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Tokyo Verdy

Japanese professional football club

Tokyo Verdy

Summary

Japanese professional football club

FieldValue
clubnameTokyo Verdy 1969
imageTokyo Verdy logo.svg
upright0.6
fullnameTokyo Verdy 1969 Football Club
nicknameVerdy
foundedas Yomiuri FC
groundAjinomoto Stadium
Chōfu, Tokyo
capacity49,970
ownerTokyo Verdy Holdings
chairmanYasuo Shimada
managerHiroshi Jofuku
league
season
position
current2024 Tokyo Verdy season
website
pattern_la1_Tokyo Verdy1969 2026 HOME FP
pattern_b1_Tokyo Verdy1969 2026 HOME FP
pattern_ra1_Tokyo Verdy1969 2026 HOME FP
pattern_sh1_Tokyo Verdy1969 2026 HOME FP
pattern_so1_Tokyo Verdy1969 2026 HOME FP
leftarm1008000
body1008000
rightarm1008000
shorts1008000
socks1008000
pattern_la2_Tokyo Verdy1969 2026 AWAY FP
pattern_b2_Tokyo Verdy1969 2026 AWAY FP
pattern_ra2_Tokyo Verdy1969 2026 AWAY FP
pattern_sh2_Tokyo Verdy1969 2026 AWAY FP
pattern_so2_Tokyo Verdy1969 2026 AWAY FP

the men's football club based in Japan

Chōfu, Tokyo |}}

Tokyo Verdy 1969 is a Japanese professional football club based in Inagi, Tokyo. The club currently competes in the J1 League, following promotion from the J2 League in 2023.

History

Founded as Yomiuri Football Club in 1969, Tokyo Verdy is one of the most decorated clubs in the J.League, with honours including 2 league titles, 5 Emperor's Cups, 6 JSL Cup/J.League Cups and an Asian Club Championship title, and the most successful team in Japanese football history with 25 titles. The club was an original member of the J.League in 1993.

Early years and rise to the top (1969–1983)

In October 1968, following Japan's bronze medal triumph at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City and the interest in football that ensued, Japan Football Association president Yuzuru Nozu visited Yomiuri Giants chairman Matsutaro Shoriki to ask him if Yomiuri was willing to ride on the wave of the game by establishing their own football club. Shoriki died a year later, in 1969, but not before signing his name to the plans to establish Yomiuri Football Club. Backed by the Yomiuri Group and NTV, Yomiuri Football Club firstly launched at Tokyo Local League B (5th tier) in 1969. They began gaining promotions from the Tokyo Local League to the Kanto Football League (3rd tier) in 1971. In 1971, Yomiuri marked 3rd place and promoted Japan Soccer League Second Division.

They were promoted to First Division in 1978, starting a long career of success in the top flight. Their first major title was the Japan Soccer League Cup in 1979.

Golden era (1983–1994)

[[Ruy Ramos

From its days as Yomiuri FC, the ownership had visions of a football equivalent of the baseball team Yomiuri Giants – a star-studded powerhouse with fans across Japan. As Japanese football began its transition from the JSL to the J.League in the early 1990s, it invested heavily in stars and featured Japan internationals Kazuyoshi Miura, Ruy Ramos and Tsuyoshi Kitazawa.

The last two JSL championships as Yomiuri FC in 1990–91 and 1991–92, and then winning the first two championships as Verdy Kawasaki in 1993 and 1994, effectively winning four straight Japanese league titles making a total of seven overall; the highest in the Japanese system. Verdy also won the 1996 Emperor's Cup and three consecutive J.League Cups from 1992 to 1994.

The JSL disbanded and reformed as the professional J.League in 1993. At this time the team professionalized and renamed itself Verdy Kawasaki, "Coined from the Portuguese "VERDE" meaning "green" probably named after their green jersey colour "Tokyo Greens/Tokyo Verdi", although the color was picked in homage to Brazilian club Palmeiras, a team admired by one of Yomiuri's first idols, São Paulo-born George Yonashiro. Although Yomiuri was dropped from the name as the club spun off from the company, the team remained under Yomiuri's ownership until 1997, when it was acquired by Nippon Television Network, the broadcast arm of the Yomiuri Group.

Lack of success and support (1995–2000)

This early success did not last, however, and as the stars aged, the team's performance suffered. Verdy's 1st-place finish in the 2nd stage of the 1995 season would be its last stage victory and the 1996 Emperor's Cup would be its last major title of the decade. A downturn in the national economy and the cooling of the J.League fad meant all teams had to cut expenses. This meant Verdy could no longer buy expensive replacements for its aging stars.

The 1996 J.League season saw Verdy Kawasaki finish in 7th place overall, the lowest standing in the league's existence at that point, and would fall further in the 1997 season, finishing 16th and 12th, in the 1st stage and 2nd stage, respectively, and 15th overall out of 17 teams. Although Verdy looked to return to prominence in 1999, finishing 2nd in the 1st Stage, the resurgence was short-lived as it fell to 10th in the 2nd stage.

Meanwhile, the team's efforts to become "Japan's Team" alienated local fans in Kawasaki. The expensive salaries and struggling attendance caused the club's debts to mount. Struggling to compete with the newly professionalized crosstown rival Kawasaki Frontale and the nearby Yokohama Marinos and Yokohama Flügels, Verdy made the decision to leave Kawasaki.

Return to Tokyo (2001–2005)

In 2001, the club returned from Kawasaki to Chōfu, Tokyo and was renamed as Tokyo Verdy 1969 to reflect the new hometown and the club's origins as Yomiuri. Although Verdy made the move to increase its fan base and distance itself from its rivals, by this time Tokyo was already home to a J1 club in FC Tokyo. Despite a sharp increase in crowd numbers for Verdy, this was still well below those of FC Tokyo. Their new local rivals had been promoted to J1 in 2000 and had already captured a vast number of the supporters Verdy had been hoping to attract.

In its first year in Tokyo, Tokyo Verdy 1969 found itself trailing FC Tokyo in the standings as well, and finished last in the division at 16th in the first stage of the 2001 season. Only the play of midseason acquisition Edmundo and a win in the final match of the second stage saved the club from relegation to J2. Tokyo Verdy 1969 was back at the bottom of the table in the first stage of the 2002 season, but again finished the season strong, placing 4th in the second stage.

Two mid-table finishes followed in 2003 and 2004, before Tokyo Verdy 1969, under Osvaldo Ardiles, won the Emperor's Cup on 1 January 2005, its first major title in 9 years and the first in Tokyo. Winning the cup earned Verdy a spot in the 2006 AFC Champions League.

However, the 2005 season saw Tokyo Verdy 1969 fall to its worst finish of its history, finishing 17th out of 18. This was the first season after the scrapping of the two-stage season format, and Tokyo Verdy 1969 were relegated to J2, after 28 years of top flight football. The season was marked by three huge losses in July: 1–7 to Gamba Osaka on 2 July, 0–7 to Urawa Red Diamonds on 6 July and a 6–0 loss to Júbilo Iwata on 17 July. Tokyo Verdy then sacked Ardiles two days later. At the time of his sacking, Ardiles' team had conceded 23 goals in their last 5 matches and had a 9 match winless streak. However, the struggling Verdy upset European giant Real Madrid (who were in Asia on a preseason tour), 3–0 on 25 July.

Brief promotion (2007–2008)

For the 2006 season, the club appointed former Verdy Kawasaki legend, Ruy Ramos, as manager on 22 December 2005. Tokyo Verdy 1969 found itself in the odd position of competing in the AFC Champions League while playing in the second tier of the national league system. After Tokyo Verdy 1969 was relegated, the club released many of the veteran players, leaving a core of young players, most notably Takayuki Morimoto, who became the youngest player to score in the J.League at age 15 in 2004.

In the 2007 season, Tokyo Verdy 1969 managed to beat Thespa Kusatsu 5–0 on the first day. After a brief scuffle with Consadole Sapporo over the J2 title, Tokyo Verdy 1969 had to settle for runners-up position, enough to earn promotion back into the top flight for 2008. At this time the club renamed itself for the second time, dropping 1969 from its team name, but the management corporation name remained as Tokyo Verdy 1969.

Verdy would eventually be relegated once again after finishing in 17th place (second to last) in their 2008 J1 League return.

Back to the second tier (2009–2023)

On 17 September 2009, NTV announced it would divest itself of shares in the club and transfer it to a new holding company, Tokyo Verdy Holdings, ending 40 years of Yomiuri/NTV direct financial support. The J.League approved the transfer, but made it a condition that Verdy find a new sponsor by 16 November or risk not being able to play J2 football for the 2010 season.

In October 2010, Tokyo Verdy signed a five-year sponsorship deal with sports retail store and apparel company Xebio. The sponsorship deal saw the Xebio logo placed on Tokyo Verdy's kit and included naming rights for two regular season home games. Xebio also produced the clubs football kit, although under their sports brand "Ennerre". After talks with Xebio, several companies decided to invest in the company and the new Xebio led administration was announced in November.

The club suffered a mere respite from heartbreak during the 2018 season, when they finished 6th, qualifying then for the promotion/relegation playoffs. They beat Omiya Ardija 1–0 in the 1st round, and repeated the script against Yokohama FC in the semi-final. They ended just one game short of a J1 League comeback, having lost in the final by 2–0 against Júbilo Iwata, which saw the promotion hopes fade away for another time. Ever since being relegated to the J2 at the end of 2008 season, the club were unable to return to the J1 and continue to compete in J2 League until 2023 season.

Return to the top-flight (2024–present)

On 2 December 2023, Tokyo Verdy gained promotion to the J1 League for the 2024 season after a 1–1 draw against Shimizu S-Pulse in the promotion play-off final, when Itsuki Someno scored the equalizer from the penalty spot in the 96th minute. As a result, Verdy, who were the top-ranked side entering the J2 League playoffs, returned to the national top tier for the first time since 2008.

Stadium

Verdy plays its home games at the Ajinomoto Stadium, a stadium with the capacity of 49,970. It is shared with the club's main rivals FC Tokyo, although occasional home matches are played in other stadiums in Tokyo, such as the Ajinomoto Field Nishigaoka.

Kits and crests

Tokyo Verdy's main colors are green.

The club's name was coined from the Portuguese, or Spanish, or Italian, or Esperanto "verde" meaning "green", probably named after their green jersey colour, so the meaning is "Tokyo Greens/Tokyo Verdi". In Italian, the form "verdi" indicates the plural form "the greens".

Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors

PeriodKit supplierShirt sponsor
1992PumaCoca-Cola
1993Mizuno
1994
1995
1996MALT'S
1997Nike
1998
1999KONAMI
2000
2001
2002Rakuten
ICHIBA
2003
2004LEOC
2005CyberAgent
2006CyberAgent (J2)
Nippon Television(ACL)
2007KappaAmeba
2008
2009
2010- /
XEBIO
2011ennerreĪdasangyō
2012Athleta
2013- /
GAGA MILANO
2014- /
Midori no shinzō
2015Midori no shinzō
2016
2017ISPS HANDA
2018
2019
2020
2021NICIGAS
2022
2023
2024
2025–2030GivovaRamsdens Currency

Kit evolution

1st – Home
{{Football kitfiletype=png
{{Football kit/No check
{{Football kit/No check
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{{Football kit/No check
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2nd – Away
{{Football kit/No check
{{Football kit/No check
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3rd – Special
{{Football kitfiletype=png
{{Football kitfiletype=png
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Players

Current squad

As of 22 August 2025. – Do NOT add new players before their signing is officially announced by the club through their website, including medical and signing the contract. A transfer fee agreed doesn't mean the player will sign. – Do NOT remove players before their exit is officially announced by the club. – Do NOT add or change squad numbers until it is official on the Tokyo Verdy website – Only add numberless players that are likely to become part of the first team – Pre-season numbers can be added temporarily with A REFERENCE – This is Wikipedia, not a football newspaper. Anything unconfirmed and unsourced will be removed on sight

Out on loan

Club officials

PositionStaff
ManagerJPN Hiroshi Jofuku
Assistant managersJPN Ichiro Wada
JPN Hitoshi Morishita
JPN Yuta Narawa
Goalkeeper coachJPN Atsushi Shirai
Conditioning coachJPN Yuya Noshiro
Analytical coachJPN Daiki Yamamoto
InterpreterJPN Genta Iwauchi
DoctorJPN Kenta Uemura
TrainerJPN Naoki Matsuda
JPN Shuji Ogawa
JPN Yusuke Kaneuchi
JPN Hiroyoshi Mutaguchi
Side managerJPN Hideki Sato
Equipment managerJPN Ryo Ito
JPN Jun Yamato
Training coachSGP Noh Alam Shah
SGP Isa Halim

Managerial history

ManagerNationalityTenureStartFinish
Jujiro Narita1 February 197030 June 1973
Frans van Balkom1 February 197331 January 1976
Shoichi Nishimura1 February 197631 January 1981
Ryoichi Aikawa1 February 198130 June 1983
Susumu Chiba1 July 198331 January 1984
Rudi Gutendorf1 January 198430 June 1986
George Yonashiro1 July 198630 June 1989
Carlos Alberto Silva1 July 199030 June 1991
José Macia "Pepe"1 January 199131 December 1992
Yasutarō Matsuki1 February 199331 January 1995
Nelsinho Baptista1 February 199525 April 1996
Yasuyuki Kishino26 April 19969 May 1996
Émerson Leão10 May 199631 January 1997
Hisashi Katō1 February 19971 June 1997
Valdir Espinosa2 June 199730 October 1997
Ryōichi Kawakatsu1 November 199731 January 1998
Nicanor1 February 19987 September 1998
Ryōichi Kawakatsu8 September 199831 January 1999
Hideki Matsunaga1 February 199931 January 2000
Chang Woe-ryong1 February 20001 January 2001
Yasutarō Matsuki1 February 200116 July 2001
Yukitaka Omi17 July 20019 April 2002
Lori Paulo Sandri1 January 200230 June 2003
Osvaldo Ardiles16 May 200318 July 2005
Nobuhiro Ishizaki19 July 200531 July 2005
Vadão1 August 200514 December 2005
Ruy Ramos1 February 200631 January 2008
Tetsuji Hashiratani1 February 200831 January 2009
Takuya Takagi1 February 200914 October 2009
Takeo Matsuda14 October 200931 January 2010
Ryōichi Kawakatsu1 February 20106 September 2012
Shinichiro Takahashi6 September 201231 January 2013
Yasutoshi Miura1 February 201315 September 2014
Kōichi Togashi1 September 201431 December 2016
Miguel Ángel Lotina1 February 201731 January 2019
Gary White1 February 201917 July 2019
Hideki Nagai17 July 20191 September 2021
Takafumi Hori2 September 202113 June 2022
Hiroshi Jofuku14 June 2022current

League and cup record

ChampionsRunners-upThird placePromotedRelegated
SeasonDiv.TeamsPos.PW (OTW/PKW)DL (OTL/PKL)FAGDPtsAttendance/GJ.League
CupEmperor's
CupAsia
Verdy Kawasaki
1992WinnerRunners-upCC
1993J1101st3628869284125,235WinnerQuarter finalCC
1994121st44311391474424,926Winner2nd roundCC3rd place
1995142nd523513 (-/3)106624410820,834Quarter finalCCQuarter final
1996167th301911 (-/0)6842265717,653Runners-UpWinnerCCQuarter final
19971715th326 (4/0)19 (1/2)3865−272610,933Group stage3rd round
19981812th3413 (0/0)17 (2/2)4753−63913,338Group stageQuarter-finalCWCQuarter final
1999167th3013 (4/-)29 (2/-)43430499,3792nd roundSemi-final
20001610th3010 (2/-)410 (4/0)46442387,609Quarter final4th round
Tokyo Verdy 1969
2001J11614th308 (2/-)213 (5/-)3857−193019,3961st roundQuarter final
20021610th308 (5/-)3144143−23915,128Group stage3rd round
2003168th30117125657−14017,563Group stageQuarter final
2004169th30116134346−33915,059Semi-finalWinner
20051817th34612164073−333014,716Group stage4th round
2006J2137th48218196975−6715,705Not eligible3rd roundCL
2007132nd48261111905733897,3273rd round
Tokyo Verdy
2008J11817th34107173850−123714,837Group stage4th round
2009J2187th5121111968617745,521Not eligible2nd round
2010195th3617712473413585,5722nd round
2011205th38161111694524595,7103rd round
2012227th4220616654619665,3413rd round
20132213th421414145258−6566,3433rd round
20142220th42915183148−17425,4302nd round
2015228th4216101643412585,6552nd round
20162218th421013194361−18435,4023rd round
2017225th42201012644915706,2062nd round
2018226th4219149564115715,9364th round
20192213th4214131559590555,3712nd round
2020 2212th4213151448480542,429Did not qualify
2021 2212th421610166266−4583,2462nd round
2022229th4216131362557614,955Quarter-finals
2023223rd4221129573126757,9823rd round
2024J1206th38141410515105620,9763rd round3rd round
20252017th381110172341-184321,121Playoff round4th round
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
  • OTW / PKW = Overtime wins / Penalty kicks wins 1997 & 1998 seasons – 1999, 2000, 2001 & 2002 Overtime wins only
  • OTL / PKL = Overtime losses / Penalty kicks losses 1997 and 1998 seasons – 1999, 2000 & 2001 Overtime losses only
  • Attendance/G = Average home league attendance
  • 2020 & 2021 seasons attendances reduced by COVID-19 worldwide pandemic
  • Source: J. League Data Site

Honours

With seven tier one league titles, five Emperor's Cups and six League Cups, Tokyo Verdy is one of the most decorated football clubs in Japan, although nearly all of its titles, came during their stay at Tokyo in the semi-professional era as Yomiuri FC, before the inception of the professional J.League.

HonourNo.YearsJapan Soccer League Division 1/J1 LeagueJapan Soccer League Division 2Emperor's CupJSL Cup/J.League CupJapanese Super CupKonica CupAsian Club ChampionshipSanwa Bank Cup
71983, 1984, 1986–87, 1990–91, 1991–92, 1993, 1994
21974, 1977
51984, 1986, 1987, 1996, 2004
61979, 1985, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994
41984, 1994, 1995, 2005
11990
11987
11994

Other sports

Verdy is a polideportivo and also fields teams in women's football, volleyball, and triathlon. Tokyo Verdy's women's football team is the 12 time Nadeshiko League champions, 14 time Empress's Cup winners and 1 time AFC Women's Club Championship winners.

Notes

References

References

  1. "FIFA Classic Clubs – Tokyo Verdy 1969". [[FIFA]].
  2. link. Tokyo Verdy. (2010)
  3. link. [[Japan Soccer League]]. (1993)
  4. (1 January 2005). "Ten-man Tokyo Verdy lift Emperor's Cup". ESPN FC.
  5. (1 January 2005). "Tokyo Verdy: Trophies". Soccerway.
  6. "Club guide: Tokyo Verdy". J.League.
  7. Ossie Ardiles. (2010). "Ossie's Dream: My Autobiography". Random House.
  8. (21 November 2005). "Tokyo Verdy to play in AFC Champions League". [[Asian Football Confederation.
  9. (21 July 2005). "J-League club Tokyo Verdy sack coach Ardiles". [[Asian Football Confederation.
  10. (25 July 2005). "Real Madrid humiliated in Tokyo". [[Rediff.com]].
  11. (23 December 2005). "Verdy appoints Ramos as boss". [[The Japan Times]].
  12. (5 May 2004). "Morimoto, 15, breaks J-League record". [[ESPN Soccernet]].
  13. (17 September 2009). "Weak ad income prompts Japan's Nipon TV to sell pro soccer club". [[Antara (news agency).
  14. (30 January 2010). "J.League to run Tokyo Verdy". [[The Japan Times]].
  15. (20 October 2010). "Japan's Tokyo Verdy secure much needed sponsorship". [[SportsPro]].
  16. (2 December 2023). "Tokyo Verdy promoted back to J1 after dramatic play-off final". J.League.
  17. (2023-12-02). "Football: Late draw seals J1 return for Verdy at Shimizu's expense". Mainichi Daily News.
  18. (24 January 2024). "選手・スタッフ". Tokyo Verdy.
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