Tokushima Vortis

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Tokushima Vortis
徳島ヴォルティス
Logo
Full nameTokushima Vortis
Nickname(s)Vortis
Founded1955; 66 years ago (1955)
GroundNaruto Otsuka Sports Park Pocari Sweat Stadium
Naruto, Tokushima
Capacity17,924
OwnerOtsuka Pharmaceutical
ManagerDani Poyatos
LeagueJ1 League
2020J2 League, 1st of 22 Increase (promoted)
WebsiteClub website
Away colours

Tokushima Vortis (徳島ヴォルティス, Tokushima Vorutisu) is a Japanese professional football club, currently playing in the J1 League. The team is located in Tokushima, Tokushima Prefecture. Their home stadium is Naruto Otsuka Sports Park Pocari Sweat Stadium, in Naruto, Tokushima.

The name, "Vortis" was named in 1997 (see below), and it was explained as a combination of Italian "Vortice" (meaning whirlpool, after the famous Naruto whirlpool in Naruto Strait).[1]

History[]

Founded in 1955 as Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. Soccer Club, VORTIS joined the J-League in 2005. They are still sponsored by Otsuka's best-known brand, Pocari Sweat sports drink.[1]

They were first promoted to the old Japan Soccer League Division 2 in 1989, but the company's reluctance to professionalize the team forced it to compete in the former JFL and current JFL. In the 1997 old JFL season, they first sported a Vortis Tokushima name, but the lack of fan interest at the time forced them to go back to the corporate identity. They finally adopted the Tokushima Vortis name for good after winning the new JFL championship in 2004 and being promoted.[2]

The first season in J2 was naturally a difficult one for Vortis, but they surprised many sceptics with their determination and quality of play. The team rose as high as fourth place, at one point, before slipping down the table later in the season to finish ninth. In 2006, the team was forced to rebuild, as the players who took the team into the J.League began to hit the ceiling of their abilities, and made way for younger replacements. As a result, despite the encouragement of a local rivalry with Ehime FC, Tokushima drifted down-table, and they followed it up with a last-place finish in 2007 and 2008.[2]

In 2013 they earned fourth place in J2, matching the same placement they had two years before in the division and twenty years before in the old JFL Division 1; this time they won the playoff, defeating Kyoto Sanga F.C. in the final round at the National Stadium in Tokyo, thus becoming the first professional Shikoku football club to compete in the top division of their national league.[3]

Until their promotion, they were the only former JSL member currently a member of the J.League which has never competed in the top tier of Japanese football. With promotion and the creation of the J3 League in 2014, the distinction was taken over by Blaublitz Akita.

In the 2019 season they finished 4th again and were one win away from a return to J1 in the playoffs, but ultimately failed to beat Shonan Bellmare away in the final game. In 2020, despite the COVID-19 pandemic, they did one better and were promoted as J2 champions.

Record as J.League member[]

Champions Runners-up Third place Promoted Relegated
League J.League Cup Emperor's Cup
Season Div. Teams Pos. Attendance/G
2005 J2 12 9th 4,366 4th round
2006 13 13th 3,477 4th round
2007 13 13th 3,289 4th round
2008 15 15th 3,862 3rd round
2009 18 9th 4,073 2nd round
2010 19 8th 4,614 3rd round
2011 20 4th 5,207 2nd round
2012 22 15th 3,991 3rd round
2013 22 4th 4,348 2nd round
2014 J1 18 18th 8,884 Group stage 3rd round
2015 J2 22 14th 5,019 4th round
2016 22 9th 4,565 3rd round
2017 22 7th 4,979 2nd round
2018 22 11th 4,997 3rd round
2019 22 4th 5,736 3rd round
2020 22 1st 3,100 - Semi-finalist
2021 J1 20 - -
Key
  • Pos. = Position in league
  • Attendance/G = Average league home attendance
  • Source: J. League Data Site

Honours[]

  • J2 League: 1
2020
  • Japan Football League: 2
2003, 2004
  • Shikoku Football League: 4
1978, 1979, 1981, 1989

Current players[]

As of 31 August 2021[4]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF Japan JPN Taiki Tamukai
3 DF Serbia SRB Dušan Cvetinović
4 DF Brazil BRA Diego
5 DF Japan JPN Hidenori Ishii
6 MF Japan JPN Kohei Uchida
7 MF Japan JPN Yudai Konishi
8 MF Japan JPN Ken Iwao
9 FW Norway NOR Mushaga Bakenga
10 MF Japan JPN Masaki Watai
11 FW Japan JPN Taisei Miyashiro (on loan from Kawasaki Frontale)
13 MF Japan JPN Joel Chima Fujita
14 DF Brazil BRA Cacá
15 MF Japan JPN Takeru Kishimoto
16 DF Japan JPN Daisei Suzuki
17 FW Japan JPN Kazunari Ichimi
18 FW Japan JPN Akihiro Sato
No. Pos. Nation Player
19 FW Japan JPN Yuki Kakita (on loan from Kashima Antlers)
20 DF Japan JPN Shota Fukuoka
21 GK Japan JPN Naoto Kamifukumoto
22 MF Japan JPN Seiya Fujita
23 MF Japan JPN Tokuma Suzuki
24 MF Japan JPN Kazuki Nishiya
27 DF Japan JPN Noriki Fuke
29 GK Japan JPN
31 GK Japan JPN Toru Hasegawa
32 MF Japan JPN
33 MF Japan JPN Shiryu Fujiwara
34 MF Japan JPN Chie Edoojon Kawakami
37 MF Japan JPN Akira Hamashita
39 FW Japan JPN Taiyo Nishino
40 GK Japan JPN
45 MF Japan JPN Koki Sugimori

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. Nation Player
GK Japan JPN Takuya Seguchi (at Albirex Niigata)
DF Japan JPN Takashi Abe (at Fagiano Okayama)
DF Japan JPN Kotaro Kume (at Verspah Oita)
DF Japan JPN (at Iwaki FC)
MF Japan JPN Ryota Kajikawa (at Tokyo Verdy)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Japan JPN (at Nara Club)
FW Japan JPN Taichi Takeda (at Nagano Parceiro)
FW Japan JPN Kiyoshiro Tsuboi (at Albirex Niigata (S))
FW Japan JPN Wadi Ibrahim Suzuki (at Valencia Mestalla)

Managers[]

  • Japan 1988–1992
  • Japan Hajime Ishii 1993–1995
  • Brazil 1996–1998
  • Japan Shinji Tanaka 1999–2006
  • Japan Yutaka Azuma 2006
  • Japan Masataka Imai 2007
  • Japan Naohiko Minobe 2008–2011
  • Japan Shinji Kobayashi 2012–2015
  • Japan Hiroaki Nagashima 2016
  • Spain Ricardo Rodríguez 2016–2020
  • Spain Dani Poyatos 2021–

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b "Tokushima Vortis Challenges J1 League Rivals". Otsuka Pharmaceutical. February 7, 2014. Retrieved February 8, 2015.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b "The 2013 Promotion Playoff winners are the first club from the island of Shikoku to participate in Japan's top flight". Goal.com. March 26, 2014. Retrieved February 8, 2015.
  3. ^ Gus Fielding (December 8, 2013). "Tokushima reaches J1 with playoff final victory". Kyodo News. The Japan Times. Retrieved February 8, 2015.
  4. ^ "Top team | トップチーム". Tokushima Vortis. Retrieved 5 May 2021.

External links[]

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