结果

日本足球联赛 04/14 04:00 - Atletico Suzuka Club v 新宿Criacao D 0-0
日本足球联赛 03/31 04:00 - Atletico Suzuka Club v 美蓓亚三美 L 0-1
日本足球联赛 03/24 04:00 - FC枚方Tiamo v Atletico Suzuka Club L 3-2
日本足球联赛 03/10 04:00 - 大分公式 v Atletico Suzuka Club W 1-2
日本足球联赛 11/26 04:00 - Suzuka Point Getters v 润梅尔青森 W 2-1
日本足球联赛 11/19 04:00 - 高知联 v Suzuka Point Getters D 2-2
日本足球联赛 11/12 04:00 - Suzuka Point Getters v 威蒂恩三重 L 0-1
日本足球联赛 11/04 04:00 - 东京武藏野城 v Suzuka Point Getters L 2-0
日本足球联赛 10/29 04:00 - 冲绳SV v Suzuka Point Getters L 2-1
日本足球联赛 10/22 04:00 - Suzuka Point Getters v 滋贺赖拉克 L 0-3
日本足球联赛 10/08 04:00 - 美蓓亚三美 v Suzuka Point Getters W 0-1
日本足球联赛 09/23 05:30 - FC枚方Tiamo v Suzuka Point Getters W 1-2

统计

 总计主队客队
已赛场次 21 11 10
Wins 6 2 4
Draws 4 2 2
Losses 11 7 4
Goals for 19 7 12
Goals against 29 16 13
Clean sheets 4 2 2
Failed to score 9 6 3

Wikipedia - Atletico Suzuka Club

Atletico Suzuka Club (アトレチコ鈴鹿クラブ, Atorechiko Suzuka Kurabu) commonly known as Atletico Suzuka, formerly Suzuka Point Getters (鈴鹿ポイントゲッターズ, Suzuka Pointo Gettāzu) is a Japanese professional football club based in Suzuka, Mie Prefecture. They play in the Japan Football League, the fourth tier of the Japanese football league system.

History

The club was originally established in Nabari, Mie in 1980 under the name Mie Club, and it became a member of Mie Football Association to join the Mie prefectural league in 1982. The club went up to the top division in 1991 and remained there until 2005, when local organisers kicked off the idea of developing a larger and more ambitious football team.

The region to the southwest of Nagoya has been traditionally very populous but still undeveloped from a football perspective despite a number of successes by local high school football. In mid- 2005, a group of local businessmen, football fans and coaches from Mie Prefecture, who were eager to put together a team to represent the area, approached Bunji Kimura, an ex-football manager of Kyoto Sanga F.C. and Yokohama Flügels. Kimura was convinced to accept the position of the president and technical director of a club that was then going by the name of "W.S.C. Nabari Admiral". Kimura plunged in and began a very ambitious project to transform the team from a bunch of amateur kickers in a tiny town to a much more competitive and tightly run organisation representing the aspirations of the entire prefecture.

At Kimura's insistence, the team in February 2006 took the name "MIE FC Rampole", taking its name from the famous Japanese mystery novel writer Rampo Edogawa, who was born in Mie Prefecture. The part "ole" of the name is supposedly a Spanish word "Olé" used to cheer and applaud (cf. Consadole Sapporo). Following the name change the club launched its official website on February 22. Kimura quickly began drawing upon his network of J.League contacts to bring in more experienced coaches and organisers, and by the end of his first season in charge the club advanced to the second division of the Tōkai Regional League.

Whereas its progress on the pitch has stalled temporarily, with third-place finishes in both 2007 and 2008, the club has been focusing most of its attention on the organisational goals. An independent corporation was established in 2006, fulfilling one of the requirements of J. League Associate Membership, and in 2008 the team merged with nearby Suzuka Club, thereby absorbing a youth program that can help to meet another key requirement. Following the merger, the team announced on 1 September 2008, that it changed its name to "F.C. Suzuka Rampole" and moved its home playing ground from Ueno Athletic Park Stadium to Suzuka Sports Garden from 2009 season. The club carried out the move since first, Suzuka is the city world-famous for the F1 circuit located outside town, and second, its population base and location, squarely in the middle of Mie Prefecture's main population centres is considered to be ideal.

On 28 January 2016, the team announced an immediate change of the team's name to Suzuka Unlimited FC (鈴鹿アンリミテッドFC).

With the appointment of coach Milagros "Mila" Martínez from the 2019 season, the club was the first and to date only in any of Japan's national level divisions to have a female leading the club.

On 1 February 2020, the club announced that it would change its name to Suzuka Point Getters (鈴鹿ポイントゲッターズ). Their logo and attire were updated to reflect Suzuka's status as home of the Suzuka Circuit.

On 5 July 2021, Suzuka announced Martínez's departure by mutual consent after her contract lapsed and published her gratitude to Point Getter fans throughout her tenure. Ten days later, former J3 League coach Yasutoshi Miura was hired to succeed her and also be Suzuka's general manager.

On 28 July 2023, two days prior to the J3 license application deadline, a meeting of the J.League Board of Directors was held. As a result, one of the decisions made was that the league decided to revoke Suzuka's "J.League 100 Year Plan club status", which was a prerequisite for J3 promotion in the next season. This punishment was treated by local media as "unprecedently severe", as no club had ever received such a punishment (Nara Club was initially stripped off the status on 2020, but their ban was eventually lifted within five months). It was mainly motivated by Suzuka's match-fixing scandal by former executives during the last rounds of the 2022 Japan Football League, but most specially in the last match, played against Sony Sendai FC. In this match, Suzuka decided to voluntarily lose the match as Sendai, who was higher-ranked, would be able to overtake Suzuka's local rivals Veertien Mie, denying them promotion for the J3 League, and not enabling Veertien to become the first team of the prefecture to be promoted from the JFL. The whole match-fixing situation was by the J.League treated as "an act that goes against the purpose of the J.League". However, it was not the only problem surrounding the club at the time, as the club had many management problems on different areas, including inappropriate payments and the management structure itself. The J.League then, exorted the club to improve the club's entire management structure before having its promotion-enabling license again.

On 31 October 2023, Suzuka announced that Kyodo Rubber Co., Ltd. became the club's new owner after purchasing a 100% stake. Hiroshi Saito, a representative director and president of the company, was appointed as the club's new chairman.

The club changed its name to Atletico Suzuka Club (アトレチコ鈴鹿クラブ), announced at a press conference on 10 January 2024. The emblem and logo were also updated, with the black and white-checkered flag being kept in the redesign alongside their official team colours (blue and green).

铃鹿安联足球俱乐部(日语:鈴鹿ポイントゲッターズ;英语:Suzuka Point Getters)是日本三重县铃鹿市的一个足球俱乐部,成立于2013年。俱乐部目前在日本足球联赛的 JFL中踢球,是首支参加日本足球联赛的三重县球队。

铃鹿安联足球俱乐部的前身是成立于1968年的铃鹿中央体育俱乐部足球队。2013年,该俱乐部改名为铃鹿安联足球俱乐部,并开始参加日本地区联赛。2014年,俱乐部获得日本地区联赛的冠军,升入日本足球联赛。2015年,俱乐部获得日本足球联赛的亚军,升级至日本职业足球乙级联赛。2016年,俱乐部以J2联赛第18名的成绩降级至日本足球联赛。

铃鹿安联足球俱乐部的主场是铃鹿市体育公园陆上竞技场(日语:鈴鹿市スポーツガーデン メイングラウンド)。俱乐部的队徽是一只戴着足球帽的浣熊,浣熊是铃鹿市的象征动物。