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・ Yokohama City University College of Nursing
・ Yokohama City University Medical Center
・ Yokohama College of Art and Design
・ Yokohama College of Commerce
・ Yokohama College of Pharmacy
・ Yokohama Commodity Exchange
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Yokohama F.C.
・ Yokohama F.C. Seagulls
・ Yokohama Film Festival
・ Yokohama Flügels
・ Yokohama Hakkeijima Sea Paradise
・ Yokohama History Museum
・ Yokohama Incident
・ Yokohama International Christian Academy
・ Yokohama International School
・ Yokohama International Swimming Pool
・ Yokohama International Women's Ekiden
・ Yokohama Jazz Festival
・ Yokohama Kaidashi Kikō
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Yokohama F.C. : ウィキペディア英語版
Yokohama F.C.

are a Japanese football (soccer) club based in the city of Yokohama.
==History==
The club was formed in 1999, following the merger of the city's two J. League clubs, Yokohama Flügels and Yokohama Marinos the previous year. Flügels supporters, whose club was essentially dissolved, rejected the suggestion that they should start supporting Marinos, their crosstown rivals. Instead, with money raised through donations from the general public and an affiliation with IMG, the talent management company, the former Flügels supporters founded the Yokohama Fulie Sports Club. Following the ''socio'' model used by FC Barcelona, the Fulie Sports Club created Yokohama F.C., the first professional sports team in Japan owned and operated by its supporters.
For its first season in 1999, Yokohama F.C. hired former German World Cup star Pierre Littbarski to be the manager and Yasuhiko Okudera, the first Japanese footballer to play professionally in Europe, to be the chairman. Despite attempts to win straight entry into the J. League, the Japan Football Association only permitted the team to enter the Japan Football League and ruled that the club would not be eligible for promotion to J2 at the end of its first season. After two seasons as JFL champions, the team was promoted to the J2 Division of the J. League.
The club spent the next 6 seasons in J2, finishing mid-table between 2001 and 2005. However, Yokohama F.C. won the J2 championship in 2006 and gained promotion to J. League Division 1 in the process. In 2007, Yokohama F.C. played its first season in the top flight of Japanese football in only its ninth year of existence. After a poor season the team were relegated with five games of the season still remaining. Despite their early demotion, Yokohama F.C. still lived to help decide the final outcome at the opposite end of the table. By beating title contenders Urawa Red Diamonds on the last day of the season, they helped Kashima Antlers claim their fifth J. League crown.
Thus far, Yokohama F.C. is the only former member of the current JFL to compete in the top division.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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