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'''[[2006 FIFA World Cup|World Cup 2006]]
'''[[2006 FIFA World Cup|World Cup 2006]]
*{{flagicon|Japan}} '''[[Seigo Narazaki]]'''
*{{flagicon|Japan}} '''[[Seigo Narazaki]]'''
*{{flagicon|Japan}} '''[[Alessandro dos Santos]]'''
*{{flagicon|Japan}} '''[[Alessandro Santos]]'''
*{{flagicon|Japan}} '''[[Keiji Tamada]]'''
*{{flagicon|Japan}} '''[[Keiji Tamada]]'''
*{{flagicon|Australia}} '''[[Joshua Kennedy]]'''
*{{flagicon|Australia}} '''[[Joshua Kennedy]]'''

Revision as of 07:20, 1 October 2009

Nagoya Grampus
名古屋グランパス
Logo
Full nameNagoya Grampus Eight
Nickname(s)Grampus
Founded1939 (as Toyota Motor S.C.)
GroundMizuho Athletic Stadium
Mizuho-ku, Nagoya &
Toyota Stadium,
Toyota City, Aichi
Capacity27,000 & 45,000
ChairmanJapan Toyo Kato
ManagerSerbia Dragan Stojković
LeagueJ. League Div.1
20083rd Place

Nagoya Grampus (名古屋グランパス, Nagoya Guranpasu) (formerly Nagoya Grampus Eight) is a Japanese Association football club which plays in the first division of the J. League. The team is based in Nagoya and was founded as the company team of Toyota Motor Corp. in 1939. Grampus Eight are one of only six teams to have competed in Japan's top flight of football every year since its inception in 1993.

History

Toyota Motor S.C. was initially overshadowed by its colleague Toyota Automated Loom Works F.C. (founded in 1946 and which was one of the founding members of the Japan Soccer League in 1965) but when Toyota ALW were relegated to regional leagues in 1968, Toyota Motor saw an opportunity to rise at their expense. In 1972 Toyota Motors were founding members of the JSL's Second Division and its inaugural champions. They remained in the JSL until the J. League's founding in 1993. They were relegated to the JSL Division 2 in 1977. After a brief return in 1987-88, they were promoted for good in 1989-90 and remain in the top flight ever since.

The team had excellent seasons in the mid 1990s when it was managed by current Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger, winning the prestigious Emperor's Cup and finishing runners up, and featured, among others, Dragan Stojković and Gary Lineker on the team.

Nagoya shares its home games between Mizuho Athletic Stadium (capacity 27,000 and the J-league's oldest stadium) and the much larger Toyota Stadium (capacity 45,000).

The team's name was derived from the two most prominent symbols of Nagoya: the two golden grampus dolphins on the top of Nagoya Castle (which can be more accurately described as shachihoko, a mythological creature part of the local folklore), and the Maru-Hachi (Circle eight), the city's official symbol.

The team's name "Nagoya Grampus Eight" was changed to just "Nagoya Grampus" at the start of the 2008 season.

In 2008, Nagoya appointed their legend Stojković as manager. They finished in 3rd place and qualified for AFC Champions League for the first time.

File:NagoyaGrumpus8.png
old logo

Team Record

J. League

Season League Place GP Pts Win Draw Lose Average Attendance
1993 J1 1st stage 9 / 10 18 - 7 - 11 19,858
J1 2nd stage 8 / 10 18 - 5 - 13
J1 Total 9 / 10 36 - 12 - 24
1994 J1 1st stage 8 / 12 22 - 9 - 13 21,842
J1 2nd stage 12 / 12 22 - 6 - 16
J1 Total 11 / 12 44 - 15 - 29
1995 J1 1st stage 4 / 14 26 46 15 - 11 21,463
J1 2nd stage Runners-up / 14 26 51 17 - 9
J1 Total 3 / 14 52 97 32 - 20
1996 J1 Runners-up / 16 30 63 21 - 9 21,699
1997 J1 1st stage 12 / 17 16 18 6 - 10 14,750
J1 2nd stage 5 / 17 16 30 10 - 6
J1 Total 9 / 17 32 48 16 - 16
1998 J1 1st stage 3 / 18 17 33 12 - 5 13,993
J1 2nd stage 6 / 18 17 30 11 - 6
J1 Total 5 / 18 34 63 23 - 11
1999 J1 1st stage 8 / 16 15 21 7 1 7 14,688
J1 2nd stage Runners-up / 16 15 33 11 1 3
J1 Total 4 / 16 30 54 18 2 10
2000 J1 1st stage 12 / 16 15 19 7 1 7 14,114
J1 2nd stage 7 / 16 15 22 7 1 7
J1 Total 9 / 16 30 41 14 2 14
2001 J1 1st stage 3 / 16 15 27 10 2 3 16,974
J1 2nd stage 6 / 16 15 22 7 1 7
J1 Total 5 / 16 30 49 17 3 10
2002 J1 1st stage 3 / 16 15 29 10 0 5 16,323
J1 2nd stage 13 / 16 15 16 5 1 9
J1 Total 6 / 16 30 45 15 1 14
2003 J1 1st stage 7 / 16 15 23 5 8 2 16,768
J1 2nd stage 8 / 16 15 22 6 4 5
J1 Total 7 / 16 30 45 11 12 7
2004 J1 1st stage 8 / 16 15 20 5 5 5 15,712
J1 2nd stage 5 / 16 15 24 7 3 5
J1 Total 7 / 16 30 44 12 8 10
2005 J1 14 / 18 34 39 10 9 15 13,288
2006 J1 7 / 18 34 48 13 9 12 14,924
2007 J1 11 / 18 34 45 13 6 15 15,585
2008 J1 3 / 18 34 59 17 8 9 16,555

Other Domestic Competitions

See other domestic competitions record

Major International Competitions

Season Competition Result Average Attendance
1996-97 Asian Cup Winners Cup Runners-up ?
2000-01 Asian Cup Winners Cup Quarter-finals ?
2009 AFC Champions League

Players

Current squad

As of July 29, 2009 Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Japan JPN Seigo Narazaki
2 DF Japan JPN Akira Takeuchi
3 DF Serbia SRB Miloš Bajalica
4 DF Japan JPN Maya Yoshida
5 DF Japan JPN Takahiro Masukawa
6 DF Japan JPN Shohei Abe
7 MF Japan JPN Naoshi Nakamura
8 MF Brazil BRA Magnum
9 MF Montenegro MNE Igor Burzanović
10 MF Japan JPN Yoshizumi Ogawa
11 FW Japan JPN Keiji Tamada
13 MF Japan JPN Kei Yamaguchi
14 MF Japan JPN Keiji Yoshimura
16 FW Australia AUS Joshua Kennedy
17 FW Japan JPN Yuki Maki
18 FW Japan JPN Tomohiro Tsuda
No. Pos. Nation Player
19 FW Japan JPN Keita Sugimoto
20 MF Japan JPN Yoshiki Hiraki
21 GK Japan JPN Koji Nishimura
22 MF Japan JPN Koji Hashimoto
23 DF Japan JPN Genta Matsuo
24 MF Japan JPN Shinta Fukushima
25 FW Japan JPN Oribe Niikawa
26 DF Japan JPN Masaya Sato
27 MF Japan JPN Sho Hanai
28 MF Japan JPN Taishi Taguchi
29 FW Japan JPN Hikaru Kuba
30 GK Japan JPN Koichi Hirono
31 GK Japan JPN Toru Hasegawa
32 DF Japan JPN Hayuma Tanaka
33 MF Japan JPN Ryota Isomura
38 MF Japan JPN Alessandro dos Santos

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Japan JPN Jun Aoyama (On loan to Tokushima Vortis)
MF Japan JPN Kazuto Tsuyuki (On loan to Tokushima Vortis)

World Cup players

World Cup 1998

World Cup 2002

World Cup 2006

Notable Players

Template:Famous players

Japan
AFC
CONMEBOL
UEFA

Managers

Manager Nat. Tenure
Ryuzou Hiraki  Japan 1992-1993
Gordon Milne  England 1994
Tetsuro Miura  Japan 1994
Arsène Wenger  France 1995-1996
Jose Alberto Costa ‡  Portugal 1996
Carlos Queiroz  Portugal 1996-1997
Koji Tanaka  Japan 1997-1999
Daniel Sanchez  France 1999
Mazaroppi  Brazil 1999
João Carlos  Brazil 1999-2001
Tetsuro Miura  Japan 2001
Zdenko Verdenik  Slovenia 2002-2003
Nelsinho  Brazil 2003-2005
Hitoshi Nakata  Japan 2005
Sef Vergoossen  Netherlands 2006-2007
Dragan Stojković  Serbia 2008-

‡ As caretaker manager

Honors

1995, 1999
1996
1968, 1970
1972

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