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Nadeshiko League
Japanese association football league
Japanese association football league
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Nadeshiko League |
| logo | Nadeshiko League logo.svg |
| pixels | 200 |
| country | Japan |
| confed | AFC |
| founded | , as L.League |
| divisions | D1: Division 1 |
| D2: Division 2 | |
| teams | D1: 12 |
| D2: 12 | |
| relegation | Regional leagues |
| levels | 2–3 |
| domest_cup | Empress's Cup |
| league_cup | Nadeshiko League Cup |
| most_champs | D1: NTV Beleza (17 titles) |
| D2: | |
| champions | D1: Asahi Intecc Loveledge Nagoya (1st title) |
| D2: VONDS Ichihara FC Ladies (1st title) | |
| season | 2025 |
| tv | YouTube |
| website | en.nadeshikoleague.jp |
| current | 2026 Nadeshiko League |
D2: Division 2 D2: 12 D2: D2: VONDS Ichihara FC Ladies (1st title)
The Japan Women's Football League, commonly known as the Nadeshiko League, is a women's association football league in Japan.
The Nadeshiko League consists of two divisions that correspond to the second and third levels of the Japanese women's football pyramid respectively. Teams are promoted and relegated between the divisions, and between the Nadeshiko League Division 2 and the fourth-level Japanese regional leagues, based on performance in the previous season. Prior to 2021, the Nadeshiko League occupied the top level of the Japanese women's football pyramid as well; that level is now represented by the fully professional WE League.
Since 2008, the Nadeshiko League has been sponsored by Plenus, a fast food (bento) company based in Fukuoka.
History
The Japan Women's Football League, or the L. League, was founded in 1989. The founding six clubs were Yomiuri SC Ladies Beleza, Shinko Seiko FC Clair, Nissan FC Ladies, Shimizu FC Ladies, Prima Ham FC Kunoichi, and Tasaki-Shinju Kobe Ladies. From 1993 to 1999 it adopted an Apertura and Clausura system, similar to the J. League system of that era. From 2000 to 2003 the clubs were divided into East and West groups and then the top clubs of each would go into a championship group, with the bottom clubs in a relegation group. In 2004 the single-table format was brought back. Teams from this early era would host annual training camps to build skills and relationships with international women's football clubs, such as those in the United States and Australia.
In 2004 the L. League acquired the nickname the Nadeshiko League. Nadeshiko is the name of the dianthus flower and was chosen from suggestions by fans, signifying an ideal of a dutiful Japanese woman.
In the 2004 season, the L. League added a second division, and until 2009 the league operated in the same way as the old Japan Soccer League for men where the bottom club in the second division playing off against a regional league playoff winner. In 2010, the second division was divided into east and west groups of six teams each; the winners of each group were promoted to the first division.
After Japan's World Cup win in 2011, the L. League saw an upsurge in popularity. In 2015, the league added a third division called the Nadeshiko Challenge League was added, and the first and second divisions now had 10 teams each.
In 2020, the Japan Football Association announced that the newly established WE League will become the top level for women's football in Japan in 2021. The Nadeshiko League would then become the second to fourth levels of the Japanese women's football pyramid. After many top teams left for the WE League, the Nadeshiko League abolished the third division in 2021.
Structure
Since 2021, the Nadeshiko League consists of two divisions:
| Level on the pyramid | Division |
|---|---|
| II | Nadeshiko League Division 1 |
| III | Nadeshiko League Division 2 |
Clubs
Champions
Division 1
Bold indicate doubles with the Empress's Cup.
| Year | Club |
|---|---|
| 1989 | Shimizu FC Ladies |
| 1990 | Yomiuri SC Ladies Beleza |
| 1991 | Yomiuri SC Ladies Beleza |
| 1992 | Yomiuri Nippon SC Ladies Beleza |
| 1993 | Yomiuri Nippon SC Ladies Beleza |
| 1994 | Matsushita Electric LSC Bambina |
| 1995 | Prima Ham FC Kunoichi |
| 1996 | Nikko Securities Dream Ladies |
| 1997 | Nikko Securities Dream Ladies |
| 1998 | Nikko Securities Dream Ladies |
| 1999 | Prima Ham FC Kunoichi |
| 2000 | Nippon TV Beleza |
| 2001 | Nippon TV Beleza |
| 2002 | Nippon TV Beleza |
| 2003 | Tasaki Perule FC |
| 2004 | Saitama Reinas FC |
| 2005 | Nippon TV Beleza |
| 2006 | Nippon TV Beleza |
| 2007 | Nippon TV Beleza |
| Year | Club |
|---|---|
| 2008 | Nippon TV Beleza |
| 2009 | Urawa Reds Ladies |
| 2010 | Nippon TV Beleza |
| 2011 | INAC Kobe Leonessa |
| 2012 | INAC Kobe Leonessa |
| 2013 | INAC Kobe Leonessa |
| 2014 | Urawa Reds Ladies |
| 2015 | Nippon TV Beleza |
| 2016 | Nippon TV Beleza |
| 2017 | Nippon TV Beleza |
| 2018 | Nippon TV Beleza |
| 2019 | Nippon TV Beleza |
| 2020 | Urawa Reds Ladies |
| 2021 | Iga FC Kunoichi Mie |
| 2022 | Sfida Setagaya FC |
| 2023 | Orca Kamogawa FC |
| 2024 | Viamaterras Miyazaki |
| 2025 | Asahi Intecc Loveledge Nagoya |
Wins by club
Clubs in bold are those competing in Division 1 as of the 2023 season. Clubs in italics no longer exist.
| Club | Championships | Years |
|---|---|---|
| Nippon TV BelezaYomiuri Beleza was renamed to Nippon TV Beleza in 1999 and to Tokyo Verdy Beleza in 2011, when the Yomiuri Group sold its stake. | 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 | |
| Urawa Reds LadiesSaitama Reinas were absorbed by Urawa Red Diamonds in 2005. | 2004, 2009, 2014, 2020 | |
| Nikko Securities Dream Ladies | 1996, 1997, 1998 | |
| Iga FC KunoichiPrima Ham FC Kunoichi was renamed to Iga FC Kunoichi in 2000. | 1995, 1999, 2021 | |
| INAC Kobe Leonessa | 2011, 2012, 2013 | |
| Shimizu FC Ladies | 1989 | |
| Matsushita Electric LSC BambinaMatsushita LSC Bambina was renamed to Speranza FC Takatsuki in 2000. Then, renamed to Speranza Osaka-Takatsuki in 2012. | 1994 | |
| Tasaki Perule FC | 2003 | |
| Sfida Setagaya FC | 2022 | |
| Orca Kamogawa FC | 2023 | |
| Viamaterras Miyazaki | 2024 | |
| Asahi Intecc Loveledge Nagoya | 2025 |
Notes
Wins by region
| Region | Total | Clubs |
|---|---|---|
| Kantō | 26 | Nippon TV Beleza (17), Nikko Securities Dream Ladies (3), Urawa Reds Ladies (4), Sfida Setagaya FC (1), Orca Kamogawa FC (1) |
| Kansai | 5 | INAC Kobe Leonessa (3), Matsushita Electric LSC Bambina (1), Tasaki Perule FC (1) |
| Tōkai | 4 | Iga FC Kunoichi (3), Shimizu FC Ladies (1) |
Division 2
| Year | Club | Year | East | West | Year | Club |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 | Okayama Yunogo Belle | |||||
| 2005 | INAC Kobe Leonessa | |||||
| 2006 | Albirex Niigata Ladies | |||||
| 2007 | TEPCO Mareeze | |||||
| 2008 | JEF United Chiba Ladies | |||||
| 2009 | AS Elfen Sayama FC | |||||
| 2010 | Tokiwagi Gakuen HS | Speranza FC Takatsuki | ||||
| 2011 | FC Kibi International University Charme | |||||
| 2012 | Vegalta Sendai Ladies | |||||
| 2013 | Tokiwagi Gakuen HS | |||||
| 2014 | Speranza FC Osaka-Takatsuki | |||||
| 2015 | AC Nagano Parceiro Ladies | |||||
| 2016 | Nojima Stella Kanagawa Sagamihara | |||||
| 2017 | Nippon Sport Science University Fields Yokohama | |||||
| 2018 | Iga FC Kunoichi | |||||
| 2019 | Ehime FC Ladies | |||||
| 2020 | Sfida Setagaya FC | |||||
| 2021 | JFA Academy Fukushima | |||||
| 2022 | Shizuoka SSU Bonita | |||||
| 2023 | Viamaterras Miyazaki | |||||
| 2024 | Okayama Yunogo Belle | |||||
| 2025 | VONDS Ichihara FC Ladies |
Challenge League
| Year | Club |
|---|---|
| 2015 | Tokiwagi Gakuen HS |
| 2016 | Orca Kamogawa FC |
| 2017 | Shizuoka Sangyo University Iwata Bonita |
| 2018 | Yamato Sylphid |
| 2019 | FC Jumonji Ventus |
| 2020 | JFA Academy Fukushima |
2024 season
Main article: 2024 Nadeshiko League
Division 1
| Club | Hometown | Current spell in D1 |
|---|---|---|
| Bunnys Gunma FC White Star | Maebashi | 2022– |
| Orca Kamogawa FC | Kamogawa | 2021– |
| Sfida Setagaya FC | Setagaya | 2021– |
| Nittaidai SMG Yokohama | Yokohama | 2021– |
| Yokohama FC Seagulls | Yokohama | 2021– |
| Shizuoka SSU Bonita | Iwata | 2023– |
| NGU Loveledge Nagoya | Nagoya | 2021– |
| Iga FC Kunoichi | Iga | 2019– |
| Speranza Osaka | Takatsuki | 2021– |
| AS Harima Albion | Himeji | 2021– |
| Ehime FC Ladies | Matsuyama | 2020– |
| Viamaterras Miyazaki | Shintomi | 2024– |
Division 2
| Clubs | Hometown |
|---|---|
| JFA Academy Fukushima LSC | Susono |
| Tsukuba FC Ladies | Tsukuba |
| Yamato Sylphid | Yamato |
| SEISA OSA Rhea Shonan FC | Ōiso |
| FC Fujizakura Yamanashi | Narusawa |
| Veertien Mie Ladies | Kuwana |
| Diosa Izumo FC | Izumo |
| Okayama Yunogo Belle | Mimasaka |
| KIU Charme | Takahashi |
| Diavorosso Hiroshima | Kumano |
| FC Imabari Ladies | Imabari |
| Fukuoka J. Anclas | Fukuoka |
Previous clubs
The following clubs have previously competed in the Nadeshiko League for at least one season.
Joined WE League in 2021
- Mynavi Sendai
- Urawa Reds
- Omiya Ardija Ventus (formerly FC Jumonji Ventus)
- Elfen Saitama
- JEF United Chiba
- NTV Tokyo Verdy Beleza
- Nojima Stella Kanagawa Sagamihara
- AC Nagano Parceiro
- Albirex Niigata
- INAC Kobe Leonessa
Joined WE League in 2023
- Cerezo Osaka Yanmar Ladies
Relegated to regional leagues
- Je Vrille Kagoshima: relegated to Kyushu League from 2014
- Shimizudaihachi Pleiades: relegated to Tokai League from 2015
- Mashiki Renaissance Kumamoto F.C.: relegated to Kyushu League from 2016
Defunct
- Fujita Soccer Club Mercury (affiliated with Shonan Bellmare)
- Nikko Securities Dream Ladies
- Nissan F.C. Ladies (affiliated with Yokohama Marinos)
- OKI F.C. Winds
- Shiroki F.C. Serena
- Suzuyo Shimizu F.C. Lovely Ladies (affiliated with Shimizu S-Pulse)
- Tasaki Perule F.C.
- Tokyo Shidax L.S.C. (formerly Shinko Seiko F.C. Clair)
- Urawa Ladies F.C.
- TEPCO Mareeze (dissolved after Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster; many of the players moved to Vegalta Sendai Ladies)
- Aguilas Kobe
- Hoyo Sukarabu F.C.
Division 1 awards
Most Valuable Player
| Year | Player | Club |
|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Tomoe Sakai | NTV Beleza |
| 2003 | Mio Otani | Tasaki Perule F.C. |
| 2004 | Kozue Ando | Saitama Reinas F.C. |
| 2005 | Shinobu Ohno | NTV Beleza |
| 2006 | Homare Sawa | NTV Beleza |
| 2007 | Shinobu Ohno | NTV Beleza |
| 2008 | Homare Sawa | NTV Beleza |
| 2009 | Kozue Ando | Urawa Reds Ladies |
| 2010 | Shinobu Ohno | NTV Beleza |
| 2011 | Nahomi Kawasumi | INAC Kobe Leonessa |
| 2012 | Megumi Takase | INAC Kobe Leonessa |
| 2013 | Nahomi Kawasumi | INAC Kobe Leonessa |
| 2014 | Michi Goto | Urawa Reds Ladies |
| 2015 | Mizuho Sakaguchi | NTV Beleza |
| 2016 | Mizuho Sakaguchi | NTV Beleza |
| 2017 | Mizuho Sakaguchi | NTV Beleza |
| 2018 | Mina Tanaka | NTV Beleza |
| 2019 | Mina Tanaka | NTV Beleza |
| 2020 | Yuika Sugasawa | Urawa Reds Ladies |
| 2021 | Ami Sugita | Iga FC Kunoichi Mie |
| 2022 | Mayu Otake | Sfida Setagaya FC |
| 2023 | Haruhi Suzuki | Orca Kamogawa FC |
Top Goalscorers
| Year | Player | Goals | Club |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Mio Otani | 5 | Tasaki Perule F.C. |
| 2003 | Mio Otani | 33 | Tasaki Perule F.C. |
| 2004 | Kozue Ando | 12 | Saitama Reinas F.C. |
| 2005 | Mio Otani | 25 | Tasaki Perule F.C. |
| 2006 | Yūki Nagasato | 18 | NTV Beleza |
| 2007 | Shinobu Ohno | 23 | NTV Beleza |
| 2008 | Shinobu Ohno | 20 | NTV Beleza |
| 2009 | Kozue Ando | 18 | Urawa Reds Ladies |
| 2010 | Shinobu Ohno | 13 | NTV Beleza |
| 2011 | Nahomi Kawasumi | 12 | INAC Kobe Leonessa |
| Shinobu Ohno | INAC Kobe Leonessa | ||
| 2012 | Megumi Takase | 20 | INAC Kobe Leonessa |
| 2013 | Beverly Goebel | 15 | INAC Kobe Leonessa |
| 2014 | Yuika Sugasawa | 20 | JEF United Chiba Ladies |
| 2015 | Yuika Sugasawa | 15 | JEF United Chiba Ladies |
| 2016 | Mina Tanaka | 18 | NTV Beleza |
| 2017 | Mina Tanaka | 15 | NTV Beleza |
| 2018 | Mina Tanaka | 15 | NTV Beleza |
| 2019 | Mina Tanaka | 20 | NTV Beleza |
| 2020 | Yuika Sugasawa | 17 | Urawa Reds Ladies |
| 2021 | Asuka Nishikawa | 19 | Iga FC Kunoichi Mie |
| 2022 | Sonoko Chiba | 14 | AS Harima Albion |
| 2023 | Chiina Kamiya | 14 | Asahi Intecc Loveledge Nagoya |
Best Young Player
| Year | Player | Club |
|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Kozue Ando | Saitama Reinas F.C. |
| 2003 | Yukari Kinga | NTV Beleza |
| 2004 | Natsuki Muraoka | Iga FC Kunoichi |
| 2005 | Karina Maruyama | TEPCO Mareeze |
| 2006 | Noriko Matsuda | Urawa Reds Ladies |
| 2007 | Kyoko Yano | Urawa Reds Ladies |
| 2008 | Mana Iwabuchi | NTV Beleza |
| 2009 | Megumi Takase | INAC Kobe Leonessa |
| 2010 | Nozomi Fujita | Urawa Reds Ladies |
| 2011 | Chinatsu Kira | Urawa Reds Ladies |
| 2012 | Shiho Kohata | Urawa Reds Ladies |
| 2013 | Saki Ueno | JEF Chiba Ladies |
| 2014 | Ruka Norimatsu | Urawa Reds Ladies |
| 2015 | Kiko Seike | Urawa Reds Ladies |
| 2016 | Hina Sugita | INAC Kobe Leonessa |
| 2017 | Yui Fukuta | INAC Kobe Leonessa |
| 2018 | Hinata Miyazawa | NTV Beleza |
| 2019 | Satsuki Miura | INAC Kobe Leonessa |
| 2020 | Fukina Mizuno | INAC Kobe Leonessa |
| 2021 | Nina Yamada | Ehime FC Ladies |
| 2022 | Yuka Kuratomi | Sfida Setagaya FC |
| 2023 | Natsumi Tago | Ehime FC Ladies |
References
References
- "Plenus Co. Ltd. Supports Nadeshiko League". [[:ja:プレナス.
- "サッカーで振り返る平成史と、未来への展望。".
- "Modern Girls on the Go: Gender, Mobility, and Labor in Japan".
- "American Soccer: History, Culture, Class".
- (2011-08-07). "Nadeshiko League attendance on rise | The Japan Times Online". Japantimes.co.jp.
- (2011-10-18). "Toyota to sponsor Nadeshiko League soccer " Japan Today: Japan News and Discussion". Japantoday.com.
- "Sky Perfect TV to Show Japan Women's Soccer League Live Following World Cup Win".
- "Women's football is booming in Japan as the game tries to capitalise on Nadeshiko's World Cup and Olympic success". Goal.com.
- (2011-08-07). "Nadeshiko League attendance on rise". The Japan Times.
- (3 June 2020). "Japan unveils professional WE league". [[Asian Football Confederation.
- "Japan – List of Women Champions".
- (22 November 2011). "Goals galore on three continents". FIFA.
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