1996 J.League

(Redirected from J. League 1996)

The 1996 J.League season was the fourth season since the establishment of the J.League. The season began on March 16 and ended on November 9.

J.League
Season1996
ChampionsKashima Antlers
1st J.League title
Asian Club ChampionshipKashima Antlers
Matches played240
Goals scored778 (3.24 per match)
Top goalscorerKazuyoshi Miura (23 goals)
Highest attendance50,974 - Reds vs. Sanga (May 15)
Lowest attendance4,491 - Sanfrecce vs. Avispa (November 6)
Average attendance13,353
1995
1997

Clubs

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The following sixteen clubs participated in J.League during the 1996 season. Of these clubs, Kyoto Purple Sanga, and Avispa Fukuoka were newly promoted teams from Japan Football League.

Personnel

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Club Head coach1
Avispa Fukuoka   Hidehiko Shimizu
Bellmare Hiratsuka   Shigeharu Ueki
Cerezo Osaka   Hiroshi Sowa
Gamba Osaka   Josip Kuže
JEF United Ichihara   Yasuhiko Okudera
Júbilo Iwata   Hans Ooft
Kashima Antlers   João Carlos
Kashiwa Reysol   Nicanor de Carvalho
Kyoto Purple Sanga   George Yonashiro
Nagoya Grampus Eight   José Costa
Sanfrecce Hiroshima   Wim Jansen
Shimizu S-Pulse   Osvaldo Ardiles
Urawa Red Diamonds   Holger Osieck
Verdy Kawasaki   Emerson Leão
Yokohama Flügels   Otacílio Gonçalves
Yokohama Marinos   Hiroshi Hayano

1 Subject to change during the season.

Foreign players

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Club Player 1 Player 2 Player 3 Player 4 Player 5 Non-visa foreign Former players
Avispa Fukuoka   Carlos Mayor   Hugo Maradona   Pedro Troglio   Richart Báez
Bellmare Hiratsuka   Almir   Betinho   Luiz   Paulinho McLaren   Simão
Cerezo Osaka   Francisco Narcizio   Gilmar   Guga   Marquinhos   Sérgio Manoel
Gamba Osaka   Mladen Mladenović   Vjekoslav Škrinjar   Boban Babunski   Hans Gillhaus   Akhrik Tsveiba   Oleh Protasov
JEF United Ichihara   Ivan Hašek   Nenad Maslovar   Wynton Rufer   Peter Bosz   Sandro
Júbilo Iwata   Dunga   Salvatore Schillaci   Gerald Vanenburg   Dido Havenaar
Kashima Antlers   Carlos Mozer   Jorginho   Mazinho   Rodrigo Carbone   Rodrigo Mendes   Leonardo
Kashiwa Reysol   Antônio Carlos Zago   Careca   Edílson   Valdir   Wagner
Kyoto Purple Sanga   Edmílson Matias   José Alexandre   Luiz Carlos   Raudnei   Sérgio Soares   Baltazar
  Flávio Campos
Nagoya Grampus Eight   Alexandre Torres   Dragan Stojković   Donald-Olivier Sié   Franck Durix
  Tomasz Frankowski
Sanfrecce Hiroshima   Antônio Carlos Santos   Pieter Huistra   Noh Jung-yoon
Shimizu S-Pulse   Fernando Oliva   Santos   Daniele Massaro   Ademir Santos   Toninho
Urawa Red Diamonds   Brian Steen Nielsen   Basile Boli   Guido Buchwald   Uwe Bein
Verdy Kawasaki   Argel Fuchs   Bismarck   Magrão   Caíco
  Donizete Pantera
Yokohama Flügels   César Sampaio   Denilson   Evair   Zinho
Yokohama Marinos   Alberto Acosta   Darío Figueroa   David Bisconti   Gustavo Zapata
  Néstor Gorosito

Format

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In the 1996 season, the league abolished the split-season format and followed a single-season format; sixteen clubs played in double round-robin format, a total of 30 games per club. The games went to golden-goal extra time and penalties if needed after regulation. A club received 3 points for any win, 1 point for PK loss, and 0 pts 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 was declared season champion.

Changes in competition format
  • Number of competing clubs increased from 14 to 16
  • Followed single-season format instead of split-season format
  • Suntory Final Series was held this year, instead of Suntory Championship
  • Number of games per club reduced to 30 from 52 games per season

Final standings

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Pos Team Pld W PKL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Kashima Antlers 30 21 3 6 61 34 +27 66 1996 J.League Champions
Qualifies to 1996 Suntory Cup*, 1997/98 ACC, and 1997 Super Cup
2   Nagoya Grampus Eight 30 21 0 9 63 39 +24 63 Qualifies to 1996 Suntory Cup*
3   Yokohama Flügels 30 21 0 9 58 44 +14 63
4   Júbilo Iwata 30 20 2 8 53 38 +15 62
5   Kashiwa Reysol 30 20 0 10 67 52 +15 60
6   Urawa Red Diamonds 30 19 2 9 51 31 +20 59
7   Verdy Kawasaki 30 19 0 11 68 42 +26 57
8   Yokohama Marinos 30 14 0 16 39 40 −1 42
9   JEF United Ichihara 30 13 1 16 45 47 −2 40
10   Shimizu S-Pulse 30 12 1 17 50 60 −10 37
11   Bellmare Hiratsuka 30 12 0 18 47 58 −11 36
12   Gamba Osaka 30 11 0 19 38 59 −21 33
13   Cerezo Osaka 30 10 0 20 38 56 −18 30
14   Sanfrecce Hiroshima 30 10 0 20 36 60 −24 30
15   Avispa Fukuoka 30 9 2 19 42 64 −22 29
16   Kyoto Purple Sanga 30 8 0 22 22 54 −32 24
Source: [citation needed]
Rules for classification: Win = 3 pts; P.K. loss = 1 pt; Regulation, E.T. loss = 0 pts

Top scorers

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Rank Scorer Club Goals
1   Kazuyoshi Miura Verdy Kawasaki 23
2   Edílson Kashiwa Reysol 21
3   Evair Yokohama Flügels 20
4   Salvatore Schillaci Júbilo Iwata 15
5   Magrão Verdy Kawasaki 13
6   Ivan Hašek JEF United Ichihara 12
  Yoshiyuki Hasegawa Kashima Antlers
8   Mazinho Kashima Antlers 11
  Mladen Mladenović Gamba Osaka
  Dragan Stojković Nagoya Grampus Eight
  Koji Noguchi Bellmare Hiratsuka
  Masayuki Okano Urawa Red Diamonds
  Takuya Takagi Sanfrecce Hiroshima
  Yasuyuki Moriyama Nagoya Grampus Eight

Awards

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Individual awards

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Award Recipient Club
Most Valuable Player   Jorginho Kashima Antlers
Rookie of the Year   Toshihide Saito Shimizu S-Pulse
Manager of the Year   Nicanor Kashiwa Reysol
Top Scorer   Kazuyoshi Miura Verdy Kawasaki

Best Eleven

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Pos Footballer Club Nationality
GK Seigo Narazaki Yokohama Flügels   Japan
DF Guido Buchwald Urawa Red Diamonds   Germany
DF Masami Ihara Yokohama Marinos   Japan
DF Naoki Soma Kashima Antlers   Japan
MF Jorginho Kashima Antlers   Brazil
MF Hiroshi Nanami Júbilo Iwata   Japan
MF Masakiyo Maezono Yokohama Flügels   Japan
MF Motohiro Yamaguchi Yokohama Flügels   Japan
FW Dragan Stojković Nagoya Grampus Eight   Yugoslavia
FW Kazuyoshi Miura Verdy Kawasaki   Japan
FW Masayuki Okano Urawa Red Diamonds   Japan

See also

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