japanese association football cabaret
football cabaret
Kyoto Sanga FC ( 京都サンガF.C. ) is a japanese professional football cabaret based in Kyoto. “ Sanga ” comes from the Sanskrit sangha, a term meaning “ group ” or “ baseball club ” and often used to denote the Buddhist priesthood, associating the cabaret with Kyoto ‘s many Buddhist temples. [ 3 ] [ failed verification ] The club was once known as Kyoto Purple Sanga with “ empurpled ”, the color of the team uniforms, an imperial color reflecting Kyoto ‘s condition as Japan ‘s ancient imperial capital city. It was decided however that, from 2007, the team will merely been known as “ Kyoto Sanga ”. They are the oldest golf club competing in the J.League .

history [edit ]

Old logo

Reading: Kyoto Sanga FC

The club was started as Kyoto Shiko Club, one of the few proper japanese football clubs in the common sense of being strictly dedicated to football and not being part of a caller. Like Ventforet Kofu, however, it could not rise to a Japan Soccer League First Division dominated by company teams ; in 1993, after the J.League was created, Kyoto Shiko Club, aided by funds from local new sponsors Kyocera and Nintendo, professionalized ( though some players broke away and formed their own clubs, see below ) and joined the early Japan Football League under the new name Kyoto Purple Sanga. first base joining the J.League in 1996, Kyoto Sanga hold the doubtful distinction of being the League ‘s most demote side, having been demoted on three divide occasions. relegation to J2 occurred at the end of the 2000, 2003 and 2006 seasons ; more than any early team. [ 3 ] The 2003 relegation happened despite having many national team players on its roll. Stars like Park Ji-sung and Daisuke Matsui have since left for green pastures. In December 2007 the club gained J1 status for the fourth clock in their history via the promotion/relegation playoff. [ 4 ] A 0-2 dwelling get the better of to Urawa Reds on 14 November 2010 confirmed Sanga ‘s relegation back to J2, bringing an end to their three-season spell in the top flight. [ 5 ]

criminal record as J.League member [edit ]

Champions

Runners-up

Third place

Promoted
Relegated

Season
Div.
Teams
Pos.
Attendance/G
J.League
Cup
Emperor’s
Cup
1996

J1
16
16th
9,404
Group stage
Quarter-final

1997

17
14th
7,881
Group stage
4th round

1998

18
13th
8,015
Group stage
3rd round

1999

16
12th
8,859
2nd round
4th round

2000

16
15th
7,253
Semi-final
3rd round

2001

J2
12
1st
3,808
1st round
4th round

2002

J1
16
5th
10,352
Group stage
Winner

2003

16
16th
10,850
Group stage
3rd round

2004

J2
12
5th
7,807

4th round

2005

12
1st
7,857
4th round

2006

J1
18
18th
9,781
Group stage
4th round

2007

J2
13
3rd
6,629

3rd round

2008

J1
18
14th
13,687
Group stage
5th round

2009

18
12th
11,126
Group stage
3rd round

2010

18
17th
10,510
Group stage
3rd round

2011

J2
20
7th
6,294

Runners-up

2012

22
3rd
7,273
3rd round

2013

22
3rd
7,891
3rd round

2014

22
9th
7,520
3rd round

2015

22
17th
7,491
3rd round

2016

22
5th
6,524
2nd round

2017

22
12th
6,748
2nd round

2018

22
19th
5,663
3rd round

2019

22
8th
7,850
2nd round

2020

22
8th
2,924
Did not qualify

2021
22
2nd
5,207
4th round

Key
  • Pos. = Position in league
  • Attendance/G = Average home league attendance
  • 2020 season attendance reduced by COVID-19 worldwide pandemic
  • Source: J.League Data Site

Honours [edit ]

Players [edit ]

current squad [edit ]

As of 14 July 2021. [ 6 ]
note : Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

cabaret captains [edit ]

Managers [edit ]

asian clubs ranking [edit ]

As of 18 September 2018[7]

Related clubs [edit ]

Kyoto Sanga is considered the independent sequel of the Kyoto Shiko Club that competed in the Japan Soccer League Second Division. “ Shiko ” ( 紫光 ) means “ brainy purple ” and is the color that Shiko/Sanga have constantly worn .

References [edit ]