2016)
  • Japan Shoya Nakajima (2016)

Former players

Manager history

ManagerNationalityTenureFromToWDLW %--
Kiyoshi Okuma1 January 199531 December 2001
Tahseen Jabbary20 February 199831 August 1998
Hiromi Hara1 January 200219 December 2005
Alexandre Gallo20 December 200514 August 2006
Hisao Kuramata15 August 20066 December 2006
Hiromi Hara7 December 200631 December 2007
Hiroshi Jofuku1 January 200819 September 2010
Kiyoshi Okuma20 September 20102 January 2012
Ranko Popović2 January 201231 December 2013
Massimo Ficcadenti2 January 201431 December 2015
Hiroshi Jofuku1 January 201624 July 2016
Yoshiyuki Shinoda26 July 201610 September 2017
Takayoshi Amma11 September 20173 December 2017
Kenta Hasegawa3 December 20177 November 2021
Shinichi Morishita7 November 202131 January 2022
Albert Puig1 February 202214 June 2023
Peter Cklamovski20 June 202331 December 2024
Rikizo Matsuhashi1 February 2025present

League & cup record

ChampionsRunners-upThird placePromotedRelegated
LeagueJ.League
CupEmperor's
CupAFC CLSeasonDivisionTeamsPos.PlaysW(OTW)DL(OTL)FAGDPointsAttendance/G
1999J2102nd3619 (2)310 (2)513516643,498Semi-final4th roundDid not qualify
2000J1167th3012 (3)112 (2)474164311,8072nd round3rd round
20018th3010 (3)511 (1)474704122,313
20029th3011 (2)2154346-33922,173Quarter final
20034th30131074631154924,9324th round
20048th30101194041-14125,438WinnerQuarter final
20051810th3411149434034727,101Group stage5th round
200613th34134175665-94324,096Group stage
200712th34143174958-94525,290Group stageQuarter final
20086th3416711504645525,716Quarter finalSemi-final
20095th3416513473985325,884Winner4th round
201016th34812143641-53625,112Quarter finalSemi-final
2011J2201st3823876722457717,562-Winner
2012J11810th3414614474434823,955Semi final2nd roundRound of 16
2013188th34166126147145425,073Group stageSemi-finalDid not qualify
20149th341212104733144825,187Group stageRound of 16
20154th3419694533126328,784Quarter finalQuarter final
20169th3415712393905224,037Semi finalRound of 16
201713th341010143742-54026,490Quarter final2nd roundDid not qualify
20186th3414812393455025,745Group stage4th round
20192nd3419784629176431,540Quarter final3rd round
2020 6th341761147425575,912WinnerDid not qualifyRound of 16
2021 209th38158154953-4537,138Semi-final2nd roundDid not qualify
2022186th3414713464334922,309Group stage3rd round
202311th34127154246-44329,410Quarter-finalRound of 16
2024207th3815914535125433,225Playoff roundThird round
202511th381311144148-75030,0103rd roundQuarter-finals
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

FC Tokyo (1999–Present) / Tokyo Gas SC (1935–1999)

HonourNo.YearsJapan Football League/J2 LeagueRegional League Promotion SeriesEmperor's CupJ.League CupJ.League Cup / Copa Sudamericana Championship
21998, 2011
11990
12011
32004, 2009, 2020
12010

Continental record

SeasonCompetitionRoundClubHomeAwayAggregate
2012AFC Champions LeagueGroup FAUS Brisbane Roar4–20–22nd
KOR Ulsan Hyundai2–21–0
CHN Beijing Guoan3–01–1
Round of 16CHN Guangzhou Evergrande
2016Play-off roundTHA Chonburi
Group EKOR Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors0–32–12nd
VIE Becamex Bình Dương3–11–2
CHN Jiangsu Suning0–01–2
Round of 16CHN Shanghai SIPG2–11–02–2 (a)
2020Play-off roundPHI Ceres-Negros
Group FKOR Ulsan Hyundai1–21–12nd
AUS Perth Glory1–00–1
CHN Shanghai Shenhua0–11–2
Round of 16CHN Beijing F.C.

References

References

  1. "Official Website Manager and Staff listing".
  2. "Clubs". J.League.
  3. "FC Tokyo Profile at J.League Official Website".
  4. "沿革・歴史|Jfa|日本サッカー協会".
  5. "Basic infos and history of FC Tokyo".
  6. "選手 & スタッフ|FC東京オフィシャルホームページ".
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