Fixtures

Dél-koreai K-League 1 04/30 10:30 10 Suwon FC vs FC Seoul - View
Dél-koreai K-League 1 05/05 05:00 11 Suwon FC vs Gangwon FC - View
Dél-koreai K-League 1 05/12 05:00 12 Jeonbuk Motors vs Suwon FC - View
Dél-koreai K-League 1 05/19 10:00 13 Suwon FC vs Pohang Steelers - View
Dél-koreai K-League 1 05/26 10:00 14 Jeju United vs Suwon FC - View
Dél-koreai K-League 1 05/29 10:30 15 Suwon FC vs Daegu FC - View

Results

Dél-koreai K-League 1 04/27 07:30 9 [12] Gwangju FC v Suwon FC [5] W 1-2
Dél-koreai K-League 1 04/20 05:00 8 [8] Suwon FC v Jeju United [4] W 2-1
Dél-koreai Kupa 04/17 10:00 9 Seongnam FC v Suwon FC L 1-0
Dél-koreai K-League 1 04/14 05:00 7 Suwon FC v Daejeon Hana Citizen W 1-0
Dél-koreai K-League 1 04/06 05:00 6 [3] Ulsan Hyundai v Suwon FC [9] L 3-0
Dél-koreai K-League 1 04/02 10:30 5 [2] Pohang Steelers v Suwon FC [6] D 1-1
Dél-koreai K-League 1 03/30 07:30 4 [5] Suwon FC v Gimcheon Sangmu FC [4] L 1-4
Dél-koreai K-League 1 03/16 07:30 3 [12] Daegu FC v Suwon FC [4] D 1-1
Dél-koreai K-League 1 03/09 05:00 2 [3] Suwon FC v Jeonbuk Motors [8] D 1-1
Dél-koreai K-League 1 03/02 07:30 1 [5] Incheon Utd v Suwon FC [5] W 0-1
Dél-koreai K-League - rájátszás 12/09 05:00 1 Suwon FC v Busan I Park W 5-2
Dél-koreai K-League - rájátszás 12/06 10:00 1 Busan I Park v Suwon FC L 2-1

Statisztika

 TotalHazaiVendég
Matches played 40 18 22
Wins 10 4 6
Draws 9 5 4
Losses 21 9 12
Goals for 45 23 22
Goals against 75 35 40
Clean sheets 5 2 3
Failed to score 9 3 6

Wikipedia - Suwon FC

Suwon FC (Korean: 수원 FC; Hanja: 水原 FC) is a South Korean professional football club based in Suwon, that competes in the K League 1, the South Korea's top professional league. They play their home games at Suwon Stadium.

History

Early years: semi-professional

Suwon city government decided to create a semi-professional level football club that would link school-level football clubs within the city and Suwon Samsung Bluewings, which is a professional club based in the city. On 15 March 2003, Suwon City Football Club was officially formed. The club appointed Kim Chang-kyum as their manager and joined the semi-professional Korea National League, which was then called the K2 League.

They won their first trophy in 2004 by winning the Korean President's Cup National Football Tournament. Slowly, they rose to strong contenders in the Korea National League as they reached the play-off on four occasions between 2005 and 2009, although they failed to lift the trophy on all four occasions. Finally, in the 2010 season, they became the league champions after beating Daejeon Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power 2–1 on aggregate in the final. Manager Kim Chang-kyum left the team after the 2011 season as his contract expired and Cho Deok-je, who had been managing the club's youth team, took over his place.

Suwon FC era

On 9 December 2012, it was officially announced that the team would become fully professional. The club's name was also changed to Suwon FC and got an approval to join the professional K League. Suwon FC joined the second-tier K League Challenge in the 2013 season. Their debut season as a professional club was successful, as they finished fourth in the league and became the only K League Challenge club to reach the quarter-finals in the FA Cup.

The 2015 season was a milestone for the club. After finishing the regular season in third place, Suwon FC proceeded to the K League Challenge play-offs in which they eliminated Seoul E-Land and Daegu FC. In the promotion-relegation playoffs, Suwon then defeated top division side Busan IPark 3–0 on aggregate and won the promotion to the 2016 K League Classic.