Kashima Antlers
Kashima Antlers are a Japanese professional football club based in Kashima, Ibaraki, part of the Greater Tokyo Area. The club plays in the J1 League, which is the top tier of football in the country.
Antlers is derived from the city name, Kashima, which literally means "deer island". The club has financial backing from Mercari, a Japanese e-commerce company.
Since the J.League's creation and introduction of professional Japanese football in 1993, Kashima have proved by far Japan's most successful club team, having won the J.League title a record eight times, the J.League Cup a record six times and the Emperor's Cup five times for an unprecedented total of nineteen major domestic titles. Kashima also won their first AFC Champions League title in 2018. Kashima have finished in the top five of the league for over seventy percent of all seasons played to date, recorded an average end of season league placing of third and captured a major domestic title in over sixty percent of all seasons played to date.
Kashima are also one of only two teams to have competed in Japan's top flight of professional football every year since its inception.
History
The name ‘Antlers’ is derived from the city of Kashima, which literally translates to ‘Deer Island’. The club crest not only resembles deer antlers but it also reflects the image of rose thorn as it is the official flower of Ibaraki, the home prefecture of the club. Deer are amiable animals and are viewed in some religions as spiritual messengers. In fact, Kashima Shrine, one of the most famous shrines in Japan and located in close proximity to the club headquarters, have kept and raised deer for more than 1,300 years as spiritual symbol. Deer are affectionate animals but are also known for their courageous character as they battle each other head to head with lethal antlers., played for Kashima from 1994 to 1996
Founded in 1947 as Sumitomo Metal Industries Factory Football Club in Osaka and moved to
Kashima, Ibaraki in 1975. It played in the semi-professional Japan Soccer League. They were promoted to the JSL's top flight in 1984, but never made much of an impact, going down in 1985/86, returning in 1986/87 and going down again in 1988/89. Its last standing in the JSL was 2nd in the Second Division for 1991/92.
After the formation of the fully professional J.League, Sumitomo, like all other clubs, stripped the corporate brand from the team name and reformed as the Kashima Antlers. Kashima was essentially promoted to the new top flight, as many JSL First Division teams decided to relegate themselves being unprepared for professionalism..
Since the J.League's creation and introduction of professional Japanese football in 1993, Kashima have consistently been amongst the strongest teams in the country, holding several distinctions and records. Led by former Brazilian star and Japanese national team coach Zico in the team's formative years, Kashima were the first team to win a J.League stage, claiming the 1st stage of the inaugural season in 1993. This laid a platform for continuous greatness and long after the Kashima icon had departed, in 2000 Kashima became the first J.League team to achieve the "treble", by winning all three major titles: J.League, J.League Cup, and Emperor's Cup in the same year.
In recent times, by clinching the 2007 J.League title they became the first and only team in Japan to have won ten domestic titles in the professional era. In 2008 they became the first and only club to successfully defend the J.League title on two separate occasions. In 2009 they became the first and only club to win three consecutive J.League titles. With victories in back to back J.League Cups in 2011, 2012 and most recently followed by their 2015 victory, Kashima extended their unmatched record of major domestic titles in the professional era to seventeen.
To this day, Kashima has maintained strong ties with the football community in Brazil, a fact borne out of Zico's past affiliation with the club. Kashima's Brazilian connection has manifested itself in both the club's player transfer and coaching policy resulting in only three non-Brazilian foreign players and predominantly Brazilian managers signing for Kashima since the inception of the J.League.
The population of Kashima city is a mere 60,000 and for that reason club has also adopted the surrounding cities of Itako, Kamisu, Namegata and Hokota as its official hometowns, all in Ibaraki Prefecture. The combined population of five cities is 280,000. Antlers home games are played at Kashima Soccer Stadium, one of the 2002 FIFA World Cup venues with capacity of 40,000.
In 2016, they became the first Asian team to reach the FIFA Club World Cup final following a 3–0 victory over South American champions Atlético Nacional. In the final, after a 2–2 draw against European champions Real Madrid after 90 minutes, they were beaten 4–2 after extra time.
Colour, sponsors and manufacturers
Kit History
Slogans
Sponsors
List of Sponsors- Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal
- Lixil Group
- Riso Kagaku Corporation
- Nike
- Sony
- All Nippon Airways
- Asahi Breweries
- Suntory
- Showa Corporation
- KDDI
- Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation
- Segway Inc.
Players
Current squad
The Kashima Antlers squad for the 2020 season.Out on loan
Technical staff
Position | Name |
Technical Director | Zico |
Manager | Antônio Carlos Zago |
Assistant coach | Carlos Pacheco |
Assistant coach | Naoki Soma |
Goalkeeping Coach | Yohei Sato |
Managers
Record
Attendance
Financials
Revenue & Expenditure
Assets & Net Worth
Honours
Sumitomo Soccer Club- Shakaijin Cup
- *Winners : 1973
- Japan Soccer League Second Division
- *Champions : 1984, 1986–87
Domestic
- J1 League:
- *Champions : 1996, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2016
- Emperor's Cup:
- *Winners : 1997, 2000, 2007, 2010, 2016
- J.League Cup:
- *Winners : 1997, 2000, 2002, 2011, 2012, 2015
- Japanese Super Cup:
- *Winners : 1997, 1998, 1999, 2009, 2010, 2017
- FIFA Club World Cup:
- *Runner-up: 2016
- AFC Champions League
- *Winners : 2018
- A3 Champions Cup:
- *Winners : 2003
- Suruga Bank Championship:
- *Winners : 2012, 2013
Personnel awards
- J.League Player of the Year
- J.League Top Scorer
- J.League Best Eleven
- J.League Rookie of the Year
- J.League Manager of the Year
World Cup players