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The fourth level, the CAJ Silk Road Champions League (SRCL), is the semi-professional league and the largest division of the JCLS, involving up to 64 teams from across the country. It consists of a mix of amateur, professional, and company clubs, serving as the football finals of each season.
The fourth level, the CAJ Silk Road Champions League (SRCL), is the semi-professional league and the largest division of the JCLS, involving up to 64 teams from across the country. It consists of a mix of amateur, professional, and company clubs, serving as the football finals of each season.
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" width="100%"
|- style="background:#c8c8c8"
! colspan="1" height="30" width="4%"| Tier on Pyramid
! colspan="9" width="96%"| Division
|-style="background:#efefef;"
| colspan="1" width="4.6%" align="center"|
| colspan="9" width="95.4%" style="text-align:center;"|'''Professional Leagues'''
|-
|1
|colspan="9"|'''[[J1 League]]'''<br>''20 clubs'' <br> ↓ 3 relegations
|-
|2
|colspan="9"|'''[[J2 League]]'''<br>''20 clubs'' <br> ↑ 2 promotions + 4 playoffs <br> ↓ 3 relegations
|-
|3
|colspan="9"|'''[[J3 League]]'''<br>''20 clubs'' <br> ↑ 2 promotions + 4 playoffs <br> ↓ 0–2 relegations
|-
|4
|colspan="9"|'''[[Japan Football League]] (JFL)'''<br>''16 clubs'' <br> ↑ 0–2 promotions <br> ↓ 0–2 relegations
|-
|rowspan="2"|
5–6
|colspan="9"|'''[[Japanese Regional Leagues]]'''<br />''135 clubs''
|-
|<!-- colspan="4" width=12% -->|
'''[[Hokkaido Soccer League|Hokkaido<br>Soccer League]] <!-- Division One East -->'''<br/>
''8 clubs''<!-- – 2p, 2r -->
|<!-- colspan="4" width=12% -->|
'''[[Tohoku Soccer League|Tohoku<br>Soccer League]] <!-- Division One East -->'''<br/>
''30 clubs <br/>(10 in D1, 20 in D2 divided to two groups)''<!-- – 2p, 2r -->
|<!-- colspan="4" width=12% -->|
'''[[Kantō Soccer League|Kantō<br>Soccer League]] <!-- Division One East -->'''<br/>
''20 clubs <br/>(10 in D1, 10 in D2)''<!-- – 2p, 2r -->
|<!-- colspan="4" width=12% -->|
'''[[Hokushinetsu Football League|Hokushinetsu<br>Football League]] <!-- Division One East -->'''<br/>
''16 clubs <br/>(8 in D1, 8 in D2)''<!-- – 2p, 2r -->
|<!-- colspan="4" width=12% -->|
'''[[Tōkai Adult Soccer League|Tōkai<br>Adult Soccer League]] <!-- Division One East -->'''<br/>
''17 clubs <br/>(8 in D1, 9 in D2)''<!-- – 2p, 2r -->
|<!-- colspan="4" width=12% -->|
'''[[Kansai Soccer League|Kansai<br>Soccer League]] <!-- Division One East -->'''<br/>
''16 clubs <br/>(8 in D1, 8 in D2)''<!-- – 2p, 2r -->
|<!-- colspan="4" width=12% -->|
'''[[Chūgoku Soccer League|Chūgoku<br>Soccer League]] <!-- Division One East -->'''<br/>
''10 clubs''<!-- – 2p, 2r -->
|<!-- colspan="4" width=12% -->|
'''[[Shikoku Soccer League|Shikoku<br>Soccer League]] <!-- Division One East -->'''<br/>
''8 clubs''<!-- – 2p, 2r -->
|<!-- colspan="4" width=12% -->|
'''[[Kyushu Soccer League|Kyushu<br>Soccer League]] <!-- Division One East -->'''<br/>
''10 clubs''<!-- – 2p, 2r -->
|-
|7+
|colspan="9"|'''47 Prefectural Leagues<ref name="47 Associations">{{cite web |url=https://www.jfa.jp/eng/about_jfa/organization/47fa/ |title=47 Prefectural Football Associations |website=www.jfa.jp |publisher=Japan Football Association |access-date=19 October 2022 |quote= |archive-date=19 October 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221019103240/https://www.jfa.jp/eng/about_jfa/organization/47fa/ |url-status=live }}</ref> & 5 Block Leagues of Hokkaido'''<br />''Many clubs'' – 1 promotion + 1 playoff
'''[[Hokkaido Prefecture|Hokkaido]]'''<br>[[Sapporo]] Block | Dōō /Dōhoku (Central and North) Blocks | Dōtō (East) Block | Dōnan (South) Block<br />
'''[[Tōhoku region|Tōhoku]]'''<br>[[Aomori Prefecture|Aomori]] | [[Iwate Prefecture|Iwate]] | [[Miyagi Prefecture|Miyagi]] | [[Akita Prefecture|Akita]] | [[Yamagata Prefecture|Yamagata]] | [[Fukushima Prefecture|Fukushima]]<br />
'''[[Kantō region|Kantō]]'''<br>[[Ibaraki Prefecture|Ibaraki]] | [[Tochigi Prefecture|Tochigi]] | [[Gunma Prefecture|Gunma]] | [[Saitama Prefecture| Saitama]] | [[Chiba Prefecture|Chiba]] | [[Tokyo Prefecture|Tokyo]] | [[Kanagawa Prefecture|Kanagawa]] | [[Yamanashi Prefecture|Yamanashi]]<br />
'''[[Hokuriku region|Hoku]]-[[shin'etsu region|shinetsu]]'''<br>[[Niigata Prefecture|Niigata]] | [[Toyama Prefecture|Toyama]] | [[Ishikawa Prefecture|Ishikawa]] | [[Fukui Prefecture|Fukui]] | [[Nagano Prefecture|Nagano]]<br />
'''[[Tōkai region|Tōkai]]'''<br>[[Gifu Prefecture|Gifu]] | [[Shizuoka Prefecture|Shizuoka]] | [[Aichi Prefecture|Aichi]] | [[Mie Prefecture|Mie]]<br />
'''[[Kansai region|Kansai]]'''<br>[[Shiga Prefecture|Shiga]] | [[Kyoto Prefecture|Kyoto]] | [[Osaka Prefecture|Osaka]] | [[Hyogo Prefecture|Hyogo]] | [[Nara Prefecture|Nara]] | [[Wakayama Prefecture|Wakayama]]<br />
'''[[Chūgoku region|Chūgoku]]'''<br>[[Tottori Prefecture|Tottori]] | [[Shimane Prefecture|Shimane]] | [[Okayama Prefecture|Okayama]] | [[Hiroshima Prefecture|Hiroshima]] | [[Yamaguchi Prefecture|Yamaguchi]]<br />
'''[[Shikoku]]'''<br>[[Tokushima Prefecture|Tokushima]] | [[Kagawa Prefecture|Kagawa]] | [[Ehime Prefecture|Ehime]] | [[Kochi Prefecture|Kochi]]<br />
'''[[Kyushu]]'''<br>[[Fukuoka Prefecture|Fukuoka]] | [[Saga Prefecture|Saga]] | [[Nagasaki Prefecture|Nagasaki]] | [[Kumamoto Prefecture|Kumamoto]] | [[Ōita Prefecture|Ōita]] | [[Miyazaki Prefecture|Miyazaki]] | [[Kagoshima Prefecture|Kagoshima]] | [[Okinawa Prefecture|Okinawa]]
|-
|}

Revision as of 05:36, 8 January 2024

Jin cuju league system
CountryDa Huang
SportAssociation football
Promotion and
relegation
Yes
National system
FederationCuju Association of Da Huang
ConfederationOAFF
Top divisionMen
J League 1
Women
Women's League 1
Second divisionMen
J League 2
Women
Women's League 2
Cup competitionMen
Jin Royal Cup
Jin Champions Cup
Jin League Cup
Women
CAJ Women's Cup

The Jin cuju league system (JCLS), or the Jin association football league system, refers to the hierarchically interconnected league system for the Cuju Association of Da Huang (CAJ). The JCLS is organised in a pyramidical shape similar to the football league system in many other countries worldwide, with eight tiers bound by the principle of promotion and relegation. The top three tiers play professionally and contain one division each. Below the top three, teams play at semi-professional and amateur levels with parallel divisions, each covering regional or metropolitan areas.

The highest level of men's association football in Da Huang is the J League 1. Formerly known as the Morning Glow Autumn League (Jin: 朝霞秋联; pinyin: Zhāo Xiá Qiū Lián), the league was founded in 1919 by the Republic of Jin as a means of consolidation and monitoring of the local unofficial leagues and clubs throughout Da Huang that was occasionally used as royalists gatherings disguised as cuju clubs. Following the fall of the republic, the league became defunct and was only refounded under the emperor's auspices in 1993, owing to the years of relative stability following the 1991 Constitutional reforms. The J League 2 was founded in 2001 due to the renewed and growing popularity of the sport, and J League 3 was founded in 2013 to accommodate the increasing number of transitional professional clubs. They served as the men's second division and third division, respectively.

Below the professional leagues are the semi-professional CAJ Silk Road Champions League, which serves as the fourth tier of the Jin association football league system. It is followed by the mixed semi-professional and amateur regional level CAJ Silk Road Regional Leagues, which serve as the fifth to seventh tier. The eighth tier of the JCLS is the city-level association leagues comprising only amateur, youth, and university teams.

Women's football in Da Huang is relatively new, owning to decades-old conservative values entrenched in the population. The government has, however, actively sought to encourage women's participation in the sport and, in February 2017, made it mandatory for top-flight clubs to have a women's team compete in the CAJ Women's League. The current format for women's association football in Da Huang has three tiers bound by promotion and relegation, with the Women's League 1 serving as the top flight.

Structure

The top three levels of the association football league system are operated by the J League, which consists of the J League 1 (JL1), J League 2 (JL2), and J League 3 (JL3). All clubs in the J League are required to be entirely professional, and clubs in the top two flights must have a women's team that competes in the Women's League.

The fourth level, the CAJ Silk Road Champions League (SRCL), is the semi-professional league and the largest division of the JCLS, involving up to 64 teams from across the country. It consists of a mix of amateur, professional, and company clubs, serving as the football finals of each season.

Tier on Pyramid Division
Professional Leagues
1 J1 League
20 clubs
↓ 3 relegations
2 J2 League
20 clubs
↑ 2 promotions + 4 playoffs
↓ 3 relegations
3 J3 League
20 clubs
↑ 2 promotions + 4 playoffs
↓ 0–2 relegations
4 Japan Football League (JFL)
16 clubs
↑ 0–2 promotions
↓ 0–2 relegations

5–6

Japanese Regional Leagues
135 clubs

Hokkaido
Soccer League

8 clubs

Tohoku
Soccer League

30 clubs
(10 in D1, 20 in D2 divided to two groups)

Kantō
Soccer League

20 clubs
(10 in D1, 10 in D2)

Hokushinetsu
Football League

16 clubs
(8 in D1, 8 in D2)

Tōkai
Adult Soccer League

17 clubs
(8 in D1, 9 in D2)

Kansai
Soccer League

16 clubs
(8 in D1, 8 in D2)

Chūgoku
Soccer League

10 clubs

Shikoku
Soccer League

8 clubs

Kyushu
Soccer League

10 clubs

7+ 47 Prefectural Leagues[1] & 5 Block Leagues of Hokkaido
Many clubs – 1 promotion + 1 playoff

Hokkaido
Sapporo Block | Dōō /Dōhoku (Central and North) Blocks | Dōtō (East) Block | Dōnan (South) Block
Tōhoku
Aomori | Iwate | Miyagi | Akita | Yamagata | Fukushima
Kantō
Ibaraki | Tochigi | Gunma | Saitama | Chiba | Tokyo | Kanagawa | Yamanashi
Hoku-shinetsu
Niigata | Toyama | Ishikawa | Fukui | Nagano
Tōkai
Gifu | Shizuoka | Aichi | Mie
Kansai
Shiga | Kyoto | Osaka | Hyogo | Nara | Wakayama
Chūgoku
Tottori | Shimane | Okayama | Hiroshima | Yamaguchi
Shikoku
Tokushima | Kagawa | Ehime | Kochi
Kyushu
Fukuoka | Saga | Nagasaki | Kumamoto | Ōita | Miyazaki | Kagoshima | Okinawa

  1. "47 Prefectural Football Associations". www.jfa.jp. Japan Football Association. Archived from the original on 19 October 2022. Retrieved 19 October 2022.