1995 J.League

(Redirected from J. League 1995)

The J.League 1995 season was the third season of the J.League. The league fixture began on March 18 and ended in 25 November. The Suntory Championship '95 took place on November 30 and December 6.

J.League
Season1995
ChampionsYokohama Marinos
1st J.League title
3rd Japanese title
Asian Club ChampionshipYokohama Marinos
Matches played364
Goals scored1,214 (3.34 per match)
Top goalscorerMasahiro Fukuda (32 goals)
Highest attendance56,652 - Reds vs. Verdy (May 3)
Lowest attendance7,012 - Sanfrecce vs. Grampus (April 12)
Average attendance16,922
1994
1996

Clubs

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Fourteen clubs participated in J.League during 1995 season. Of these clubs, Kashiwa Reysol and Cerezo Osaka were newly promoted teams from Japan Football League.

Club name Hometown Stadium
(majority games)
Capacity Notes Head coach
Bellmare Hiratsuka Hiratsuka, Kanagawa Hiratsuka Stadium 15,380   Mitsuru Komaeda
Cerezo Osaka Osaka Nagai Stadium 47,816 Promoted   Paulo Emilio
Gamba Osaka Osaka, Osaka Osaka Expo '70 Stadium 21,000   Sigfried Held
JEF United Ichihara Chiba, Chiba Ichihara Seaside Stadium 14,051   Eijun Kiyokumo
Júbilo Iwata Iwata, Shizuoka Júbilo Iwata Stadium 15,165   Hans Ooft
Kashima Antlers Kashima, Ibaraki Kashima Soccer Stadium 37,638   Edu Coimbra
Kashiwa Reysol Kashiwa Hitachi Kashiwa Stadium 15,349 Promoted   Antoninho
Nagoya Grampus Eight Nagoya, Aichi Paloma Mizuho Rugby Stadium 11,900   Arsène Wenger
Sanfrecce Hiroshima Hiroshima, Hiroshima Hiroshima General Ground Main Stadium 13,800   Wim Jansen
Shimizu S-Pulse Shimizu-ku, Shizuoka, Shizuoka Prefecture Nihondaira Sports Stadium 20,248   Masakatsu Miyamoto
Urawa Red Diamonds Saitama, Greater Tokyo Area Urawa Komaba Stadium 21,500   Holger Osieck
Verdy Kawasaki Kawasaki, Kanagawa Todoroki Athletics Stadium 26,232   Nelsinho Baptista
Yokohama Flügels Yokohama Yokohama Mitsuzawa Stadium 15,454   Antônio Silva
Yokohama Marinos Yokohama Yokohama Mitsuzawa Stadium 15,454   Hiroshi Hayano

Foreign players

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Club Player 1 Player 2 Player 3 Player 4 Player 5 Player 6 Non-visa foreign Former players
Bellmare Hiratsuka   Betinho   Edson   Émerson   Júnior   Simão   Almir
Cerezo Osaka   Bernardo   Gilmar   Marquinhos   Toninho Cecílio   Jorge Dely Valdés
Gamba Osaka   Sergei Aleinikov   Vjekoslav Škrinjar   Hans Gillhaus   Akhrik Tsveiba   Oleh Protasov
JEF United Ichihara   Goran Vasilijević   Nenad Maslovar   Wynton Rufer   Sandro
  Shin Che-bon
Júbilo Iwata   Dunga   Salvatore Schillaci   André Paus   Gerald Vanenburg   Dido Havenaar
  Kim Jong-song
Kashima Antlers   Carlos Mozer   Jorginho   Leonardo   Mazinho   Santos
Kashiwa Reysol   Bentinho   Careca   Nelsinho   Valdir   Wolnei Caio   Müller
Nagoya Grampus Eight   Alexandre Torres   Dragan Stojković   Franck Durix   Gérald Passi
Sanfrecce Hiroshima   Ivan Hašek   Pieter Huistra   Noh Jung-yoon   Andrey   John van Loen
  Tore Pedersen
Shimizu S-Pulse   Dias   Marcelo Miguel   Marco Aurélio   Santos   Sidmar   Daniele Massaro   Ademir Santos   Ronaldão
Urawa Red Diamonds   Toninho   Guido Buchwald   Michael Rummenigge   Uwe Bein   Edwin Uehara
  Cho Kwi-jae
  Gwak Kyung-keun
Verdy Kawasaki   Alcindo   Bismarck   Embu   Pereira
Yokohama Flügels   César Sampaio   Evair   Rodrigo Batata   Zinho
Yokohama Marinos   David Bisconti   Gustavo Zapata   Pedro Massacessi   Ramón Medina Bello   Ramón Díaz

Format

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In the 1995 season, the league followed split-season format, and each halves (or stages) were known as Suntory Series and NICOS Series for sponsorship purposes. In each series, fourteen clubs played in double round-robin format, a total of 26 games per club (per series). The games went to golden-goal extra time and penalties if needed after regulation. The points system is introduced for the first time and a club received 3pts for any win, 1pts for PK loss, and 0pts for regulation or extra time loss. The clubs were ranked by points and tie breakers are, in the following order:

  • Goal differential
  • Goals scored
  • Head-to-head results
  • Extra match or a coin toss

The club that finished at the top of the table is declared stage champion and qualifies for the Suntory Championship. The first stage winner, hosts the first leg in the championship series. If the same club win both stages, the runners-up of each stages plays against each other and the winners challenges the stage winner at the championship game.

Changes in Competition Format
  • Number of competing clubs increased from 12 to 14
  • Number of games per club in a series increased from 22 to 26 games and from 44 to 52 games per season
  • Points system were introduced
  • Due to fixture congestion, Yamazaki Nabisco Cup was cancelled that year

Standings

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Suntory Series (1st Stage) standings

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Pos Team Pld W PKL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Yokohama Marinos 26 17 1 8 47 38 +9 52 1995 Suntory Series Champions
Qualified to Suntory Championship '95
2   Verdy Kawasaki 26 16 1 9 46 36 +10 49
3   Urawa Red Diamonds 26 15 3 8 41 34 +7 48
4   Nagoya Grampus Eight 26 15 1 10 50 48 +2 46
5   Júbilo Iwata 26 15 0 11 48 40 +8 45
6   JEF United Ichihara 26 14 3 9 48 40 +8 45
7   Bellmare Hiratsuka 26 14 1 11 60 47 +13 43
8   Kashima Antlers 26 14 0 12 38 38 0 42
9   Cerezo Osaka 26 13 2 11 43 44 −1 41
10   Sanfrecce Hiroshima 26 13 0 13 38 33 +5 39
11   Gamba Osaka 26 10 1 15 49 54 −5 31
12   Shimizu S-Pulse 26 10 0 16 35 63 −28 30
13   Yokohama Flügels 26 9 1 16 42 54 −12 28
14   Kashiwa Reysol 26 7 1 18 30 46 −16 22
Source: [citation needed]
Rules for classification: Win = 3pts; P.K. loss = 1pt; Regulation, E.T. loss = 0pts

NICOS Series (2nd stage) standings

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Pos Team Pld W PKL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Verdy Kawasaki 26 19 2 5 60 26 +34 59 1995 NICOS Series Champions
Qualified to Suntory Championship '95
2 Nagoya Grampus Eight 26 17 0 9 49 34 +15 51
3 Yokohama Marinos 26 15 1 10 39 37 +2 46
4 Shimizu S-Pulse 26 15 0 11 42 34 +8 45
5 Kashiwa Reysol 26 14 1 11 57 54 +3 43
6 Kashima Antlers 26 14 1 11 44 41 +3 43
7 JEF United Ichihara 26 14 1 11 49 51 −2 43
8 Urawa Red Diamonds 26 14 0 12 44 38 +6 42
9 Júbilo Iwata 26 13 1 12 40 37 +3 40
10 Cerezo Osaka 26 12 1 13 36 39 −3 37
11 Yokohama Flügels 26 11 1 14 36 57 −21 34
12 Sanfrecce Hiroshima 26 9 1 16 31 43 −12 28
13 Gamba Osaka 26 8 2 16 38 53 −15 26
14 Bellmare Hiratsuka 26 7 1 18 34 55 −21 22
Source: [citation needed]
Rules for classification: Win = 3pts; P.K. loss = 1pt; Regulation, E.T. loss = 0pts

1995 Suntory Championship

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Yokohama Marinos1–0Verdy Kawasaki
Bisconti   49'
Attendance: 47,631

Verdy Kawasaki0–1Yokohama Marinos
Ihara   29'
Attendance: 48,271

Yokohama Marinos won the series 2–0 on aggregate.

Top scorers

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Rank Scorer Club Goals
1   Masahiro Fukuda Urawa Red Diamonds 32
2   Salvatore Schillaci Júbilo Iwata 31
3   David Bisconti Yokohama Marinos 27
4   Betinho Bellmare Hiratsuka 25
5   Kazuyoshi Miura Verdy Kawasaki 23
  Koji Noguchi Bellmare Hiratsuka
7   Ramón Medina Bello Yokohama Marinos 21
  Wynton Rufer JEF United Ichihara
9   Nobuhiro Takeda Verdy Kawasaki 20
  Hans Gillhaus Gamba Osaka

Honours

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Competition Champion Runner-Up 3rd Place
League competition
J.League Suntory Series Yokohama Marinos Verdy Kawasaki Urawa Red Diamonds
J.League NICOS Series Verdy Kawasaki Nagoya Grampus Eight Yokohama Marinos
Suntory Championship Yokohama Marinos Verdy Kawasaki n/a
Cup tournaments
Emperor's Cup Nagoya Grampus Eight Sanfrecce Hiroshima n/a
Nabisco Cup Not held due to fixture congestion
XEROX Super Cup Verdy Kawasaki Bellmare Hiratsuka n/a

Awards

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Individual awards

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Award Recipient Club
Most Valuable Player   Dragan Stojković Nagoya Grampus Eight
Rookie of the Year   Yoshikatsu Kawaguchi Yokohama Marinos
Manager of the Year   Arsène Wenger Nagoya Grampus Eight
Top Scorer   Masahiro Fukuda Urawa Red Diamonds

Best Eleven

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Position Footballer Club Nationality
GK Shinkichi Kikuchi Verdy Kawasaki   Japan
DF Guido Buchwald Urawa Red Diamonds   Germany
DF Masami Ihara Yokohama Marinos   Japan
DF Masaharu Suzuki Yokohama Marinos   Japan
DF Naoki Soma Kashima Antlers   Japan
MF Bismarck Verdy Kawasaki   Brazil
MF Tetsuji Hashiratani Verdy Kawasaki   Japan
FW Masahiro Fukuda Urawa Red Diamonds   Japan
FW Kazuyoshi Miura Verdy Kawasaki   Japan
FW Hiroaki Morishima Cerezo Osaka   Japan
FW Dragan Stojković Nagoya Grampus Eight   Yugoslavia
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