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Gamba Osaka

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Gamba Osaka
ガンバ大阪
Logo
Full name Gamba Osaka
Nickname(s) Gamba
Founded 1980 (originally)
1991 (Gamba Osaka)
Ground Osaka Expo '70 Stadium,
Suita, Osaka
(Capacity: 21,000)
Chairman Kikuo Kanamori
Manager Akira Nishino (2002 - )
League J. League Div.1
2008 8th place
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Home colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
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Team colours
Away colours
This article contains Japanese text. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of kanji and kana.

Gamba Osaka (ガンバ大阪 Ganba Ōsaka?) is a Japanese professional football club, currently playing in the J. League Division 1. The team's name comes from the Italian word "Gamba" meaning "leg" and the Japanese ganbaru (頑張る?), meaning "to do your best" or "to stand firm". Located in Suita, Osaka, the team's home stadium is Osaka Expo '70 Stadium. Gamba are one of only six teams to have competed in Japan's top flight of football every year since its inception in 1993.

Contents

[edit] History

Founded in 1980 as Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. (which is renamed to "Panasonic Corporation" on October 1st, 2008) soccer club in Nara Prefecture and a member of the Japan Soccer League. It was mostly made of remaining players and staff of the defunct Yanmar Club, the former B-team of Yanmar Diesel F.C., later to be known as Cerezo Osaka. Gamba Osaka was an original member of the J. League in 1993.

In 2005 the club claimed its first J. League championship on a dramatic final day during which any of five clubs could have claimed the championship. Gamba needed to win, and have cross town rivals Cerezo Osaka draw or lose. Gamba defeated a valiant Kawasaki Frontale 4-2, while victory was snatched from Cerezo by a last minute FC Tokyo equalizer. In an AFC Champions League match in 2006, Gamba Osaka defeated Vietnamese side Da Nang FC in a record equaling victory of 15-0. In the 2008 Pan-Pacific Championship final, Gamba Osaka destroyed the Houston Dynamo of Major League Soccer a stunning 6 goals to 1 to win the tournament, with Bare making 4 of the goals.

In October 2008, Gamba for the first time in their history, reached the final of the AFC Champions League when they defeated fellow Japanese and league rivals Urawa Reds 4-2 on aggregate after a 1-1 draw at home in the first leg, Gamba registered one of the most historic comebacks in Champions League history when they came back from being behind 1-0 before half time to win 1-3 with all goals scored in the second half at Saitama. Gamba Osaka went on to win the 2008 AFC Champions League title after winning 5-0 on aggregate against the giant-killing Australian team Adelaide United in the Final. They became the fifth Japanese club to win the maximum Asian title, after Urawa, Júbilo Iwata, and then-company-affiliated Yomiuri (Tokyo Verdy) and Furukawa Electric (JEF United Ichihara Chiba).

In December 2008, Gamba made it to the semi finals of the 2008 FIFA Club World Cup after beating Australian team Adelaide United 1-0. They were beaten in the semi finals by Premier League and UEFA Champions League winners Manchester United. On the 21st December 2008 they played for third place against Mexican side C.F. Pachuca winning the match 1-0.

On January 1, 2009, Ryuji Bando scored in extra time to lift Gamba Osaka to a 1-0 win over Kashiwa Reysol and take the 88th Emperor's Cup in Tokyo. The victory secured Gamba a place in the AFC Champions League, where it will defend the title it won last year. This is the team's second ever Cup win, with the last 18 years ago in its previous incarnation as Matsushita Electric Industrial Soccer Club.

[edit] Team Record

[edit] J.League

Season League Place GP Pts Win Draw Lose Average Crowd
1993 J1 1st stage 8 / 10 18 - 8 - 10 21,571
J1 2nd stage 6 / 10 18 - 8 - 10
J1 Total 7 / 10 36 - 16 - 20
1994 J1 1st stage 10 / 12 22 - 7 - 15 22,367
J1 2nd stage 10 / 12 22 - 8 - 14
J1 Total 10 / 12 44 - 15 - 29
1995 J1 1st stage 11 / 14 26 31 10 - 16 13,310
J1 2nd stage 13 / 14 26 26 8 - 18
J1 Total 14 / 14 52 57 18 - 34
1996 J1 12 / 16 30 33 11 - 19 8,004
1997 J1 1st stage 8 / 17 16 24 8 - 8 8,443
J1 2nd stage Runners-up / 17 16 34 12 - 4
J1 Total 4 / 17 32 58 20 - 12
1998 J1 1st stage 14 / 18 17 17 7 - 10 8,723
J1 2nd stage 16 / 18 17 13 5 - 12
J1 Total 15 / 18 34 30 12 - 22
1999 J1 1st stage 10 / 16 15 17 6 0 9 7,996
J1 2nd stage 13 / 16 15 15 5 1 9
J1 Total 11 / 16 30 32 11 1 18
2000 J1 1st stage 13 / 16 15 17 5 2 8 9,794
J1 2nd stage 4 / 16 15 28 10 0 5
J1 Total 6 / 16 30 45 15 2 13
2001 J1 1st stage 5 / 16 15 25 9 0 6 11,723
J1 2nd stage 11 / 16 15 17 5 2 8
J1 Total 7 / 16 30 42 14 2 14
2002 J1 1st stage 4 / 16 15 27 9 1 5 12,762
J1 2nd stage Runners-up / 16 15 27 10 0 5
J1 Total 3 / 16 30 54 19 1 10
2003 J1 1st stage 12 / 16 15 16 4 4 7 10,222
J1 2nd stage 7 / 16 15 23 6 5 4
J1 Total 10 / 16 30 39 10 9 11
2004 J1 1st stage 4 / 16 15 24 7 3 5 12,517
J1 2nd stage 3 / 16 15 27 8 3 4
J1 Total 3 / 16 30 51 15 6 9
2005 J1 Champions / 18 34 60 18 6 10 15,966
2006 J1 3 / 18 34 66 20 6 8 16,259
2007 J1 3 / 18 34 67 19 10 5 17,439
2008 J1 8 / 18 34 50 14 8 12 16,128

[edit] Other domestic competitions

[edit] Emperor's Cup

Season Result
1992 Quarter-finals
1993 2nd Round
1994 Semi-finals
1995 Semi-finals
1996 Semi-finals
1997 Quarter-finals
1998 3rd Round
1999 3rd Round
2000 Semi-finals
2001 Quarter-finals
2002 4th Round
2003 4th Round
2004 Semi-finals
2005 Quarter-finals
2006 Runners-up
2007 Semi-finals
2008 Champions
 

[edit] J. League Cup

Season Result
1992 Group Stage
1993 Semi-finals
1994 Semi-finals
1995 Not Held
1996 Group Stage
1997 Group Stage
1998 Group Stage
1999 2nd Round
2000 2nd Round
2001 2nd Round
2002 Semi-finals
2003 Quarter-finals
2004 Quarter-finals
2005 Runners-up
2006 Quarter-finals
2007 Champions
2008 Semi-finals
 

[edit] Super Cup

Season Result
2006 Runners-up
2007 Champions
2009 Runners-up

[edit] Major International Competitions

Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Gamba Osaka's 1st Uniform for international match 08.
Season Competition Result Average Crowd
2006 AFC Champions League Round 1 -
2006 A3 Champions Cup Runners-up -
2008 Pan-Pacific Championship Champions -
2008 AFC Champions League Champions -
2008 FIFA Club World Cup Third Place -
2009 AFC Champions League

[edit] Players

[edit] Current squad

As of June 25, 2009

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Japan GK Naoki Matsuyo
2 Flag of Japan DF Sota Nakazawa
4 Flag of Japan DF Kazumichi Takagi
5 Flag of Japan DF Satoshi Yamaguchi (captain)
6 Flag of South Korea DF Park Dong-Hyuk
7 Flag of Japan MF Yasuhito Endo
8 Flag of Japan MF Shinichi Terada
9 Flag of Brazil FW Lucas Severino
10 Flag of Japan MF Takahiro Futagawa
11 Flag of Japan FW Ryuji Bando
13 Flag of Japan MF Michihiro Yasuda
14 Flag of Japan FW Shoki Hirai
16 Flag of Japan MF Hayato Sasaki
17 Flag of Japan MF Tomokazu Myojin
18 Flag of South Korea FW Cho Jae-Jin
No. Position Player
19 Flag of Japan DF Takumi Shimohira
20 Flag of Japan MF Shu Kurata
21 Flag of Japan DF Akira Kaji
22 Flag of Japan GK Yosuke Fujigaya
23 Flag of Brazil FW Leandro
24 Flag of Japan FW Kenta Hoshihara
25 Flag of Japan MF Takuya Takei
26 Flag of Japan GK Yoichi Futori
27 Flag of Japan MF Hideo Hashimoto
28 Flag of Japan DF Shunya Suganuma
29 Flag of Japan GK Atsushi Kimura
30 Flag of Japan FW Masato Yamazaki
31 Flag of Japan MF Kodai Yasuda
32 Flag of Japan FW Shohei Otsuka
33 Flag of Japan MF Takashi Usami

[edit] Out on loan

No. Position Player
Flag of Japan GK Masaki Kinoshita (On loan to Roasso Kumamoto)
Flag of Japan DF Daiki Niwa (On loan to Avispa Fukuoka)
Flag of Japan MF Akihiro Ienaga (On loan to Oita Trinita)
Flag of Japan MF Masafumi Maeda (On loan to Ventforet Kofu)
Flag of Japan MF Shigeru Yokotani (On loan to Ehime F.C.)
Flag of Japan FW Hideya Okamoto (On loan to Avispa Fukuoka)


[edit] Notable Players

[edit] World Cup players

World Cup 1998

World Cup 2002

World Cup 2006

[edit] Honours

[edit] Japanese Competitions

Matsushita (Amateur era)

Gamba Osaka (Professional era)

[edit] Major International Competitions

[edit] Minor International Competitions

[edit] Managers

Manager Nat. Tenure
Kunishige Kamamoto  Japan 1992-1994
Siegfried Held  Germany 1995
Josip Kuže  Croatia 1996-1997
Friedrich Koncilia  Austria 1997-1998
Frédéric Antonetti  France 1998-1999
Hiroshi Hayano  Japan 1999-2001
Kazuhiko Takemoto  Japan 2001
Akira Nishino  Japan 2002-

[edit] External links

Achievements
Preceded by
Urawa Red Diamonds
Flag of Japan
Champions of Asia
2008
Succeeded by
Incumbent
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