Koji Maeda

Position: DF
Born: 3-Feb-1969
Height/Weight: 178/74
Birthplace: Kagoshima
Previous Teams: Kagoshima PE U., Matsushita Electric, PJM Futures, Fukuoka Blux, Yokohama Flugels, Jubilo Iwata, FC Tokyo, Avispa Fukuoka
Matches (J1/J2): 125/16 Goals: 5/0
First Appearance: 16-Mar-1996 Yokohama Flugels -vs- Cerezo Osaka
First Goal : 7-Nov-1998 Yokohama Flugels -vs- Avispa Fukuoka
Photo Year Team Uniform # Caps Goals
- 1991-92 Matsushita Electric - - -
- 1993 PJM Futures (JFL) - 17 2
- 1994 PJM Futures (JFL) - 25 4
- 1995 Fukuoka Blux (JFL) - 8 0
- 1996 Yokohama Flugels 20 0
- 1997 Yokohama Flugels 21 0
- 1998 Yokohama Flugels 24 1
1999 Jubilo Iwata 15 1
2000- FC Tokyo 0 0
- -2000 Avispa Fukuoka 21 2
2001 Avispa Fukuoka 21 1
2002- Avispa Fukuoka 3 0
  -2002 Sagan Tosu 16 0
  J.League TOTAL 141 5

 

 


 

Wagner Lopes

Position: FW
Born: 29-Jan-1969
Height/Weight: 182/75
Birthplace: Brazil
Previous Teams: Nissan FC, Kashiwa Reysol , Honda, Bellmare Hiratsuka, Nagoya Grampus Eight, FC Tokyo, Avispa Fukuoka
Appearances (J1/J2/JFL): 125/31/96 Goals: 69/7/102
First Appearance: 12-Apr-1997 Bellmare Hiratsuka -vs- Gamba Osaka (at Expo '70 Stadium)
First Goal : 19-Apr-1997 Bellmare Hiratsuka -vs- Kyoto Purple Sanga (at Nishikyogoku Stadium)

Bio 

Wagner Lopes is a very interesting character in the history of the J.League. Born in Brazil, Lopes moved to Japan at the age of 20 and Joined Nissan FC, earning a reputation as a good finisher and one of the team's leading scorers as the team prepared to join the newly created J.League. However, when Nissan became the Yokohama Marinos, they hired three Argentines to form their strike force -- Ramon Diaz, Ramon Medina Bello and David Bisconti. Lopes, a Brazilian, decided to stay in the JFL and try to help another aspiring team, Kashiwa Reysol, win a spot in the new League.

After two years Reysol achieved success, but once again Lopes decided to remain in the JFL, this time joining Honda FC. Though continuing to play in the "minor leagues", Lopes was racking up an impressive tally of goals, averaging a shade over 1 goal per match in six years of JFL play. Finally, when Bellmare Hiratsuka joined the J.League, they convinced Lopes to move up to the big show as their ace striker. As he continued to find the net with high frequency in the J.League, Lopes began to think about the possibility of playing for the national team,. Another Brazilian-born, naturalised Japanese player, Ruy Ramos, had been a centerpiece of the national team in the early 1990s, and following in Ramos' footsteps, Lopes naturalized as a Japanese citizen in 1997, earning a call to national team duty in the run-up to the 1998 World Cup.

Unfortunately, by this time Lopes was on the downward slope of his career, and the World Cup proved to be his last hurrah. The next season he joined Nagoya Grampus, but had lost the scoring tough he showed in his earlier days. Wanting nothing else but to play on a regular basis, Lopes continued the long decline, moving from Grampus to FC Tokyo in 2001 and finally to Avispa Fukuoka in 2002. Because Lopes gained most of his "fame" after he was already on the road to becoming a washed-up hacker, , many people base their impression of his talent on the performances he made during his waning years.

But that is hardly a fair basis for evaluating this player -- a deadly finisher who racked up an amazing 102 goals in 96 matches, during the early 1990s. Nevertheless, Lopes did hold a share of the record for most goals scored in a J.League match (5 -- a mark he shared with Masashi Nakayama), for almost two decades, until it was finally broken by Robert Olunga in 2019. Few players (and even fewer non-native Japanese) made as many contributions to the growth of football during the J.League's first decade.


 

Photo Year Team Uniform # Appearances Goals
- 1991 Nissan FC - 18 8
- 1992 Nissan FC - 17 11
- 1993 Kashiwa Reysol 18 18
- 1994 Kashiwa Reysol 18 17
- 1995 Honda Motor - 30 31
- 1996 Honda Motor - 30 36
- 1997 Bellmare Hiratsuka 27 18
- 1998 Bellmare Hiratsuka 29 18
1999 Nagoya Grampus 23 13
2000 Nagoya Grampus 28 10
2001 FC Tokyo 18 10
2002 Avispa Fukuoka 31 7
- TOTAL 252 178

 

 

 


 

Tsuyoshi Kitazawa

Position: MF
Born: 10-Aug-1968
Height/Weight: 170/67
Birthplace: Tokyo
Previous Teams: Shutoku HS; Honda FC; Verdy Kawasaki; Tokyo Verdy
Appearances (J1/J2): 268/0 Goals: 41/0
First Appearance: 15-May-1993 Verdy Kawasaki -vs- Yokohama Marinos (at National Stadium)
First Goal : 19-May-1993 Verdy Kawasaki -vs- JEF Ichihara (at National Stadium)

 Bio

Tsuyoshi Kitazawa was undoubtedly one of the most "prominent" players who graced the J.League during its first decade, despite the fact that his statistics may pale beside those of most other stars. Former teammate Ruy Ramos once jokingly described him as "the most valuable, and the most talentless player I ever met". Kitazawa was always a throwback to an era when players were able to make a competitive contribution to a sports team through sheer force of determination and relentless competitive spirit. Though the description of "talentless" is certainly an overstatement, it is true that Kitazawa's pure footballing skills were mediocre at best. He was neither big (170cm) nor fast, and his dribbling ability was close to nonexistent.

But Kitazawa learned to make up for his weaknesses through hard work and intelligent, uncompromising play. He did have a very good sense of positioning, a strong and fairly accurate boot, and could pass the ball reasonably well. He also clearly understood the game in a way that only an elite few can match. This ability to analyze and explain the game earned him a spot as one of the most popular colour commentators on TV, following his playing career. It also served him well as a coach in Cambodia, where he earned a reputation as an early and important contributor to the growth of the sport. However what made Kitazawa a first-string and first-rate player even on the star-studded Verdy teams of the early 1990s was his incredible competitiveness and blazing intensity.

Kitazawa never learned the meaning of the word "quit", and even after he passed the age of 30 he was one of the most tireless pressing midfielders Japan ever produced. Kitazawa won a number of national team caps early in his career, before the level of skill among other Japanese players reached the point where his energy and competitiveness could no longer make up for his lack of technique. In a league that is often criticised for being too "polite", Kitazawa was one of the few players who showed absolutely no cordiality or compassion once he stepped onto the pitch. Off the field, he was a very popular and mild-mannered individual, but once the whistle blew to begin play, anyone wearing a different coloured uniform was "the enemy". That, truly, is the definition of a competitor.

Photo Year Team Uniform # Appearances Goals
- 1993 Verdy Kawasaki 35 6
- 1994 Verdy Kawasaki 40 9
- 1995 Verdy Kawasaki 40 11
- 1996 Verdy Kawasaki 28 4
- 1997 Verdy Kawasaki 29 1
- 1998 Verdy Kawasaki 34 5
1999 Verdy Kawasaki 28 4
2000 Verdy Kawasaki 4 0
2001 Tokyo Verdy 23 0
2002 Tokyo Verdy 7 1
- J.League TOTAL 268 41

 

 


 

Mitsuaki Kojima

Position: DF
Born: 14-Jul-1968
Height/Weight: 174/74
Birthplace: Nagasaki
Previous Teams: Tokyo Agricultural U., Fujitsu, Sanfrecce Hiroshima, Avispa Fukuoka
Matches (J1/J2): 233/31 Goals: 4/0
First Appearance: 16-May-1993 Sanfrecce Hiroshima -vs- JEF United Ichihara
First Goal : 16-May-1993 Sanfrecce Hiroshima -vs- JEF United Ichihara
Photo Year Team Uniform # League Matches Cup Matches
Caps Goals Caps Goals
- 1992 Fujitsu (JSL) - - - - -
- 1993 Sanfrecce Hiroshima 27 3 9 1
- 1994 Sanfrecce Hiroshima 15 0 1 0
- 1995 Sanfrecce Hiroshima 33 0 5 0
- 1996 Sanfrecce Hiroshima 26 1 19 0
- 1997 Sanfrecce Hiroshima 30 0 7 0
- 1998 Sanfrecce Hiroshima 24 0 4 0
  1999 Avispa Fukuoka 22 0 5 0
2000 Avispa Fukuoka 27 0 3 0
2001 Avispa Fukuoka 29 0 4 0
2002 Avispa Fukuoka 31 0 0 0
  J.League TOTAL 264 4 45 1

 

 


 

Toshimi Kikuchi

Position: DF
Born: 17-Jun-1973
Height/Weight: 178/72
Birthplace: Mie
Previous Teams: Tono HS, Verdy Club, Verdy Kawasaki, Gamba Osaka, Verdy Kawasaki, Sanfrecce Hiroshima, Gamba Osaka, Omiya Ardija, Verdy Kawasaki, Tokyo Verdy
Matches (J1/J2): 85/11 Goals: 2/0
First Appearance: 19-Jul-1995 Verdy Kawasaki -vs- Urawa Reds
First Goal : 4-Oct-1995 Verdy Kawasaki -vs- Yokohama Marinos
Photo Year Team Uniform # League Matches Cup Matches
Caps Goals Caps Goals
- 1991-92 Verdy Club - - - -
- 1993 Verdy Kawasaki 0 0 0 0
- 1994 Verdy Kawasaki 0 0 0 0
- 1995 Verdy Kawasaki 24 1 3 1
- 1996 Verdy Kawasaki 12 0 6 0
- 1997- Gamba Osaka 13 0 0 0
- -1997 Verdy Kawasaki 1 0 5 0
- 1998 Verdy Kawasaki 9 0 5 0
1999- Sanfrecce Hiroshima 1 0 1 0
- -1999 Gamba Osaka 3 0 1 0
  2000- Omiya Ardija 11 0 1 0
  -2000 Verdy Kawasaki 5 0 4 0
2001 Tokyo Verdy 14 1 3 0
2002 Tokyo Verdy 3 0 1 0
  J.League TOTAL 96 2 30 1

 

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