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The 2024 J2 League, also known as the 2024 Meiji Yasuda J2 League (Japanese: 2024 明治安田J2リーグ, Hepburn: 2024 Meiji Yasuda J2 Rīgu) for sponsorship reasons, was the 26th season of the J2 League, the second-tier Japanese professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 1999. It was the tenth season of ...
The Japan Football League is also restructured, as it becomes the third-tier Japan Football League (JFL). Note: To distinguish between the former and the current JFL, the new JFL is pronounced Nihon Football League in Japanese. 10 2 0 2000: Mito HollyHock is promoted from Japan Football League; 11 2001: Yokohama FC is promoted from Japan ...
The 2022 J2 League, also known as the 2022 Meiji Yasuda J2 League (Japanese: 2022 明治安田生命J2リーグ, Hepburn: 2022 Meiji Yasuda Seimei J2 Rīgu) for sponsorship reasons, was the 24th season of the J2 League, the second-tier Japanese professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 1999.
The Japanese association football league system is organized in a pyramidal shape similar to football league systems in many other countries around the world. The leagues are bound by the principle of promotion and relegation; however, there are stringent criteria for promotion from the JFL to J3, which demands a club being backed by the town itself including the local government, a community ...
The Japan Football League (Japanese: 日本フットボールリーグ, Hepburn: Nihon Futtobōru Rīgu), also known as simply the JFL, is the 4th tier of the Japanese association football league system, positioned beneath the three divisions of the J.League.
The Mid-Columbia is down to two football teams left in the WIAA Washington state playoffs. Kamiakin defeated Mt. Si 8-6 last Saturday in North Bend in the 4A state quarterfinals, while Royal ...
The 2024 WIAA football state semifinals are tonight with both Winneconne and Lomira each looking to punch their ticket to the state championship game at Camp Randall Stadium in Madison.
Before the inception of the J.League, the highest level of club football was the Japan Soccer League (JSL), which consisted of amateur clubs. [2] [3] Despite being well-attended during the boom of the late 1960s and early 1970s (when Japan's national team won the Olympic bronze medal at the 1968 games in Mexico), the JSL went into decline in the 1980s, in general line with the deteriorating ...