Fixtures

Jaapani J-League 04/20 06:00 9 Avispa Fukuoka vs Jubilo Iwata - View
Jaapani J-League 04/27 05:00 10 Jubilo Iwata vs Machida Zelvia - View
Jaapani J-League 05/03 05:00 11 Yokohama F-Marinos vs Jubilo Iwata - View
Jaapani J-League 05/06 04:00 12 Tokyo Verdy vs Jubilo Iwata - View
Jaapani J-League 05/11 05:00 13 Jubilo Iwata vs Sagan Tosu - View
Jaapani J-League 05/15 10:00 14 Consadole Sapporo vs Jubilo Iwata - View

Results

Jaapani J-League'i karikas 04/17 10:00 8 V-Varen Nagasaki v Jubilo Iwata L 1-0
Jaapani J-League 04/13 05:00 8 [11] Jubilo Iwata v Nagoya Grampus [10] L 0-1
Jaapani J-League 04/07 05:00 7 [16] Kyoto Sanga FC v Jubilo Iwata [17] W 0-3
Jaapani J-League 04/03 10:00 6 [18] Jubilo Iwata v Albirex Niigata [7] W 2-0
Jaapani J-League 03/30 06:00 5 [4] Kashima Antlers v Jubilo Iwata [17] L 1-0
Jaapani J-League 03/16 06:00 4 [9] Gamba Osaka v Jubilo Iwata [16] L 2-1
Jaapani J-League 03/09 05:00 3 [13] Jubilo Iwata v Kashiwa Reysol [5] L 0-1
Jaapani J-League 03/01 10:00 2 [5] Kawasaki Frontale v Jubilo Iwata [18] W 4-5
Jaapani J-League 02/24 04:00 1 [8] Jubilo Iwata v Vissel Kobe [17] L 0-2
Maailma klubide sõpruskohtumised 02/03 04:00 - Kagoshima United v Jubilo Iwata W 0-4
Jaapani J2-League 11/12 04:00 42 [18] Tochigi SC v Jubilo Iwata [3] W 1-2
Jaapani J2-League 11/04 05:00 41 [3] Jubilo Iwata v Mito HollyHock [17] W 5-0

Statistika

 TotalKodusVõõrsil
Matches played 47 22 25
Wins 25 10 15
Draws 8 5 3
Losses 14 7 7
Goals for 81 39 42
Goals against 51 27 24
Clean sheets 16 6 10
Failed to score 9 5 4

Wikipedia - Júbilo Iwata

Júbilo Iwata (Japanese: ジュビロ磐田, Hepburn: Jubiro Iwata) is a Japanese professional football team based in Iwata, located in Shizuoka Prefecture. The club compete in J1 League following promotion from J2 League in 2023. The club name Júbilo means 'joy' in Spanish and Portuguese.

Júbilo have won 3 J1 League titles, 1 J2 League title, 2 Emperor's Cup, 2 J.League Cup and 3 Japanese Super Cup. Continentally, Kashima became Asian champions when they won the 1998–99 Asian Club Championship (now known as AFC Champions League). The club also won the 2011 J.League Cup / Copa Sudamericana Championship.

History

Origins and rise to the top (1972–1996)

The team started out as the company team for Yamaha Motor Corporation in April 1972. After making its way through the Shizuoka and Tōkai football leagues, it played in the Japan Soccer League until it reorganized as the J.League at the end of 1992.

Their first glory happened when they won both the Emperor's Cup and promotion as champions of the JSL Division 2 in 1982. They won their first Japanese league title in the 1987/88 season. Due to problems in the upcoming professionalization, Yamaha decided to relegate themselves and not be one of the J.League founder members.

They finished in 2nd place of the JFL 1st division, a division below the top flight, in 1993 and were promoted to the J1 league for 1994. The team welcomed Marius Johan Ooft as its manager, as well as the Brazil national team captain Dunga and a number of foreign players to build a winning team. Dunga's football philosophy deeply influenced the club, initially as a player and currently as an advisor.

Glory years (1997–2003)

In a seven-year period between 1997 and 2003, the club won a number of titles relying on Japanese players instead of foreigners who may leave on a transfer during the middle of the season. Within this period Júbilo won the J.League title three times, finished second three more and won each of the domestic cup competitions once. In 1999, Júbilo were also crowned Champions of Asia after winning the final match against Esteghlal in front of 121,000 spectators at the Azadi Stadium.

In one of the most fruitful periods in J.League history, Júbilo broke several records and created some new ones. Amongst these are the most goals scored in a season (107 in 1998); the fewest goals conceded in a season (26 in 2001); the biggest goal difference (plus 68 goals in 1998); and the largest win (9–1 against Cerezo Osaka in 1998). In 2002, the team won both stages of the championship, a first in J.League history, and the same year the team had a record seven players selected for the J.League Team of the Year. All of these records still stand today.

Between 1997 and 2003, Júbilo were one of the most successful teams in the J. League. Over this seven-year spell Jubilo finished outside the top two of J1 just once, winning the league title on three occasions. This period also saw a number of cup final appearances, including winning the Emperor's Cup, the J. League Cup, and the Asian Champions League once each.

Post-glory years (2003–2015)

Yamaha Stadium Júbilo Iwata

Since their last cup triumph in the 2003 Emperor's Cup, the squad which took them to such heights began to age. Without similarly skilled replacements coming through the youth team or from outside, Júbilo's power started to fade, and in 2007 the club ended the season in a record worst position of 9th. Perhaps more concerning to Júbilo supporters is their eclipse in recent seasons by bitter local rivals Shimizu S-Pulse who, in ending the season above Júbilo every year since 2006, have become Shizuoka prefecture's premier performing team. In 2008 they finished 16th out of 18 – their lowest position in the 18-club table – but kept their J1 position by defeating Vegalta Sendai in the promotion/relegation playoff.

In 2013 season, it took them until 8th week to make their first win in the league matches, and never move up higher than 16th since they were ranked down to 17th as of the end of 5th week. Then eventually suffered their first relegation to 2014 J.League Division 2 after they were defeated by Sagan Tosu at their 31st week match. Júbilo were promoted back to J1 in 2015 after finishing runners-up.

Yo-yo era (2019–present)

After an 18th-place finish in 2019, Iwata were relegated to J2 for 2020. The following year, Júbilo won J2 and were promoted for the 2022 J1 League season.

In 2022, Júbilo couldn't find their way into success throughout the season, with forgettable campaigns being made in each competition. In the J.League Cup, the team saw an early elimination at the group stage, finishing third at their group after losing half of their fixtures. In the Emperor's Cup, they were eliminated in the Round of 16 by Tokyo Verdy at extra-time, despite looking promising after 5–2 win against Matsumoto Yamaga on the 2nd round.

On 19 October 2022, Júbilo Iwata announced through their media accounts that for both transfers windows of the 2023 season, the club would be unable to make new signings after a ban was imposed by FIFA and the CAS. The ban, however, didn't applied to youth team promotions of Júbilo's academy system, and for players returning from loan transfers. The decision was made based on issues regarding Fabián González's contract with the club, as the player supposedly cancelled a contract signed with an unnamed Thai club without a justifiable reason. According to Júbilo, at the time of his signing (in the pre-season) they were unaware of the previous contract González signed with the Thai club. The situation became public after the Thai club left a complaint highlighting the transfer issue situation to FIFA's Dispute Resolution Chamber in April 2022. González was also imposed a punishment by FIFA, being suspended from any participation in official matches for four months. The transfer ban also led to a provisional contract cancellation of Shu Morooka on 17 November 2022, who had during the season signed a provisional contract for the 2023 season, after graduating from university. Then, on the same day, it was announced he would join Kashima Antlers instead. Later on 20 December, the club filed an appeal about the CAS decision over the subject, but it was denied on 22 December.

The situation in J1 became much worse for the club, spending the last 16 rounds of the top-flight league without leaving relegation zone, resulted another drop to J2 League for 2023 season, which confirmed on the penultimate round. Nonetheless, just a year later, Iwata eventually made a swift return to J1 for the 2024 season by finishing as runners-up of the second-tier, obtained a 2–1 away win in the final matchweek of the season against Tochigi SC on 12 November 2023 and favoured by results of another matches in the same day. On 1 March 2024, Ryo Germain scored 4 goals in an memorable 5–4 league away win against Kawasaki Frontale.