2015 J3 League
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| Season | 2015 |
|---|---|
| Champions | Renofa Yamaguchi |
| Promoted | Renofa YamaguchiMachida Zelvia |
| Matches | 234 |
| Goals | 586 (2.5 per match) |
| Top goalscorer | Kazuhito Kishida (32 goals) |
| Highest attendance | 9,040(Sagamihara vs YSCC Yokohama, 25 October) |
| Lowest attendance | 461(YSCC Yokohama vs Tottori, 13 November) |
| Average attendance | 2,432 |
← 2014 2016 → | |
The 2015 Meiji Yasuda J3 League (2015 明治安田生命J3リーグ) was the 19th season of the third tier in Japanese football, and the 2nd season of the professional J3 League.
To participate, a club must have held an associate membership, or have submitted an application before 30 June 2014, and then passed an inspection to obtain a participation license issued by J.League Council. J.League has confirmed the following clubs participating in the 2015 J3 season:
| Club name | Home town | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Blaublitz Akita | All cities/towns in Akita | |
| Fukushima United | Fukushima | |
| Gainare Tottori | All cities/towns in Tottori | Withdrew a J2 license due to financial reasons.[1] |
| Grulla Morioka | Morioka, Iwate | |
| Kataller Toyama | All cities/towns in Toyama | Relegated from 2014 J2, eligible for J2 promotion |
| Fujieda MYFC | Fujieda, Shizuoka | |
| Nagano Parceiro | Nagano | Eligible for J2 promotion |
| FC Ryukyu | All cities/towns in Okinawa | |
| SC Sagamihara | Sagamihara, Kanagawa | |
| YSCC Yokohama | Yokohama, Kanagawa | |
| Machida Zelvia | Machida, Tokyo | Eligible for J2 promotion |
| Renofa Yamaguchi | Yamaguchi | Promoted from 2014 JFL, eligible for J2 promotion |
| J.League U-22 Selection | n/a | A special team, composed of best J1 and J2 youngsters to prepare them for the 2016 Olympics. Folded by the JFA after the season.[2] |
Competition rules
The league is played in three rounds, each team playing a total of 36 matches. J.League U-22 Selection played all their matches on the road.[3]
Each team must have at least 3 players holding professional contracts. Two foreign players are allowed per team, plus 1 more from the ASEAN partner country of J. League. The matchday roster will consist of 16 players, and up to 5 substitutes will be allowed in a game.[3]
Promotion and relegation
Rules for promotion to J2 are largely similar to those of Japan Football League in the recent seasons: to be promoted, a club must hold a J2 license and finish in top 2 of the league. The U-22 team is not eligible for promotion regardless of their final position. The champions will be promoted directly, in exchange with 22nd-placed J2 club, and the runners-up will participate in the playoffs with 21st J2 club. If either or both top 2 finishers are ineligible for promotion, the playoffs and/or direct exchange will not be held in accordance to the exact positions of promotion-eligible clubs.[3]
No relegation to JFL is planned. Up to 2 clubs may be promoted if they are licensed by J. League for J3 participation and finish in top 4 of JFL.
Personnel and kits
Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
| Team | Manager1 | Captain | Kit manufacturer | Shirt sponsor |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blaublitz Akita | Shuichi Mase | Toshio Shimakawa | Athleta | TDK |
| Fukushima United | Keisuke Kurihara | Kazuto Ishido | Hummel | TOHO BANK |
| Gainare Tottori | Masanobu Matsunami | Ryosuke Kawanabe | Hummel | Tottori Gas Co. |
| Grulla Morioka | Naoki Naruo | Kenta Matsuda | SVOLME | PalcoHome |
| Kataller Toyama | Yasuyuki Kishino | Taijiro Mori | Goldwin | YKK |
| Fujieda MYFC | Atsuto Oishi | Hiroki Narabayashi | Razzoli | Chang |
| Nagano Parceiro | Naohiko Minobe | Yuji Unozawa | DUELO | Hokto |
| Renofa Yamaguchi | Nobuhiro Ueno | Kiyohiro Hirabayashi | FINTA | upr |
| FC Ryukyu | Norihiro Satsukawa | Satoshi Nakayama | mitre | GOO |
| SC Sagamihara | Keiju Karashima | Naohiro Takahara | gol. | Gion |
| YSCC Yokohama | Kenji Arima | Akio Yoshida | SVOLME | Kaspersky |
| Machida Zelvia | Naoki Soma | Ri Han-jae | SVOLME | Eagle Kenso |
| J.League U-22 Selection | Tsutomu Takahata | Various | Adidas | None |
Managerial changes
| Team | Outgoing manager | Date of separation | Manner of departure | Incoming manager | Date of announcement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nagano Parceiro | 5 August | Resigned on health issues[4] | 5 August | ||
| Kataller Toyama | 27 August | Mutual consent[5] | 27 August | ||
| SC Sagamihara | 2 November | Resigned[6] | 2 November | ||
Foreign players
| Club | Player 1 | Player 2 | Player 3 | Asian player | Non-visa foreign | Type-C contract |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blaublitz Akita | ||||||
| Fukushima United | ||||||
| Gainare Tottori | ||||||
| Grulla Morioka | ||||||
| Kataller Toyama | ||||||
| Fujieda MYFC | ||||||
| Nagano Parceiro | ||||||
| Renofa Yamaguchi | ||||||
| FC Ryukyu | ||||||
| SC Sagamihara | ||||||
| YSCC Yokohama | None | |||||
| Machida Zelvia | ||||||
| J.League U-22 Selection1 | N/A | |||||
Note:
^1 A special team, composed of best J1 and J2 youngsters to prepare them for the 2016 Olympics
League table
Results
Rounds 1–13
Rounds 14–26
Rounds 27–39
Promotion/relegation playoffs
2015 J2/J3 Play-Offs (2015 J2・J3入れ替え戦)
| Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oita Trinita | 1–3 | Machida Zelvia | 1–2 | 0-1 |
| Machida Zelvia | 2–1 | Oita Trinita |
|---|---|---|
| K. Suzuki |
Report | Daniel |
Machida Zelvia was promoted to J2 League.
Oita Trinita was relegated to J3 League.