Neha Patil (Editor)

Tokushima Vortis

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Full name
  
Tokushima Vortis

Ground Capacity
  
20,000

2016
  
9th

Manager
  
Ricardo Rodríguez

Leagues
  
J2 League, J1 League

Nickname(s)
  
Vortis

Owner
  
Otsuka Pharmaceutical

Arena/Stadium
  
Pocarisweat Stadium

Founded
  
1955

Tokushima Vortis JLeague Club Profile Tokushima Vortis Goalcom

Ground
  
Naruto Athletic Stadium Naruto, Tokushima

Location
  
Tokushima, Tokushima Prefecture, Japan

CEO
  
Kazuhiro Kishida (27 Feb 2015–)

Profiles

Tokushima Vortis (徳島ヴォルティス, Tokushima Vorutisu) is a Japanese professional football club, currently playing in the J2 League. The team is located in Tokushima, Tokushima Prefecture. Their home stadium is Naruto Athletic Stadium, in Naruto, Tokushima.

Contents

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).

Tokushima Vortis httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen886Tok

History

Tokushima Vortis soccershop Rakuten Global Market Book by 2015 Tokushima vortis

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.

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.

Tokushima Vortis Japan Tokushima Vortis Results fixtures squad statistics

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.

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.

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 J. League Division 3 in 2014, the distinction will be taken over by Blaublitz Akita.

Record as J. League member

Key
  • Tms. = Number of teams
  • Pos. = Position in league
  • Attendance/G = Average league attendance
  • Source: J. League Data Site
  • Honours

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

    Current players

    As of 4 February 2017.

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

    Out on loan

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

    Managers

  • Kunio Yamade 1988–1992
  • Hajime Ishii 1993–1995
  • Edinho 1996–1998
  • Shinji Tanaka 1999–2006
  • Yutaka Azuma 2006
  • Masataka Imai 2007
  • Naohiko Minobe 2008–2011
  • Shinji Kobayashi 2012–2015
  • Hiroaki Nagashima 2016
  • Ricardo Rodríguez 2017–
  • References

    Tokushima Vortis Wikipedia


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