Matsumoto Yamaga FC

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Matsumoto Yamaga Football Club (松本山雅フットボールクラブ, Matsumoto Yamaga Futtobōru Kurabu) or simply Matsumoto Yamaga FC (松本山雅FC, Matsumoto Yamaga Efu Shī) is a Japanese football (soccer) club based in the city of Matsumoto, located in the Nagano Prefecture. The club currently plays in the J3 League, Japanese third tier of professional football.

Matsumoto Yamaga FC
松本山雅FC
Full nameMatsumoto Yamaga Football Club
Nickname(s)Ptarmigans, Gans
Founded1965; 59 years ago (1965)
StadiumMatsumoto Stadium
(Alwin)
Matsumoto, Nagano
Capacity20,396
ChairmanFumiyuki Kanda
ManagerMasahiro Shimoda
LeagueJ3 League
2023J3 League, 9th of 20
WebsiteClub website
Current season

History

The club was founded in 1965 by the players who represented Nagano Prefecture. The players frequented a cafe called Yamaga in front of Matsumoto railway station and initially they were simply called Yamaga Club. In 2004, they were renamed as Matsumoto Yamaga FC when nonprofit organisation Alwin Sports Project were set up to support the club with the intention of promotion to J. League. The very coffee shop where they founded the club no longer exists, but the club opened a new one in 2017.

In the 2007 and 2008 season they finished respectively 1st and 4th in the Hokushin'etsu First Division, but failed to gain the promotion to the Japan Football League as they exited at the group stage of the Regional League promotion series against other regional champions. 2008 also brought a crucial Emperor's Cup run, where they defeated former Japanese champions Shonan Bellmare in the third round by penalty kicks, only to be eliminated 8–0 by Vissel Kobe.

The 2009 season brought inconsistency, as they took 4th place in the regional league but knocked Urawa Red Diamonds out of the Emperor's Cup in the second round, their biggest giant-killing ever.

By virtue of winning the Shakaijin Cup, they earned a berth in the Regional League promotion series, and won the series at home to earn promotion to the Japan Football League for 2010. They earned 7th place on their first season in the third tier.

In 2011, despite a season thrown off by the Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami and the resulting inability of Sony Sendai to play a full schedule, Yamaga earned 4th place and were promoted to J. League Division 2. After three seasons they earned their first ever promotion to J1 League, only to be relegated after one season.

After failing to secure promotion in 2016 and 2017, Yamaga finished their 2018 season at the top of the J2 table, winning their first ever league title and securing automatic promotion to J1 in the process.

This began the downfall of Matsumoto Yamaga FC, due to the club's bad idea of high player turnover. Ahead of the 2020 J2 League, Yamaga turned over more than 20 players, in which began a slow start in 2020, as the club also went through many winless runs, including 5 losses in a row, which at the time was a record number of defeats for the club in J2. Eventually, in September 2020, manager Keiichiro Nuno was sacked, and the club finished 13th that season. Things were about to get worse as they continued high player turnover, with twenty-seven players leaving and twenty-four coming to the club before the 2021 J2 League. In June that year, Nuno's replacement, Kei Shibata, was fired from the club, and was replaced with Hiroshi Nanami, who couldn't help the club escape relegation after finishing dead last that season.[1]

In 2022, Matsumoto played its first season on the J3. Matsumoto failed to be promoted back to the J2 League, as it finished on fourth place in the final standings of the 2022 J3 League season. The club ended tied on points with Kagoshima United, with both having earned 66 points in 34 matches. However, the goal difference stood out in Kagoshima's favour. The club will play its third consecutive season at the J3 during 2024.

Rivalry

The biggest rival of Matsumoto Yamaga are the prefectural neighbours and former Hokushin'etsu League fellows Nagano Parceiro. Matches between those teams are labelled "Shinshū derby" and generate a lot of interest in both cities.[2] For 2011 season, Parceiro joined their rivals in JFL bringing the derby to the national level.

Stadium

Matsumoto Stadium (Alwin)

Matsumoto Yamaga's home ground is Matsumoto Stadium (popularly known as Alwin) located in the Kambayashi area of Matsumoto city. The stadium has a capacity of 20,000 (16,000 seats and 4,000 standings).[3] It is the third largest Sport venue in Nagano Prefecture.

Mascot

The mascot of the club is named "Gans-kun" (ガンズくん), who is a Ptarmigan (ターミガン, Tāmigan), the symbol bird of Nagano Prefecture.[4]

Theme song

The club's theme song is "wanna be a superstar" by local rock band ASIAN2.[citation needed]

Affiliated clubs

On 23 November 2016, Matsumoto Yamaga and Geylang International signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) in a press event which was held at the Marina Bay Floating Platform. This MOU will enable both clubs to establish a platform to exchange expertise and knowledge with the objective of promoting cohesion and development of football between the two clubs. The MOU spells out possible areas of collaboration such as the exchange of players and technical staff for training attachments and loans. Geylang will be looking to select promising players from its Active SG-GIFC Soccer Academy and junior teams to send on short training stints with Matsumoto Yamaga while the Japanese club is also looking into the possibility of sending players from their junior team to Singapore for pre-season training stints. Amongst the key initiatives of the partnership with Matsumoto Yamaga is the exchange programmes for head coach, Mohd Noor Ali, who had a one-year attachment with the club in 2018, where he guided the club U18 B team to the Japan FA's Under-18 Football League Nagano prefecture title while on 17 August 2018, Anders Aplin become the first Singaporean football player to sign for a J.League team signing on loan until the end of the 2018 J2 League season in November.

On 30 October 2022, both clubs reaffirmed their close and long-standing relationship as Geylang International officials went to Japan to explore future collaborations going into the seventh year of partnership since 2016. Geylang International has a memorandum of understanding with J.League outfits, Matsumoto Yamaga that was signed in 2016, while Epson's relationship with the club also dates back to the same year when it became the club's platinum sponsor. In the last seven years, Epson has enjoyed premium hospitality access to the club's home matches and has also supported the Singaporean football community and youths with the staging of the Epson Youth Cup.

League & cup record

ChampionsRunners-upThird placePromotedRelegated
LeagueJ. League
Cup
Emperor's
Cup
SeasonDivisionTierPosPWDLFAGDPts
1975Hokushin'etsu36th8314141317Not eligibleDid not qualify
19766th9243171438
19778th92341722−57
197810th9108927−182
19792nd96121811713
19804th96211981114
19813rd9513159611
19825th9414111019
19837th92341214−27
19847th92341315−27
19851st97112371615
19864th94232113810
19874th94231211110
19883rd94321981111
19892nd96121710713
19904th93421614210
19915th9414171259
199245th94321512311
19936th93331517−29
199435th92521113−29
19956th9225814−68
19965th9324919−1011
19978th92161123−1271st round
19983rd84-41724−712Did not qualify
199949th92(1)-7429−254
20008th8107618−123
20019th8026424−202
20028th93151218−69
20039th121471342−297
2004Hokushin'etsu
(Div. 2)
56th144281627−1114
20051st1383236112527
2006Hokushin'etsu
(Div. 1)
42nd141112341024342nd round
20071st14101347153231Did not qualify
20084th14734311813244th round
20094th14923401426293rd round
2010JFL37th341571248417522nd round
20114th341788603822594th round
2012J2 League212th4215141346433592nd round
20137th421991454540663rd Round
20142nd4224117653530833rd round
2015J1 League116th3477203054−2428Group stage4th round
2016J2 League23rd422412662323084Not eligible2nd round
20178th4219914614516664th round
20181st4221147543420773rd round
2019J1 League117th34613152140-1931Group stage2nd round
2020J2 League213th421315144452-854Group stageDid not qualify
202122nd42713223671-3534Not eligible3rd round
2022J3 League34th342068463313662nd round
20239th38159145147454Did not qualify
2024TBD382nd roundDid not qualify
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
  • Source: J.League Data Site

Honours

Matsumoto Yamaga FC Honours
HonourNo.Years
Hokushin'etsu Football League Div. 121985, 2007
Hokushin'etsu Football League Div. 212005
Shakaijin Cup12009
Regional League promotion series12009
J2 League12018

Current squad

As of 24 May 2024[6]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos. NationPlayer
21GK  ESPVíctor Ibáñez
22DF  JPNKazuaki Saso
23MF  JPNYuta Taki
27DF  JPNJiyo Ninomiya
28DF  JPNYuya Fujimoto
30MF  JPNRyuji Kokubu
32MF  JPNShusuke Yonehara
33FW  JPNNaoto Arai
35GK  JPNShoma Kanda
36MF  JPNGen Matsumura DSP
40DF  JPNDaiki Higuchi
41MF  JPNKaiga Murakoshi
44DF  JPNTakato Nonomura
46MF  JPNReo Yasunaga
48DF  JPNSo Fujitani
50FW  JPNSerigne Saliou Diop (on loan from V-Varen Nagasaki)

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos. NationPlayer
FW  JPNMao Hamana (at Atletico Suzuka)
FW  BRALucas Rian (at Confiança)
FW  JPNSora Tanaka (at Geylang International)

Club officials

PositionName
Manager Masahiro Shimoda
Assistant manager Tomonobu Hayakawa
Development coach Nozomu Kato
Technical coach Kohei Takeishi
Goalkeeper coach Tetsuro Yoshimoto
Physical Coach Rui Kokubo
Interpreter Felipe
Doctor Takashige Momose
Chief trainer Koji Inoue
Trainer Chisato Chiba
Fumiya Sugiuchi
Competent Makoto Shiraki
Side affairs Kazumasa Hirabayashi
Kumpei Saito

Managerial history

ManagerNationalityTenure
StartFinish
Katsua Kobayashi  Japan2004
Keiju Karashima  Japan1 February 200531 January 2008
Hideo Yoshizawa  Japan21 February 20088 June 2011
Yoshiyuki Katō  Japan9 June 201131 January 2012
Yasuharu Sorimachi  Japan1 February 201231 January 2020
Keiichirō Nuno  Japan1 February 202024 September 2020
Kei Shibata  Japan25 September 202020 June 2021
Hiroshi Nanami  Japan21 June 202131 January 2023
Masahiro Shimoda  Japan1 February 2023Current

Kit evolution

First kit - home
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024 -
Second kit - away
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024 -
Third kit
2015
Club
50th anniversary
2016
Mountain Day
2017 3rd
2017
Mountain Day
2018
Mountain Day
2019
Mountain Day
2020
Club
55th anniversary
2021 SP
2022
Summer
2023
Summer
2024
Summer

References