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This article is about the men s football club based in Japan For the women s team see Urawa Red Diamonds Ladies The Urawa Red Diamonds 浦和レッドダイヤモンズ Urawa Reddo Daiyamonzu colloquially Urawa Reds 浦和レッズ Urawa Rezzu also known as Mitsubishi Urawa Football Club from April 1992 to January 1996 are a professional football club in the city of Saitama part of the Greater Tokyo Area in Japan The club plays in the J1 League the top tier of football in the country Its name comes from the former city of Urawa now part of Saitama It is one of the most successful clubs in the country having won three AFC Champions League titles most recently in 2022 and varied domestic titles including a joint record eight overall Emperor s Cup titles It participated three times at the FIFA Club World Cup Urawa RedsFull nameUrawa Red DiamondsNickname s Reds レッズ Rezzu Red Devils 赤い悪魔 Akai Akuma Founded1950 74 years ago 1950 as Mitsubishi Motors FC 1992 32 years ago 1992 as Mitsubishi Urawa FC 1996 28 years ago 1996 as Urawa Red DiamondsStadiumSaitama Stadium 2002 Saitama JapanCapacity63 700OwnerMitsubishi Heavy IndustriesChairmanMakoto TaguchiManagerPer Mathias HogmoLeagueJ1 League2023J1 League 4th of 18WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursCurrent season The name Red Diamonds alludes to the club s pre professional era parent company Mitsubishi The corporation s logo consists of three red diamonds one of which remains within the current club badge Contents 1 History 1 1 Domestic treble 1 1 1 Name changed 1 2 Back to back cup champion 1 3 AFC Champions League winner 2 International affiliation 3 Home stadium 3 1 New home ground 4 Facilities 5 Mascots 6 Rivalries 6 1 Saitama derby 6 2 Marunouchi Gosanke 6 3 Others 7 Women s team 8 Kit and colours 8 1 Colours 8 2 Kit evolution 9 Players 9 1 Current squad 9 2 Out on loan 10 Club officials 11 Honours 12 Individual awards 12 1 World Cup players 12 2 Club captains 13 Former players 13 1 International capped players 14 Manager history 15 League amp cup record 16 League history 17 Notes 18 References 19 External linksHistoryeditMitsubishi Heavy Industries established a football club in 1950 1 in Kobe and moved the club to Tokyo in 1958 In 1965 it formed the Japan Soccer League JSL along with today s JEF United Chiba Kashiwa Reysol Cerezo Osaka Sanfrecce Hiroshima and three other clubs who have since been relegated to regional leagues Original Eight a Mitsubishi first won the JSL championship in 1969 as a break in Mazda Sanfrecce s dominance and also with the fact that Toyo were in Bangkok Thailand competing in the Asian Club Cup their runs up the first division were sporadic but steady until the 1980s when they fell into the Second Division In 1990 they were promoted as JSL Division 2 champions and thus were ready when the J League implementation began in earnest Urawa Red Diamonds was an original member Original Ten b of the J League in 1993 Domestic trebleedit Mitsubishi were the first Japanese club to complete a domestic treble when in 1978 they won the title the Emperor s Cup and the Japan Soccer League Cup Name changededit The club name was than changed to Mitsubishi Urawa Football Club from in April 1992 where their nickname was Red Diamonds However in February 1996 the club name was changed to Urawa Red Diamonds The club has enjoyed mixed fortunes since the J League advent The club finished bottom of the league for the first two seasons of the J League with an average crowd of under 15 000 In 1999 they suffered relegation to the second tier of Japanese football yet again The club has since improved in form in recent years starting with a 2003 victory in the Nabisco Cup In 2006 Urawa Reds clinched their first professional league title by defeating runners up Gamba Osaka 3 2 on December 2 in front of 63 000 supporters This came after two close calls in the previous two years In 2005 they finished 2nd one point behind champions Gamba Osaka In 2004 they finished 3rd in the first stage and won the second stage Having qualified for the two match J League Championship decider they lost on penalty shootout to Yokohama F Marinos Back to back cup championedit Urawa Reds were back to back Emperor s Cup winners in 2005 and 2006 Winning the title for the first time since their establishment as a professional club they defeated Shimizu S Pulse 2 1 on 1 January 2006 and retained the title in 2007 with a 1 0 win over Gamba Osaka This win also completed a league cup double In the 2007 tournament they were defeated at the first hurdle by J2 League outfit Ehime FC In 2007 despite a seemingly unassailable lead of seven points with four games remaining Urawa Reds picked up only two points from their final four games This run included losing at home to Kashima Antlers the club who would leapfrog Urawa on the final day of the season to claim their fifth J League title Following their capitulation in the fourth round of the Emperor s Cup to J2 League outfit Ehime FC Urawa Reds had to be content with their 2007 AFC Champions League fixtures AFC Champions League winneredit nbsp Urawa Reds players lifting the 2007 AFC Champions League trophy Urawa Reds recorded their first prestigious cup overcoming Iranian club Sepahan 3 1 on aggregate to clinch the 2007 AFC Champions League trophy The victory made them the first Japanese side to win the cup since the competition was reorganised from the Asian Champions Cup in 2003 In the 2007 FIFA Club World Cup of the same year Urawa Reds became the first AFC club to finish in third place beating Tunisian side Etoile Sportive du Sahel on penalty shootout in the third fourth place play off Throughout the 2008 AFC Champions League edition Urawa Reds attempted to win their second consecutive AFC Champions League title and progressed to the semi finals where they were defeated by fellow J League rivals and eventual Champions League winners Gamba Osaka 3 1 on aggregate On 8 March 2014 a banner which read JAPANESE ONLY was hung at one of the entrances to the stands 2 As punishment for this racist behavior the league match on 28 March was played behind closed doors 3 In the 2017 AFC Champions League edition Urawa Reds had a good run throughout the entire tournament which see them face Saudi Arabia club Al Hilal in the final which see Urawa Reds winning the 2017 AFC Champions League final 2 1 on aggregate to clinch their 2nd trophy Urawa Reds managed to make their way through all the way until the 2019 AFC Champions League final facing off against Al Hilal once again which however the club fell to 3 0 aggregate lost to the Saudi Arabia club During the 2022 AFC Champions League Urawa Reds had an easier run en route to the final where they faced three Southeast Asian club along the way Singapore league champions Lion City Sailors in the group stage while they faced Malaysia league champions Johor Darul Ta zim 5 0 in the Round of 16 and Thailand league champions BG Pathum United 4 0 in the Quarter finals Urawa Reds would than face Korea league champions Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors in the semi finals which ended up with Urawa Reds advancing to the final after winning the penalty shootout The club would than faced their tournament rivals Al Hilal for the third time in the 2022 AFC Champions League final in which Urawa Red won 2 1 on aggregate clinching their 3rd trophy On 19 September 2023 it was announced by JFA that Urawa Reds will not be participating in 2024 edition of Emperor s Cup following the riot caused by the fans after 0 3 loss against Nagoya Grampus in the 4th round of 2023 edition 4 International affiliationeditThe club is also notable in that former Feyenoord midfielder Shinji Ono began his professional career playing for Urawa Reds Ono returned for the 2006 season for a second stint with the club Urawa Reds is affiliated with German club Bayern Munich whose nickname is also The Reds 5 Karl Heinz Rummenigge the chairman of the Bayern Munich announced that We have been looking for clubs which have potential ability management stability and cordial confidence We could fulfill the desire to affiliate with this great club Urawa Reds 6 Some other foreign clubs such as Arsenal Club Atletico Independiente CR Flamengo VfB Stuttgart Manchester United Feyenoord Hamburger SV and Perth Glory visited Japan and played friendly games at the Saitama Stadium In August 2004 Urawa Reds appeared in a pre season four club friendly tournament the Vodafone Cup at Old Trafford the home ground of Manchester United Urawa Reds missed a few key players losing their first match 5 2 against the Argentinian side Boca Juniors The second fixture against the hosts Manchester United was called off due to a massive electric storm Some 800 Urawa Reds fans had travelled to the game and were later compensated The club s supporters also have an unofficial relationship with Chinese club Shanghai Shenhua The clubs supporters will support each other in continental competition For example Shenhua fans will support Urawa Reds when Urawa Reds plays in Shanghai against Shanghai SIPG 7 Home stadiumedit nbsp Saitama stadium Since the establishment of J League in 1992 the club had used the Urawa Komaba Stadium as its home stadium Due to the increasing popularity of the matches Saitama City owner of the stadium expanded the seat capacity During the renovation the club used Ōmiya Park Soccer Stadium In spite of the poor performance of the club the stadium was filled with faithful supporters New home groundedit In October 2001 Saitama Prefecture built new football specific Saitama Stadium in Saitama city This stadium was used as a venue for the 2002 FIFA World Cup After the World Cup the club gradually increased home games in Saitama Stadium and in 2003 the stadium was formally designated as the home stadium In 2008 only two games were held at Komaba Stadium FacilitieseditUrawa Reds uses Ohara City Field for training In addition to this facility the club opened Redsland in 2005 which has three grass fields one artificial turf field one baseball field futsal courts and tennis courts 8 Redsland is opened to the public and club members can use the facilities at relatively cheap fees MascotseditThe Red Diamonds have four mascots Redia Friendia Schale and Diarra However Redia doesn t make much appearances at Saitama Stadium due to the club s policy of the stadium being a place for serious competition When he does occasionally appear at the stadium he does not participate in any fan activities Because of this Reds fans dubbed him as a NEET mascot which is an acronym for No education employment or training 9 According to the club profile Redia and Friendia were married during a Reds fan festival in 1997 The younger twin mascots Schale and Diarra were born on the day the Red Diamonds won their first J League Championship in 2006 10 RivalrieseditSaitama derbyedit Main article Saitama derby Urawa Red Diamonds has a local derby with Omiya Ardija from Ōmiya ku Saitama city They first met in the 1987 Emperor s Cup with Mitsubishi defeating NTT Kanto by 5 to 0 at Nishigaoka National Stadium The derby first took place in the JSL Second Division in the 1989 90 season and it wouldn t take place until the 2000 season when Urawa was relegated to the second tier again In 2003 the formerly separate Omiya and Urawa cities merged to become Saitama city and since 2005 the derby became a top flight fixture after Omiya was promoted Marunouchi Gosankeedit During the JSL years and into the 1990s Urawa s main top flight rivals were JEF United Chiba and Kashiwa Reysol both now based in Chiba Prefecture Because of their former parent companies headquarters being all based in Marunouchi Tokyo the three clubs were known as the Marunouchi Gosanke 丸の内御三家 Marunouchi Big Three and fixtures among them were known as the Marunouchi derbies although the term is falling out of use as they are now based in different prefectures and rarely play home games in Tokyo stadiums Othersedit Rivals further afield include Kashima Antlers FC Tokyo Yokohama Marinos Kawasaki Frontale and even farther away Gamba Osaka Old JSL championship rivalries with Sanfrecce Hiroshima Cerezo Osaka and Shonan Bellmare have ebbed down as those clubs had nadirs in the second tier Women s teameditThe club also has a women s football team currently playing in the WE League as Urawa Red Diamonds Ladies 11 Kit and colourseditColoursedit The main colours of the Urawa Red Diamonds are red black and white Kit evolutionedit Home kit 1st nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1993 1994 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1995 1996 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1997 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1998 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1999 2000 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2001 2002 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2003 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2004 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2005 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2006 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2007 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2008 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2009 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2010 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2011 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2012 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2013 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2014 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2015 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2016 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2017 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2018 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2019 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2020 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2021 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2022 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2023 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2024 Away kit 2nd nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1993 1994 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1995 1996 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1997 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1998 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1999 2000 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2001 2002 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2003 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2004 2005 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2006 2007 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2008 2009 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2010 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2011 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2012 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2013 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2014 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2015 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2016 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2017 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2018 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2019 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2020 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2021 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2022 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2023 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2024 Alternative kit 3rd nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1992 1993 Cup 1st nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2012 3rd nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2013 3rd nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2014 3rd nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2017 3rd nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2019 3rd nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2020 3rd nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2022 vs PSG nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2022 vs Eintracht FrankfurtPlayerseditCurrent squadedit As of 9 May 2024 12 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player 1 GK nbsp JPN Shusaku Nishikawa 2 DF nbsp JPN Hiroki Sakai captain 3 MF nbsp JPN Atsuki Ito 4 DF nbsp JPN Hirokazu Ishihara 5 DF nbsp NOR Marius Hoibraten 6 MF nbsp JPN Ken Iwao 7 FW nbsp JPN Hiroki Abe 8 MF nbsp JPN Yoshio Koizumi 9 FW nbsp NED Bryan Linssen 10 MF nbsp JPN Shoya Nakajima 11 MF nbsp SWE Samuel Gustafson 12 FW nbsp BRA Thiago Santana 13 MF nbsp JPN Ryoma Watanabe 14 MF nbsp JPN Takahiro Sekine 16 GK nbsp JPN Ayumi Niekawa No Pos Nation Player 17 FW nbsp NOR Ola Solbakken on loan from Roma 20 DF nbsp JPN Yota Sato 21 MF nbsp JPN Tomoaki Okubo 23 DF nbsp JPN Rikito Inoue 24 MF nbsp JPN Yusuke Matsuo 25 MF nbsp JPN Kaito Yasui 27 MF nbsp THA Ekanit Panya on loan from Muangthong United 28 DF nbsp DEN Alexander Scholz vice captain 29 MF nbsp JPN Yota Horiuchi 30 FW nbsp JPN Shinzo Koroki 31 GK nbsp JPN Shun Yoshida 35 MF nbsp JPN Tomoya Ugajin 38 FW nbsp JPN Naoki Maeda 47 MF nbsp JPN Hidetoshi Takeda 66 DF nbsp JPN Ayumu Ohata Out on loanedit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player 18 FW nbsp JPN Toshiki Takahashi at Yokohama FC
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