Tag: AFC Champions League Elite

  • What Is the J.League “100-Year Vision”?

    — A 30-Year Story of Using Sport to Make Communities, Japan, and the World Happier


    The J.League Is More Than a Football League

    Most people know the J.League as Japan’s professional football league. That is correct. But there is more to it than that.

    Behind the match results and league tables, the J.League has another side. It is called the “100-Year Vision” (J.League 100 Year Vision).


    Where It All Started — 10 Clubs in 1993

    The J.League launched in 1993 with just 10 clubs. At that time, Japan did not have a culture of community-based sports clubs like those found in Europe. Football was mainly run by company teams, and clubs had little connection to their local communities.

    Saburo Kawabuchi, the first J.League Chairman, asked a bold question: “Can we change Japan’s sports culture from the ground up?”

    His answer became the starting point of the 100-Year Vision.


    The Day the Name Was Born

    The slogan “100-Year Vision” was officially announced in 1996 — just three years after the league’s launch, when there were still only 16 clubs.

    The word “100 years” carries a clear message. This is not something that can be finished in a few years. It is a long-term commitment to build something that grows over generations, across a full century.

    The goal was simple: create 100 community-based sports clubs across Japan, and make each club the heart of its local community.


    The Kind of Society the 100-Year Vision Imagines

    The 100-Year Vision aims for a future that looks like this:

    In your town, there is a green grass pitch. Anyone can visit easily — children, adults, and elderly people alike. You can play football or choose any sport you enjoy. Qualified coaches are there to support you, whatever your age, fitness level, or goal. People connect with sport in three ways: they play, they watch, and they support — and through sport, different generations come together.

    The J.League’s official website puts it this way: a rich sports culture can only grow in an environment where everyone can enjoy sport freely.

    This is not only about football. The vision is to energise local communities, strengthen Japan as a whole, and spread happiness around the world through sport. That is the heart of the 100-Year Vision.


    How Far Has the Dream Come in 30 Years?

    From 10 clubs in 1993, the J.League grew to 60 clubs across J1, J2, and J3 by 2026.

    💡 Quick guide to the divisions: J1 is the top division. Clubs that finish near the bottom are relegated (dropped down) to J2, the second division. Top clubs in J2 are promoted (moved up) to J1. J3 is the third division. This promotion and relegation system works the same way as in European leagues.

    Those 60 clubs now cover 42 of Japan’s 47 prefectures (regional areas, similar to counties or states). The phrase “The J.League is in your town” is now almost a reality.

    Each club does more than play matches. Clubs send players to local schools, hospitals, and care facilities. These activities are called community outreach activities (hometownkatsudo in Japanese), and they bring clubs and communities closer together. The J.League requires every club to do this work — it is one of the most important ways the 100-Year Vision is put into practice every day.

    The J.League has also invested heavily in its academy system (youth development programme). Each club’s academy trains young players from the local area and develops the next generation of players and coaches.


    2026 — A Milestone Year for the 100-Year Vision

    2026 marks exactly 30 years since the “100-Year Vision” was first announced. It is also a historic turning point for the J.League itself.

    The league is changing its season format. It is moving from the traditional spring-to-autumn format (starting in spring, ending in autumn) to an autumn-to-spring format (starting in autumn, ending the following spring) — the same calendar used by most major European leagues. This is a strategic decision to align the schedule with the AFC Champions League Elite (ACLE), Asia’s top club competition.

    The J.League has named this transition period the “100-Year Vision League” — a special season that celebrates the milestone and sends the founding spirit of the vision out to the world.

    For more details on the format and rules of this special season, check out this article: 👉 J.League 2026: A Year of Major Change


    Summary — The 100-Year Vision Is Both an Idea and an Action

    The “100-Year Vision” is not just a slogan. For more than 30 years, the J.League has turned this vision into concrete action — through community activities, youth development, stadium improvement, and international expansion.

    100 clubs. 42 prefectures. 30 years. The numbers keep growing. But the direction never changes.

    Use sport to build a happier world. That is the J.League’s “100-Year Vision.”

  • J.League 2026: A Year of Major Change

    Introduction — Why 2026 Is a Special Year

    2026 is a turning point for J.League. For many years, J.League used a spring-to-autumn season format — starting in spring and finishing in winter. But from late 2026, the league will switch to an autumn-to-spring format, starting in autumn and ending the following spring. This change brings J.League into line with major European leagues and the AFC Champions League Elite (ACLE) — Asia’s top club competition, similar to the UEFA Champions League in Europe. The new season, called the 2026/27 season, is scheduled to begin in August 2026.

    However, this change created a problem. After the 2025 season ended, there would be a gap of about six months before the new season started. To fill that gap, J.League created a special competition called the 100 Year Vision League (Japanese: 百年構想リーグ).


    What Is the 100 Year Vision League?

    The 100 Year Vision League is a one-time special tournament that runs from 6 February 2026 to 7 June 2026. It was created to bridge the gap between the old and new season formats.

    The name comes from J.League’s founding vision, set in 1993: to build 100 professional football clubs across Japan by the year 2092, with each club deeply connected to its local community.


    J1 100 Year Vision League — Format and Rules

    Clubs and Groups

    All 20 J1 clubs take part in this competition. However, it does not use a single league table like a normal season. The 20 clubs are divided into two regional groups: EAST (10 clubs) and WEST (10 clubs). Clubs from the same prefecture are placed in the same group where possible. Clubs based in areas that face heavy snow in February and March were also considered when forming the groups.

    Match Format — Group Stage

    Each group plays a full home-and-away double round robin within itself. This means every club plays against each of the other 9 clubs in its group twice — once at home and once away. Each club plays 18 matches in the group stage.

    Points System — Special Rule

    The basic points system applies: 3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 for a loss. However, there is one important difference. If a match is level after 90 minutes, the game goes straight to a penalty shootout. The winner of the shootout earns 2 points. The loser earns 1 point. This rule means every match always produces a winner. There are no draws in this tournament.

    Playoffs — Deciding the Final Rankings

    After the group stage, clubs in the same position from each group face each other in a two-legged playoff (home and away). For example, 1st place in EAST plays 1st place in WEST to decide the champion. 2nd place in EAST plays 2nd place in WEST, and so on, all the way down to 10th vs 10th. This decides the final overall rankings from 1st to 20th place.

    The aggregate score over the two legs decides the winner. There is no away goals rule. If the aggregate score is level after two legs, the tie goes to extra time and then a penalty shootout.

    The first legs are scheduled for 30–31 May, and the second legs for 6–7 June.


    Important Rule: No Relegation

    In this tournament, no club will be relegated (sent down) to J2 — the second tier of Japanese football — based on their final position. This is very different from a normal J1 season, where the bottom clubs are relegated at the end of the year. Because the 100 Year Vision League is a special transitional event, its results do not affect promotion or relegation.

    Every club can compete freely, without fear of dropping down a division.


    The Main Prize: A Spot in Asia’s Top Club Competition

    Even without relegation, this competition matters greatly. The winner earns a place in the 2026/27 AFC Champions League Elite (ACLE) — Asia’s top club competition, comparable to the UEFA Champions League in Europe.

    Kashima Antlers, the 2025 J1 champions, and Kashiwa Reysol, the runners-up, have already qualified for the ACLE. The 100 Year Vision League winner will join them as Japan’s third representative in Asia.

    Prize Money

    The tournament also offers significant prize money.

    • Champion: ¥150,000,000 (approx. $943,000 USD)
    • Runner-up: ¥60,000,000 (approx. $377,000 USD)
    • 3rd place: ¥30,000,000 (approx. $189,000 USD)
    • Group stage bonus: ¥2,000,000 (approx. $12,600 USD) per point earned

    (All USD figures are approximate, based on an exchange rate of ¥159 = $1 USD as of April 2026.)


    J2 & J3 100 Year Vision League — Format and Rules

    Clubs from J2 (the second division) and J3 (the third division) also take part in their own version of this special competition. This is an unusual format: all 40 clubs from J2 and J3 compete together in one combined tournament — 22 clubs from J2 and 18 from J3.

    The 40 clubs are split into four groups of 10: East A, East B, West A, and West B. The match format and points system follow the same rules as the J1 competition. After the group stage, clubs in matching positions play off against each other to determine the final rankings. As with the J1 competition, there is no relegation based on results in this tournament. J2 and J3 clubs compete on the same stage.


    The 2026/27 Season — A New Era Begins

    After the 100 Year Vision League ends, J.League steps into a new era. The 2026/27 season, opening in August 2026, will be the first official season under the new autumn-to-spring calendar. From this point on, every J.League season will run from August to May of the following year — a schedule that fans of European football will find familiar.

    You can follow live fixtures and standings for the 100 Year Vision League on J.League’s official English website at jleague.co.


    Quick Summary Table

    ItemDetails
    Competition NameMeiji Yasuda J1 100 Year Vision League
    Dates6 February 2026 – 7 June 2026
    ClubsAll 20 J1 clubs
    GroupsEAST (10 clubs) / WEST (10 clubs)
    FormatGroup stage (double round robin) + playoffs
    RelegationNone
    Top PrizeAFC Champions League Elite 2026/27 spot + ¥150,000,000 (approx. $943,000 USD)
    Next StepAugust 2026: 2026/27 season begins (autumn-to-spring format)

    The year 2026 is the biggest turning point in J.League’s 30+ year history. The 100 Year Vision League marks the start of that change, and football fans around the world are paying attention.