Kashiwa Reysol
Kashima Antlers play in the J1 League at Kashima Soccer Stadium (40,728) in Kashima City, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan.
Eight J1 League titles. No other club in Japan has won the domestic championship more often. Kashima won three consecutively from 2007 to 2009, and three more from 1996 to 1998, establishing a pattern of sustained excellence that makes them the benchmark for Japanese domestic success. The club was founded in 1947, but the modern Antlers story begins in 1991 when Zico, the Brazilian legend who had won three Copa América titles and was considered one of the greatest players of the 1980s, joined as a player-coach to help launch the J-League era. Zico’s presence in a coastal city of 65,000 people was the kind of signal that told the world Japanese football was serious about its professional transformation.
Kashima City’s size makes the club’s success more remarkable. The stadium holds 40,728, and on major nights the ground is fuller than the town seems capable of producing. Supporters travel from across the Kanto region. The Antlers have built their reputation not on single superstar imports but on meticulous organisation, an academy that has produced internationals including Yuya Osako and Mitsuki Saito, and a style of football that prioritises winning over entertainment. They are not always beautiful, but they have been consistently effective for three decades.
The club reached the FIFA Club World Cup final in 2016, losing 4-2 to Real Madrid after extra time, with Ronaldo scoring twice. The fact that a club from a city of 65,000 competed with the Spanish and European champions until the closing minutes of a Club World Cup final is the single most extraordinary achievement in J1 League club history. It contextualised what Kashima represents beyond domestic football.
When does Kashima Antlers play? J1 League fixtures run in Japan Standard Time (JST, UTC+9). A 19:00 JST kickoff at Kashima Soccer Stadium is 11:00 in London, 06:00 in New York, and 20:00 in Sydney. Supporters tracking the record J1 champions should check Japan time before matchday. The J1 League official YouTube channel carries four free-to-watch streams each matchweek.