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Blaublitz Akita

Coordinates: 39°43′9.2″N 140°6′20.1″E / 39.719222°N 140.105583°E / 39.719222; 140.105583
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Blaublitz Akita
ブラウブリッツ秋田
Full nameBlaublitz Akita
Nickname(s)Blaublitz
Short nameBB, BBA, Blau
Founded1965; 59 years ago (1965) as TDK S.C.
2010; 14 years ago (2010) as Blaublitz Akita
GroundSoyu Stadium
Akita, Akita Prefecture
Capacity20,125
J.League:18,528
ChairmanKosuke Iwase
ManagerKen Yoshida
LeagueJ2 League
2024J2 League, 10th of 20
Websiteblaublitz.jp
Current season

Blaublitz Akita (ブラウブリッツ秋田, Burauburittsu Akita) is a Japanese professional association football team based in Akita, capital of Akita Prefecture. The club currently play in the J2 League, Japanese second tier of professional football league. Due to the club's former ownership by TDK and thus formerly known as the TDK S.C. (JaWiki), most of the players were employees of TDK's Akita factory.

History

[edit]

The club based in Nikaho, Akita, was founded in 1965. They were promoted to the Tohoku Regional League in 1982. They played in the Japan Soccer League Division 2 in 1985 and 1986. They were the only club in Tohoku region competing in the JSL.

In 2006, they won the Tohoku Regional League championship for the fifth straight year. They were automatically promoted to the Japan Football League after they won the National Regional League Playoffs.

The team has announced that it would separate from its parent company and join the J. League if the club's final yearly standing should ever allow promotion.

In May, 2009, TDK announced that the football club will become independent for the 2010 season and be based around Akita. Later in 2010 the club's name was changed to "Blaublitz Akita". Blau and Blitz mean blue and lightning in German respectively.

In 2014 they entered the J3 League after previously playing in the Japan Football League, the third tier of the Japanese association football league system until promotion to J2 in 2020.

The club moved to Akita City[1] and entered the J3 League for the 2014 season. The club finished 8th in each of its first two years in the professional competition. In the 2017 season, their fourth, they won the title, however due to their lacking a license to play upper-tier football, they were not promoted, becoming the first professional third-tier champion not to be promoted. However, Akita acquired the J2 license on September 27, 2018,[2] after which they won the title again in the 2020 season, returning to the second tier for the first time in 34 years.

Stadium

[edit]

Their home stadium is Soyu Stadium, also known as "Yabase" (capacity 20,125 and the J.League's oldest serving stadium). The club practices at the adjacent Akita Sports Plus ASP Stadium and Space Project Dream Field.

League and cup record

[edit]
Champions Runners-up Third place Promoted Relegated
League J. League Cup Emperor's
Cup
Season Div. Tier Teams Pos. P W D L F A GD Pts Attendance/G
TDK
1982 Tohoku 3 8 1st 14 11 3 0 41 12 29 25 - -
1983 8 1st 14 13 1 0 76 13 63 27 - -
1984 8 1st 14 11 1 2 50 15 35 23 - 1st round
1985 JSL2 2 12 12th 14 0 3 11 12 48 -36 3 - -
1986 16 15th 20 0 1 19 21 111 -90 2 - -
1987 Tohoku 3 8 3rd 14 10 2 2 51 15 36 22 - 1st round
1988 8 1st 14 12 0 2 48 13 35 24 - 1st round
1989 8 1st 14 11 2 1 49 11 38 24 - 1st round
1990 8 2nd 14 9 3 2 31 13 18 21 - -
1991 8 3rd 14 8 1 5 27 26 1 17 - -
1992 4 8 5th 14 6 2 6 18 24 -6 14 - -
1993 8 5th 14 4 3 7 22 30 -8 11 - -
1994 3 8 5th 14 3 5 6 18 28 -10 11 - -
1995 8 5th 14 4 5 5 20 23 -3 13 - -
1996 8 5th 14 6 2 6 25 24 1 14 - 1st round
1997 8 3rd 14 6 2 6 28 27 1 20 - -
1998 8 3rd 14 8 1 5 30 18 12 25 - 1st round
1999 4 8 2nd 14 7 5 2 35 13 22 26 - 1st round
2000 8 1st 14 11 1 2 41 11 30 35 - 1st round
2001 8 2nd 14 9 2 3 41 12 29 29 - -
2002 8 1st 14 13 1 0 39 6 33 40 - 1st round
2003 8 1st 14 8 5 1 38 12 26 29 - 2nd round
2004 8 1st 14 11 1 2 43 10 33 34 - 1st round
2005 8 1st 14 9 2 1 36 10 26 29 - 1st round
2006 8 1st 14 14 0 0 58 7 51 42 - 2nd round
2007 JFL 3 18 13th 34 11 9 14 49 47 2 42 983 4th round
2008 18 13th 34 10 11 13 48 47 1 41 951 1st round
2009 18 10th 34 14 4 16 39 54 -15 46 741 1st round
Blaublitz Akita
2010 JFL 3 18 8th 34 14 9 11 54 41 13 51 1,256 2nd round
2011 18 14th 33 10 7 16 38 52 -14 37 1,274 2nd round
2012 17 13th 32 9 10 13 33 41 -8 37 1,136 2nd round
2013 18 8th 34 14 8 12 48 45 3 50 1,768 2nd round
2014 J3 12 8th 33 10 4 19 38 57 -19 34 1,773 2nd round
2015 13 8th 36 12 9 15 37 40 -3 45 1,998 2nd round
2016 16 4th 30 14 8 8 37 26 11 50 2,425 2nd round
2017 17 1st 32 18 7 7 53 31 22 61 2,364 1st round
2018 17 8th 32 12 7 13 37 35 2 43 2,839 1st round
2019 18 8th 34 13 10 11 45 35 10 49 1,576 1st round
2020 18 1st 34 21 10 3 55 18 37 73 1,221 Semi Final
2021 J2 2 22 13th 42 11 14 17 41 53 -12 47 2,097 1st round
2022 22 12nd 42 15 11 16 39 46 -7 56 2,283 2nd round
2023 22 13th 42 12 15 15 37 44 -7 51 3,139 2nd round
2024 20 10th 38 15 9 14 36 35 1 54 4,128 3rd round 2nd round
2025 20 TBA 38 TBD TBD
Key
  • Pos. = Position in league; P = Games played; W = Games won; D = Games drawn; L = Games lost; F = Goals scored; A = Goals conceded; GD = Goals difference; Pts = Points gained
  • Attendance/G = Average home league attendance
  • 2020 season attendance reduced by COVID-19 worldwide pandemic
  • Source: Source: J. League Data Site[3]

Honours

[edit]
Blaublitz Akita Honours
Honour No. Years
Tohoku Soccer League 11 1982, 1983, 1984, 1988, 1989, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 (shared with Grulla Morioka), 2006
Regional Promotion Series 1 2006
J3 League 2 2017, 2020

Current squad

[edit]

As of 30 July 2024.[4] Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Japan JPN Genki Yamada
2 DF Japan JPN Ryohei Okazaki
3 DF Japan JPN Tatsushi Koyanagi
4 DF Japan JPN Koji Hachisuka
5 DF Japan JPN Takashi Kawano
6 MF Japan JPN Hiroto Morooka
7 MF Japan JPN Takuma Mizutani
8 FW Japan JPN Junki Hata
9 MF Japan JPN Ryota Nakamura
10 FW Japan JPN Ren Komatsu
11 FW Japan JPN Yukihito Kajiya
13 DF Japan JPN Ryuji Saito
14 MF Japan JPN Ryuhei Oishi
16 DF Japan JPN Kota Muramatsu
17 FW Japan JPN Koya Handa
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 FW Japan JPN Ibuki Yoshida
20 MF Japan JPN Hiroki Kurimoto
22 DF Japan JPN Takumi Kawamura (on loan from Tokyo Verdy)
23 GK Japan JPN Soki Yatagai
25 MF Japan JPN Tomofumi Fujiyama
27 DF Japan JPN Keita Yoshioka (on loan from Montedio Yamagata)
29 FW Japan JPN Daiki Sato (on loan from Machida Zelvia)
39 DF Japan JPN Kyowaan Hoshi
40 FW Japan JPN Shota Aoki
41 GK Japan JPN Kosuke Inose (on loan from SC Sagamihara)
42 FW Japan JPN Ken Tshizanga Matsumoto
47 GK Japan JPN Tomoki Horiuchi Type 2
77 FW Japan JPN Keito Kawamura (on loan from Tokyo Verdy)
80 MF Japan JPN Kazuya Onohara (on loan from Zweigen Kanazawa)
88 DF Japan JPN Kenichi Kaga

Out on loan

[edit]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
15 FW Japan JPN Shion Niwa (at Kamatamare Sanuki)
45 MF Japan JPN Hinase Suzuki (at Michinoku Sendai)
No. Pos. Nation Player
DF Japan JPN Shintaro Kato (at Vanraure Hachinohe)
FW Japan JPN Hayate Take (at Thespa Gunma)

Club officials

[edit]
Position Name
Manager Japan Ken Yoshida
Assistant manager Japan Hirotaka Usui
First-team coach Japan Shota Sakagawa
Japan Masanori Tamo
Goalkeeper coach Japan Hirohito Ito
Analytical coach Japan Haruki Sasaki
Chief trainer Japan Yuta Kobayashi
Trainer Japan Kaichi Hiraoka
Japan Ryota Kanagaya
Competent Japan Taichi Matsuda
Side affairs Japan Hiromasa Nishizawa

Managerial history

[edit]
Name Nationality Tenure
Start Finish
Kazuaki Sato  Japan 1988 ?[5][6][7]
Norio Sasaki  Japan ? 31 January 1998 [8]
Tsutomu Komatsu  Japan 1 February 1999 31 January 2007
Hisao Sasaki  Japan 1 February 2008 31 January 2009
Hirotoshi Yokoyama  Japan 1 February 2010 31 January 2011
Yuji Yokoyama  Japan 1 February 2012 31 January 2013
George Yonashiro  Brazil /  Japan 1 February 2013 31 January 2014
Shuichi Mase  Japan 1 February 2015 31 January 2016
Koichi Sugiyama  Japan 1 February 2017 11 July 2018
Shuichi Mase  Japan 12 July 2018 31 January 2019
Ken Yoshida  Japan 1 February 2020 Current

List of captains

[edit]
# Name Captaincy years
- Akira Sasaki [9] JSL Era
7 Satoshi Sato[10]
17 Moriyasu Saito[11]
4 Masatoshi Ozawa 2007–2009
18 Satoshi Yokoyama 2010
2 Hiroyuki Kobayashi 2011
10 Masatoshi Matsuda 2012-2013
10 Shingo Kumabayashi 2014
4 Toshio Shimakawa 2015
24 Naoyuki Yamada 2016-2018
39
24
Hiroki Kotani
Naoyuki Yamada
2019
24 Naoyuki Yamada 2020
9 Ryota Nakamura 2021
23 Shuto Inaba 2022
33 Ryutaro Iio 2023
6 Hiroto Morooka 2024-

[12]

Kit evolution

[edit]

Top goal scorers by seasons

[edit]
Season Name Goals
2014 Japan Hirochika Miyoshi 12
2015 Japan Kyohei Maeyama 10
2016 Japan Tomohiro Tanaka 8
2017 15
2018 Japan Tomohiro Tanaka
Japan Ken Hisatomi
6
2019 Japan Ryota Nakamura 11
2020 10
2021 Japan Hayate Take 7
2022 Japan Ibuki Yoshida
Japan Shota Aoki
5
2023 Japan Keita Saito 5

Emperor's Cup Record (1984-2014)

[edit]
15 December 1984 1 Aichi Gakuin University 3–1 TDK
JST (UTC+9)
19 December 1987 1 TDK 1–10 Tokai University
JST (UTC+9)
24 December 1988 1 Yomiuri 4–1 TDK
JST (UTC+9)
9 December 1989 1 PJM Futures 5–0 TDK
JST (UTC+9)
3 November 1996 1 Volca Kagoshima 3–1 TDK
JST (UTC+9)
29 November 1998 1 Omiya Ardija 1–0 TDK
JST (UTC+9)
28 November 1999 1 Mito HollyHock 5–1 TDK
JST (UTC+9)
25 November 2000 1 Juntendo University 3–2 TDK
JST (UTC+9)
30 November 2003 1 Alouette Kumamoto 1–3 TDK SC Kumamoto Suizenji Stadium
Aira 86' Report Morita 18', 75', 87' Attendance: 536
7 December 2003 2 Otsuka Pharmaceuticals 6–0 TDK SC Tokushima Naruto Stadium
06'
44'
45'
62'
65'
84'
Report Attendance: 655
2004-09-23 1 TDK SC 2–3 Tottori SC Yabase Athletic Field
own goal 44'
Ozawa 73'
Report Yamazaki 27'
Kobayashi 60'
Hori 67'
Attendance: 1,111[13][14][15][16][17][18][19]
2005-09-17 1 TDK 1–3 Ehime FC Yabase Athletic Field
15:00 Togashi 27' Report Maegawa 24'
Hoshino 33'
Akai 38'
Attendance: 1,168
Referee: Hiroyuki Anzai
2006-09-17 1 TDK 2–0 Japan Soccer College Yabase Athletic Field
13:00 Ozawa 10'
Fujiwara 80'
Report Attendance: 1,214
Referee: Yusuke Murata
2006-09-23 2 Hosei University 2–0 TDK Yumenoshima Stadium
13:00 Inoue 61'
Kosukegawa 71'
Report Attendance: 449
Referee: Keiichi Sunagawa
2007-09-16 1 Nirasaki Astros 0–8 TDK S.C. Yamanashi Chuo Bank Stadium, Kōfu
13:00 Ozawa 1'
Matsuda 27', 39', 47'
(own goal) 37'
Togashi 55'
Ikeda 61', 79'
2007-10-07 3 Consadole Sapporo 1–1
(9–10 p)
TDK S.C. Sapporo Atsubetsu Park Stadium, Sapporo
13:00 Ishii 4' Report Matsugae 2'
2007-11-04 4 FC Tokyo 2–1 TDK SC Ajinomoto Stadium
13:00 Hirayama 52'
Konno 82'
Matsuda 53'
2008-09-13 1 TDK S.C. 2  – 3 (a.e.t.) Osaka Taiiku University Yabase Athletic Field
13:00 Narita 63'
Ikeda 79'
Report Mori 23', 33'
Kawanishi 92'
Attendance: 773
Referee: Hiroyuki Onishi
2009-09-19 1 TDK SC 1–2 Sony Sendai Akita Athletics Stadium, Akita
13:00 Yokoyama 16' Report Machida 32'
Konta 65'
Attendance: 392
Referee: Hiosaharu Kitamura
2010-09-03 1 Yamagata University 1–6 Blaublitz Akita ND Stadium, Tendō
19:00 Sato 38' Report Yokoyama 1', 62'
Fukazawa 5'
Ka. Sato 22'
Togashi 43'
Maeyama 75'
Attendance: 452
Referee: Koei Koya
2010-09-05 2 Montedio Yamagata 3–0 Blaublitz Akita ND Stadium, Tendō
18:00 Masuda 32'
Ota 68'
89' (o.g.)
Report Attendance: 3,085
Referee: Toshimitsu Yoshida
2011-09-04 1 Blaublitz Akita 13–0 Yamagata University School of Medicine Akita Yabase Stadium, Akita City
13:00 Miyoshi 13'
Matsuda 26', 41', 56', 73', 75'
Imai 30', 53'
Higa 45+2', 61'
Kawata 73'
Kozawa 80'
Chino 90+3'
Report Attendance: 473
Referee: Toshiyuki Wazumi
2011-10-08 2 Montedio Yamagata 2–0 Blaublitz Akita ND Soft Stadium Yamagata, Tendō
13:00 Shimomura 23'
Hasegawa 38'
Report Attendance: 2,425
Referee: Minoru Tojo
2 September 2012 1 Blaublitz Akita 1–0 Heisei International University Akita Yabase Stadium, Akita
13:00 Taisuke Matsugae 62' report Attendance: 677
Referee: Taku Hase
9 September 2012 2 Omiya Ardija 2–0 Blaublitz Akita Kumagaya Athletic Stadium, Kumagaya
13:00 Carlinhos 45+4'
Cho Young-Cheol 68'
report Attendance: 1,439
Referee: Nobutsugu Murakami
1 September 2013 1 Blaublitz Akita 2–0 Renofa Yamaguchi FC Akita
13:00 Maeyama 23'
Handa 31'
Report Stadium: Akita Yabase Stadium
Attendance: 1,053
Referee: Atsushi Uemura
7 September 2013 2 Vegalta Sendai 3–0 Blaublitz Akita Sendai
15:00 Sasaki 1'
Akamine 63'
Matsushita 82'
Report Stadium: Yurtec Stadium Sendai
Attendance: 3,377
Referee: Yoshiro Imamura
5 July 2014 1 Blaublitz Akita 7–1 Saitama SC Akita
19:00 Stadium: Akita Yabase Athletic Field
12 July 2014 2 FC Tokyo 8–0 Blaublitz Akita Chōfu, Tokyo
18:00 Mita 11'
Kawano 22'
Morishige 26'
Edú 29' (P), 58'
Ota 48' (DFK)
Hirayama 62'
Watanabe 84'
Stadium: Ajinomoto Stadium
Attendance: 5,860
Referee: Nobutsugu Murakami

JSL Cup Record

[edit]
23 June 1985 1 Honda FC 6–0 TDK
JST (UTC+9)

Seasons

[edit]
TDK fans in 2007, Ajinomoto Stadium

Support

[edit]

Blaublitz Akita's main active supporters' group is called the Blue tasu Akita.[20]

Stadium and facilities

[edit]
Tsuchizaki Facility[21]

Former facilities

[edit]

Team mascots

[edit]
Blaublitz Akita Co., Ltd.
Company typePublic
IndustrySports
FoundedSeptember 14, 2009; 15 years ago (2009-09-14) in Akita, Japan [27]
HeadquartersTokan Building 1F, Sanno 3–1–7, ,
Japan
RevenueJPY 435 million (2019) [28]
JPY −3 million (2019) [28]
JPY 2 million (2019) [28]
Total assetsJPY 99 million [28]
Headquarters
Map

The official team mascot is an 8-year-old Ryūjin, named Blaugon and wears #00.[29]

Blaugon

Songs and chants

[edit]
[edit]

TDK derby list

[edit]
1996-08-25 9 Tsuruoka TDK [ja] 0–4 TDK Akita Yamagata Prefecture
1996-09-29 12 TDK Akita 3–1 Tsuruoka TDK [ja] Akita Prefecture
1997-08-24 8 TDK Akita 6–0 Tsuruoka TDK [ja] Akita Prefecture
1997-10-19 13 Tsuruoka TDK [ja] 0–2 TDK Akita Yamagata Prefecture
1998-05-30 2 TDK Akita 4–0 Tsuruoka TDK [ja] Nikaho, Akita
Stadium: TDK General Sports Center
1998-08-30 8 Tsuruoka TDK [ja] 2–5 TDK Akita Yamagata Prefecture

Rivalries

[edit]

Ōu Honsen (Dewa derby)

[edit]

TDK and NEC Yamagata first met in 1990 in old Tohoku regional football league. The two clubs have been based in former Dewa Province, and their rivalry is renamed as Ōu Honsen (奥羽本戦) after the Japan Railways Ōu Main Line (奥羽本線) in 2021.[32]

Broadcasters

[edit]

Shirt sponsorship by TDK

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "1.15 拠点移設の記者会見を行いました | ブラウブリッツ秋田". ブラウブリッツ秋田 公式ホームページ.
  2. ^ "水戸に解除条件付J1ライセンス、秋田にJ2ライセンス初交付!J1昇格圏町田はJ2ライセンス". ゲキサカ. 27 September 2018.
  3. ^ "J. League Data Site". J. League. Retrieved 2 October 2021.
  4. ^ "選手・スタッフ紹介 – ブラウブリッツ秋田". blaublitz.jp.
  5. ^ Archived copy Archived 27 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "企業クラブから地域に根ざしたJクラブへ J2・J3漫遊記 ブラウブリッツ秋田 後編". スポーツナビ.
  7. ^ "BB秋田、開幕7連勝支える堅守速攻 仲間助ける走りに注目|秋田魁新報電子版". 秋田魁新報電子版.
  8. ^ "ストーブリーグを前に。。。". 続・東北の門番からJFL~J3へ.
  9. ^ "旧Jsl戦ったTdkのOb、J2・ブラウブリッツに期待|秋田魁新報電子版". Archived from the original on 27 March 2021. Retrieved 6 May 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  10. ^ "TDK prayer". homepage3.nifty.com. Archived from the original on 30 November 2004. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  11. ^ "Archived copy". homepage3.nifty.com. Archived from the original on 26 November 2004. Retrieved 11 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  12. ^ "2021年2月". 続・東北の門番からJFL~J3~J2へ.
  13. ^ 続・東北の門番からJFL~J3へ (12 May 2006). "第84回天皇杯1回戦 対 SC鳥取". Retrieved 8 July 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ Japan Football Association (23 September 2004). "第84回天皇杯全日本サッカー選手権大会" (PDF). Retrieved 8 July 2020.
  15. ^ 日本サッカー情報Gen (23 September 2004). "2004年第84回天皇杯全日本サッカー選手権". Retrieved 8 July 2020.
  16. ^ MOO's Football Data (23 September 2004). "第84回天皇杯(2004–05)". Archived from the original on 10 July 2020. Retrieved 8 July 2020.
  17. ^ fcmarco.com (23 September 2004). "第84回天皇杯対戦一覧表". Retrieved 8 July 2020.
  18. ^ まぐまぐまぐろん (23 September 2004). "第84回天皇杯". Retrieved 8 July 2020.
  19. ^ Shikoku News (23 September 2004). "FC琉球など2回戦に進出/サッカーの天皇杯が開幕". Retrieved 8 July 2020.
  20. ^ "BLUE+ AKITA Network". Retrieved 29 September 2018.
  21. ^ "12.16 室内練習場がオープンしました | ブラウブリッツ秋田". ブラウブリッツ秋田 公式ホームページ.
  22. ^ "秋田県フットボールセンター|人工芝導入実績". 国内実績No.1 スポーツ専用ロングパイル人工芝 ハイブリッドターフ.
  23. ^ "ラジパル日記 – ブラウブリッツ秋田アカデミーの寮に潜入! - Abs秋田放送".
  24. ^ "TDK秋田総合スポーツセンター". waka77.fc2web.com.
  25. ^ "本荘由利総合運動公園水林陸上競技場". waka77.fc2web.com.
  26. ^ "男鹿総合運動公園陸上競技場". waka77.fc2web.com.
  27. ^ "株式会社ブラウブリッツ秋田(秋田県秋田市)の企業情報詳細". 全国法人データバンク.
  28. ^ a b c d "ブラウブリッツ秋田 売上高と業績推移のグラフで財務諸表の内訳を比較分析 2019". グラフで決算|投資、分析、金融、就職転職に役立つ. 12 August 2024.
  29. ^ "ブラウブリッツ秋田のマスコット、ブラウゴンの紹介ページです Jリーグマスコット総選挙(2019/サッカー):Jリーグ.jp". Jリーグ.jp.
  30. ^ "しゃちょさんの介護日記". 有限会社アタカンテ.
  31. ^ "チーム紹介 | 東北社会人サッカーリーグ | 一般社団法人東北サッカー協会". tohoku-fa.jp.
  32. ^ "東北日本海側の最強を決める戦い「奥羽本戦」". モンテディオ山形 オフィシャルサイト.
  33. ^ "ベリッシモ・フランチェスコ『三浦淳宏さんと竹島アナとサッカー解説!#ベリッシモ #ブラウブリッツ秋田 #Jリーグ #イケメン』". 料理研究家ベリッシモ・フランチェスコ オフィシャルブログ Powered by Ameba.
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39°43′9.2″N 140°6′20.1″E / 39.719222°N 140.105583°E / 39.719222; 140.105583

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