2013 Japan Football League
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1st JFL title
1st D3 title
| Season | 2013 |
|---|---|
| Champions | Nagano Parceiro 1st JFL title 1st D3 title |
| Promoted | Kamatamare Sanuki |
| Matches played | 306 |
| Goals scored | 784 (2.56 per match) |
| Top goalscorer | Yuji Unozawa (20 goals) |
| Highest attendance | 10,116 F.C. Ryukyu vs Uva |
| Lowest attendance | 103 Printing vs Uva |
| Average attendance | 1,322 |
← 2012 | |
The 2013 Japan Football League (Japanese: 第15回日本フットボールリーグ, Hepburn: Dai Jūgo-kai Nihon Futtobōru Rīgu) was the 17th season of the third tier of the Japanese football, and the 15th season since the establishment of Japan Football League. It started on 10 March and finished on 24 November.
Due to unfortunate withdrawal of Arte Takasaki, the previous season has featured only 17 teams, but for 2013 the league has brought the number of teams back to 18. After having another team (Sagawa Shiga) ceasing its operations and withdrawing after the season, the league has welcomed into its ranks two newcomers, SC Sagamihara and Fukushima United. Both clubs looked forward to eventual J. League promotion, with Sagamihara holding the associate membership status, and Fukushima having applied for it in 2007, though unsuccessfully.
Last season has for the first time ever featured direct exchange of teams between JFL and J. League. JFL champions and J. League associate members V-Varen Nagasaki were promoted at the expense of Machida Zelvia, who returned to JFL after only a single season in J2.
Tochigi Uva were on the brink of relegation, as their play-off series against Norbritz Hokkaido was tied after two rounds. It was decided in penalty shootout, which Tochigi club has won 4–1 and retained their place in the JFL.
On 26 February Blaublitz Akita and Zweigen Kanazawa were granted J. League associate membership status,[1] bringing the number of such clubs to six, an all-time high mark for the league. On 20 August YSCC Yokohama's application was also granted by J. League,[2] further increasing associate members count to seven. It raised again to 10 members after another J. League board session on 16 September, when applications of Fukushima United, FC Ryukyu and Fujieda MYFC were approved.[3]
| Club name | Home town | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Blaublitz Akita | All cities/towns in Akita | J. League associate member |
| Fukushima United | Fukushima, Fukushima | Promoted from Tohoku league D1 in 2012. J.League associate member |
| Honda FC | Hamamatsu, Shizuoka | |
| Honda Lock | Miyazaki, Miyazaki | |
| Hoyo Oita | Ōita, Ōita | |
| Kamatamare Sanuki | All cities/towns in Kagawa | J. League associate member |
| MIO Biwako Shiga | Kusatsu, Shiga | |
| Fujieda MYFC | Fujieda, Shizuoka | J.League associate member |
| Nagano Parceiro | Nagano, Nagano | J. League associate member |
| SP Kyoto | Mukō, Kyoto | |
| FC Ryukyu | All cities/towns in Okinawa | J.League associate member |
| SC Sagamihara | Sagamihara, Kanagawa | Promoted from Kantō league D1 in 2012. J. League associate member |
| Sony Sendai | Tagajō, Miyagi | |
| Tochigi Uva | Tochigi, Tochigi | |
| Yokogawa Musashino | Musashino, Tokyo | |
| YSCC Yokohama | Yokohama, Kanagawa | J.League associate member |
| Machida Zelvia | Machida, Tokyo | Relegated from J2 in 2012, eligible for J2 promotion |
| Zweigen Kanazawa | Kanazawa, Ishikawa | J. League associate member |
Change in rules
- Promotion to J. League Division 2
- As in the previous year, the league winner was promoted to J. League Division 2 (J2) if it met promotion criteria, and the runner-up also promoted to J2 if it met the criteria and won a home-and-away play-off against a J2 club.
- As the establishment of J3 League, if a playoff took place, the losing team would go to J3, but not staying to JFL.
- Relegation to regional leagues
- As the establishment of J3 League leads to a number of teams' transfer in next year, only promotion of teams from regional leagues took place, not relegation.[4]
Table
Results
Top scorers
| Rank | Scorer | Club | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Nagano Parceiro | 20 | |
| 2 | Kamatamare Sanuki | 15 | |
| Machida Zelvia | 15 | ||
| 4 | Zweigen Kanazawa | 13 | |
| SC Sagamihara | 13 | ||
| Hoyo Oita | 13 | ||
| FC Ryukyu | 13 | ||
| 8 | FC Ryukyu | 12 | |
| SC Sagamihara | 12 | ||
| Sony Sendai | 12 | ||
Updated to games played on 24 November 2013
Source: Japan Football League
Attendances
| Pos | Team | Total | High | Low | Average | Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Machida Zelvia | 53,956 | 6,379 | 2,317 | 3,174 | −12.5%† |
| 2 | Kamatamare Sanuki | 53,129 | 8,968 | 1,037 | 3,125 | +33.3% |
| 3 | Nagano Parceiro | 39,768 | 3,213 | 1,418 | 2,339 | −16.8% |
| 4 | FC Ryukyu | 35,180 | 10,116 | 846 | 2,069 | −4.4% |
| 5 | Zweigen Kanazawa | 35,074 | 8,112 | 699 | 2,063 | −10.8% |
| 6 | SC Sagamihara | 32,705 | 4,893 | 513 | 1,924 | n/a‡ |
| 7 | Blaublitz Akita | 30,057 | 4,889 | 1,011 | 1,768 | +55.6% |
| 8 | Fukushima United | 17,464 | 2,195 | 339 | 1,027 | −19.2%‡ |
| 9 | Fujieda MYFC | 16,209 | 1,563 | 565 | 953 | +79.1% |
| 10 | YSCC | 13,310 | 1,889 | 355 | 783 | +10.3% |
| 11 | Yokogawa Musashino | 13,085 | 2,257 | 298 | 770 | +7.7% |
| 12 | Honda FC | 12,824 | 1,238 | 354 | 754 | −8.4% |
| 13 | Sony Sendai | 10,929 | 951 | 334 | 643 | +9.4% |
| 14 | Tochigi Uva | 10,276 | 1,679 | 239 | 604 | +23.0% |
| 15 | MIO Biwako Shiga | 9,233 | 1,091 | 224 | 543 | −14.8% |
| 16 | Honda Lock | 8,727 | 1,153 | 283 | 513 | −5.9% |
| 17 | SP Kyoto | 6,982 | 1,004 | 103 | 405 | +3.8% |
| 18 | Hoyo Oita | 5,654 | 641 | 218 | 333 | −30.5% |
| League total | 404,472 | 10,116 | 103 | 1,322 | +6.6% |
Updated to games played on 24 November 2013
Source: Japan Football League: first round, second round
Notes:
† Team played previous season in J2
‡ Team played previous season in Regional Leagues.