J3 League

(Redirected from J.League Division 3)

J3 League (Japanese: J3リーグ, Hepburn: J3 Rīgu) or simply J3 is the third division of Japan Professional Football League (日本プロサッカーリーグ, Nihon Puro Sakkā Rīgu). It was established in 2013 as the third-tier professional association football league in Japan under the organization of J.League. The league is known as the Meiji Yasuda J3 League (Japanese: 明治安田J3リーグ) for sponsorship reasons.[2]

J3 League
Organising bodyJ.League
Founded2013; 11 years ago (2013)
CountryJapan
ConfederationAFC
Number of teams20
Level on pyramid3
Promotion toJ2 League
Relegation toJapan Football League (since 2023)
Domestic cup(s)Emperor's Cup
Current championsEhime FC (1st title)
(2023)
Most championshipsBlaublitz Akita (2 titles)
TV partnersDAZN
WebsiteOfficial website (in English)
Current: 2024 J3 League

The third-tier nationwide league is a relatively recent development in Japanese football with a first attempt made in 1992 (second division of the old JFL), though it only lasted for two seasons. In 1999, following the establishment of J2 League, a new Japan Football League was created to comprise the third tier and lower divisions. After the introduction of J3, the JFL was demoted to the fourth-tier nationwide league, for the first time in history of Japanese football.

History of Japanese third-tier football

Amateur era (until 2013)

A national third tier of Japanese association football was first established along with its professionalization in 1992, when the newly created Japan Football League kicked off with two tiers below the professional J. League. Among the 10 original clubs of the third tier included the forerunners to Kyoto Sanga FC, Ventforet Kofu, Omiya Ardija, Avispa Fukuoka and Vissel Kobe (the latter two being located in different regions from their J. League successors). But after a number of clubs were lost for various reasons – some were promoted to J.League and the others folded – the league contracted the second division in 1994 and continued with the single second-tier division.

The third tier football was reintroduced in 1999 upon creation of fully professional J2. The old JFL was dissolved but a new Japan Football League was formed the same year in order to establish a nationwide top-tier amateur league. But despite its officially amateur status the league quickly became de facto semi-professional, serving as the cradle of the future J. League members. Since the establishment of associate membership system in 2006 the number of professional clubs holding or actively seeking for this status has grown steadily and reached its peak in 2013 season when 6 full members and 2 former candidates made up to almost half of the league's 18 teams. Through the course of the season this number grew even bigger, to 10 full associate members that formed the core of J3.

Professionalization and establishment (2013)

Close to the end of 2012 football season Japanese media began to spread rumors[3][4] about the upcoming professional third-tier league, referred to as either "J3" or "J.Challenge League". Most of the sources agreed that the new league will feature around 10–12 clubs, most of which will be associate members. The league would also provide more relaxed licensing criteria in comparison to J2 – e.g. the stadium seating capacity of just 3,000 with no mandatory floodlighting.[5]

After the discussion on J1-J2 Joint Committee on 16 January 2013, all J.League clubs agreed in principle with an establishment of the new league starting 2014.[6] This decision was formally put into force by J.League Council in a 26 February executive meeting.[7] The league was planned to launch with 10 teams, but another session of J.League Council in July decided that inaugural season of J3 will feature 12 teams.[8]

To participate, a club must have held an associate membership, or have submitted an application before 30 June 2013, and then passed an inspection to obtain a participation licence issued by J.League Council.[9] On 19 November, J.League confirmed the following clubs to participate in the inaugural J3 season:[10]

Future plans

The league has not provided a clear expansion timeline yet but it was most likely that J3 continued to accommodate new teams after its inaugural season. The following is a list of clubs that may get promoted to J.League in the near future:[12]

Other teams have applied for the 100 Year plan status or a J3 license but were denied. Most of these clubs continue to aim for J3 as their ultimate goal.

  • None

Five teams, one declined to decide on a J3 license, one withdrew its own, two their 100 Year Plan status, formerly associate membership, and another was deprived of both:

Some sources claimed that J3 was intended to reach up to 60 clubs in the future, being split into three regionalized divisions running in parallel.[13]

At the end of January 2023, the J.League removed its 100 Year Plan status from application requirements for J3 licenses as part of revisions to the division's club licensing regulations.[14]

Timetable

YearImportant eventsNo. J3
clubs
Prom.
slots
Rel.
slots
2014
  • The J.League adopts three divisions, as the following clubs join Division 3:
  • A J.League U-22 Selection is also included, composed of the best J1 and J2 youngsters to prepare them for the 2016 Olympics.
  • The Japan Football League becomes the nationwide fourth tier, and first tier for amateur clubs.
  • Zweigen Kanazawa becomes the first J3 champions and get promoted to J2. Nagano Parceiro lost the promotion/relegation Series against the J2 21st placed team.
11+11.50
2015
  • Kataller Toyama is relegated from J2.
  • Renofa Yamaguchi is promoted from Japan Football League (JFL) and in its first J3 season becomes champions and got promoted to J2.
  • FC Machida Zelvia is also promoted as it finished in 2nd place and won the promotion/relegation Series against newly relegated Oita Trinita, the first former J1 team to play in J3.
12+1
2016
  • Tochigi SC and Oita Trinita are relegated from J2.
  • Kagoshima United FC is promoted from JFL.
  • J. League U-22 Selection disbanded. Cerezo Osaka, Gamba Osaka and FC Tokyo introduced U-23 reserve teams to reach 16 teams and change the league to a two-round system.
13+3
2017
  • Giravanz Kitakyushu is relegated from J2.
  • Azul Claro Numazu is promoted from JFL.
  • Promotion/relegation series abolished; runner-up promoted automatically.
14+32
2018
  • Roasso Kumamoto and Kamatamare Sanuki are relegated from J2.
  • Vanraure Hachinohe is promoted from JFL.
15+3
2019
  • Kagoshima United and FC Gifu are relegated from J2.
  • FC Imabari is promoted from JFL.
16+3
2020
  • FC Tokyo U-23 withdraws from J3. Cerezo and Gamba Osaka dissolve their U-23s after the season.
  • This was the last season to feature U-23 teams.
  • Tegevajaro Miyazaki is promoted from JFL.
16+2
2021
  • SC Sagamihara, Ehime FC, Giravanz Kitakyushu, and Matsumoto Yamaga are relegated from J2.
  • Iwaki FC is promoted from JFL.
15
2022
  • Iwaki FC is promoted from Japan Football League (JFL) and in its first J3 season becomes champions and got promoted to J2.
  • FC Ryukyu and Iwate Grulla Morioka are relegated from J2.
  • Nara Club and FC Osaka are promoted from JFL.
18
2023
  • Omiya Ardija and Zweigen Kanazawa are relegated from J2
  • This season features J3–JFL playoffs; relegation from the J3 League to the JFL is introduced.
200–2
2024
  • There will be promotion playoffs for the J3 with teams from 3rd to 6th place.
3

Crest

On 20 December 2022, the J3 League logo colour was changed to blue for the 2023 season prior to the 10th anniversary of Japan's third-tier professional league below J1 and J2, whose respective logo colours are red and green.[15]

History crest

2024 season

League format

For this season, the league is played in two rounds (home and away), each team playing a total of 38 matches.[16]

Each team must have at least 3 players holding professional contracts. Also, from the 2016 season, 5 foreign players are allowed per team, plus 1 more from J.League's ASEAN partner country of or from other AFC countries. The matchday roster will consist of 18 players, and up to 3 substitutes will be allowed in a game.[17]

Promotion and relegation

Rules for promotion to J2 are largely similar to those of Japan Football League in recent seasons: to be promoted, a club must hold or be granted a J2 license and finish in top 2 of the league. From 2017 to 2023, the champions and the runners-up have been promoted directly and replace the 21st- and 22nd-placed J2 clubs. If only the champion or runner-up holds or is given a J2 license, only the bottom club of J2 is relegated; if both top 2 finishers are ineligible for promotion, then no teams will be promoted to or relegated from J2.[16]

From the 2024 season, the 3rd to 6th placers will have promotion playoffs and the winner will also be the third team automatically promoted. The three J2 bottom-placed teams will be automatically relegated to J3.[18]

At a J.League board meeting in August 2021, 60 clubs (of which 20 are J3) were targeted for the entire league, and a possibility that J3 will have exceeded 20 clubs by the 2023 season was brought up. Mitsuru Murai, the J.League chairman, revealed that he was discussing how to adjust to 20 clubs. At this time, he was asked, "If there is a possibility of the [J3] league having 21 teams, is it okay to understand that there are teams that will fall from J3 to JFL?" While under consideration, he admitted that the J3 and JFL were considering the introduction of relegation to the latter league as early as after the 2022 season.[19] Later in November, Murai announced that promotion from and relegation to the JFL was planned after the 2023 season,[20]

In early January 2023, the J.League introduced the J3–JFL promotion/relegation playoffs, enabling the possibility for teams to be relegated from the J3.[21] The system of promotion and relegation between the J3 and the JFL can be determined by the eligibility (promotion to J3 requires a J.League license) of the JFL's champions and runners-up for the season.

  • If only the JFL champions hold a license, they replace automatically the J3's 20th-placed team.
  • If only the JFL runners-up hold a license, there are promotion/relegation playoffs with the J3's 20th-placed team.
  • If both the JFL champions and runners-up hold licenses, there will be automatic exchange between the JFL champions and the J3's 20th-placed team, and the runners-up compete in two-legged playoffs with the J3's 19th-placed team.
  • If both the JFL champions and runners-up do not hold licenses, no exchange takes place; the teams placed third and below in the league standings, even if one of them holds a J3 license, are not entitled to promotion and the playoffs.

Participating clubs (2024)


Club nameYear joinedSeasons
in J3
Based inFirst season
in D3
Seasons
in D3
Current spell
in D3
Last spell
in J2
Azul Claro Numazu20175Numazu, Shizuoka201752017–
Fukushima United20149All cities/towns in Fukushima2013102013–
Gainare Tottori2011 (J2)9All cities/towns in Tottori2001192014–2011–2013
FC Gifu2008 (J2)3All cities/towns in Gifu200732020–2008–2019
Giravanz Kitakyushu2010 (J2)4Kitakyushu, Fukuoka200862022–2020–2021
FC Imabari20203Imabari, Ehime202032020–
Iwate Grulla Morioka20148Morioka, Iwate201482023–2022
Kamatamare Sanuki2014 (J2)4Takamatsu, Kagawa201172019–2014–2018
Kataller Toyama2009 (J2)8All cities/towns in Toyama200892015–2009–2014
Matsumoto Yamaga2012 (J2)2Central cities/towns in Nagano201032022–2020–2021
Nagano Parceiro20149Northern cities/towns/villages in Nagano2011122011–
Nara Club20231All cities/towns in Nara202312023–
Omiya Ardija1999 (J2)0Saitama199222024–2018–2023
FC Osaka20231Higashiōsaka, Osaka202312023–
Ryukyu Okinawa20145All cities/towns in Okinawa2006132023–2019–2022
SC Sagamihara20148Sagamihara, Kanagawa201392022–2021
Tegevajaro Miyazaki20212Miyazaki, Miyazaki202122021–
Vanraure Hachinohe20194Hachinohe, Aomori201942019–
YSCC Yokohama20149Yokohama, Kanagawa2012112012–
Zweigen Kanazawa20141Kanazawa201512024–2015–2023
  • Pink background indicates clubs most recently promoted from JFL
  • Gray background indicates the club most recently relegated from J2
  • "Year joined" is the year the club joined the J. League (J3 League unless otherwise indicated).
  • "First season in D3," "Seasons in D3," and "Current spell in D3" include seasons in JFL

Stadiums (2024)

Primary venues used in the J3 League:

Azul Claro NumazuFukushima UnitedGainare TottoriFC GifuGiravanz Kitakyushu
Ashitaka Park StadiumToho StadiumAxis Bird StadiumGifu Nagaragawa StadiumMikuni World Stadium Kitakyushu
Capacity: 5,104Capacity: 15,454Capacity: 11,999Capacity: 16,310Capacity: 15,300
FC ImabariIwate Grulla MoriokaKamatamare SanukiKataller ToyamaMatsumoto Yamaga
Imabari Satoyama StadiumIwagin StadiumPikara StadiumToyama StadiumSunpro Alwin
Capacity: 5,316Capacity: 9,892Capacity: 22,338Capacity: 18,588Capacity: 20,000
Nagano ParceiroNara ClubOmiya ArdijaFC OsakaRyukyu Okinawa
Nagano U StadiumRohto Field NaraNACK5 Stadium OmiyaHanazono Rugby StadiumTapic Kenso Hiyagon Stadium
Capacity: 15,515Capacity: 30,600Capacity: 15,500Capacity: 27,346Capacity: 12,270
SC SagamiharaTegevajaro MiyazakiVanraure HachinoheYSCC YokohamaZweigen Kanazawa
Sagamihara Gion StadiumIchigo Miyazaki Shintomi Football StadiumPrifoods StadiumNippatsu Mitsuzawa StadiumKanazawa Go Go Curry Stadium
Capacity: 15,300Capacity: 5,354Capacity: 5,124Capacity: 15,454Capacity: 10,444

Former clubs

Club nameYear joinedSeasons
in J3
Based inFirst season
in D3
Seasons
in D3
Last spell
in D3
Current
league
Blaublitz Akita20147All cities/towns in Akita2007142007–2020J2
Cerezo Osaka U-2320165Osaka & Sakai, Osaka201652016–2020defunct
Ehime FC20062Central cities/towns in Ehime2012152022–2023J2
Fujieda MYFC20149Central cities/towns in Shizuoka2012152012–2022J2
Gamba Osaka U-2320165Northern cities in Osaka201652016–2020defunct
Iwaki FC20221Iwaki and Futaba District, Fukushima202212022J2
J.League U-22 Selection20142Played away games only201422015defunct
Kagoshima United20166Central cities/towns in Kagoshima201662020–2023J2
Machida Zelvia2012 (J2)2Machida, Tokyo200962015J1
Oita Trinita1999 (J2)1All cities/towns in Ōita201612016J2
Renofa Yamaguchi20151Yamaguchi, Yamaguchi201512015J2
Roasso Kumamoto2008 (J2)3Kumamoto, Kumamoto200172019–2021J2
Thespakusatsu Gunma2005 (J2)2All cities/towns in Gunma200432018–2019J2
Tochigi SC2009 (J2)2Utsunomiya, Tochigi2000112016–2017J2
FC Tokyo U-2320164Chōfu, Tokyo201642016–2019defunct
  • Pink background indicates clubs most recently promoted to J2
  • "Year joined" is the year the club joined the J. League (J3 League unless otherwise indicated).
  • "First season in D3," "Seasons in D3," and "Current spell in D3" include seasons in JFL

Championship and promotion history

From 2014 to 2016, the playoff winners faced off against the 21st place in J2. From 2017 to 2023 season, the two club was promoted by default. From 2024 onwards, the third promotion place is determined by a playoff between the 3rd to 6th actual places.

SeasonWinnerRunner-upThird placePlay-off winners
Zweigen KanazawaNagano ParceiroMachida ZelviaN/A
Renofa YamaguchiMachida ZelviaNagano Parceiro
Oita TrinitaTochigi SCNagano Parceiro
Blaublitz AkitaTochigi SCAzul Claro Numazu
FC RyukyuKagoshima UnitedGainare Tottori
Giravanz KitakyushuThespakusatsu GunmaFujieda MYFC
Blaublitz AkitaSC SagamiharaNagano Parceiro
Roasso KumamotoIwate Grulla MoriokaTegevajaro Miyazaki
Iwaki FCFujieda MYFCKagoshima United
Ehime FCKagoshima UnitedKataller Toyama

* Bold designates the promoted club;
† Lost the J2–J3 playoffs;
‡ Won the J2–J3 playoffs and got promoted;

Most successful clubs

Clubs in bold compete in J3 as of 2023 season.

ClubWinnersRunners-upPromotionsWinning seasonsRunners-up seasonsPromotion seasons
Blaublitz Akita
2
0
1
2017, 20202020
Zweigen Kanazawa
1
0
1
20142014
Renofa Yamaguchi
1
0
1
20152015
Oita Trinita
1
0
1
20162016
FC Ryukyu
1
0
1
20182018
Giravanz Kitakyushu
1
0
1
20192019
Roasso Kumamoto
1
0
1
20212021
Iwaki FC
1
0
1
20222022
Ehime FC
1
0
1
20232023
Kagoshima United
0
2
2
2018, 20232018, 2023
Tochigi SC
0
2
1
2016, 20172017
Fujieda MYFC
0
1
1
20222022
Iwate Grulla Morioka
0
1
1
20212021
SC Sagamihara
0
1
1
20202020
Thespakusatsu Gunma
0
1
1
20192019
Machida Zelvia
0
1
1
20152015
Nagano Parceiro
0
1
0
2014

Relegation history

From 2023, relegation from J3 to JFL was introduced, after nine seasons of not featuring it.

Year19th place20th place
2023Tegevajaro MiyazakiGiravanz Kitakyushu
2024

* Bold designates relegated clubs
Won the playoff against JFL team
Lost the playoff series to JFL team and was relegated

Players and managers

Managers

Top scorers

YearPlayerNationalitySquadGoals
2014Koji Suzuki  JapanMachida Zelvia19
2015Kazuhito KishidaRenofa Yamaguchi32
2016Noriaki FujimotoKagoshima United15
201724
2018Leonardo  BrazilGainare Tottori24
2019Taichi Hara  JapanFC Tokyo U-2319
2020Kaito TaniguchiRoasso Kumamoto18
2021Shota KawanishiFC Gifu13
2022Ryo AritaIwaki FC17
2023Ren KomatsuMatsumoto Yamaga19
2024

See also

Soccer/football
League system
Domestic cup
Futsal
Beach soccer

References

External links