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Suwon FC

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Suwon FC
Club crest
Full nameSuwon Football Club
수원시민프로축구단
Founded2003; 23 years ago (2003)[1]
GroundSuwon Stadium
Capacity11,808
OwnerSuwon Government
ChairmanLee Jae-joon (Mayor of Suwon)
ManagerPark Kun-ha
LeagueK League 2
2025K League 1, 10th of 12
(relegated via play-offs)
Websitesuwonfc.com

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 2, the second tier of South Korean football. They play their home games at Suwon Stadium.

History

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Early years: semi-professional

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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 be 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, succeeded him.

Suwon FC era

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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.[2] 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.[3]

Players

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Current squad

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As of 9 April 2026[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 Image KOR Lee Yun-oh
2 DF Image KOR Kim Jeong-wan
3 DF Image BRA Derlan
5 DF Image KOR Lee Hyun-yong
6 DF Image KOR Kim Ji-hoon
7 MF Image KOR Lee Jae-won (vice-captain)
8 MF Image KOR Han Chan-hee (captain)
9 FW Image BRA Matheus Babi
10 MF Image BRA Matheus Frizzo
11 FW Image KOR Kim Jeong-hwan
13 GK Image KOR Jeong Min-ki
14 MF Image KOR Goo Bon-cheul
15 DF Image KOR Hong Joon-ho
16 DF Image KOR Jo Jin-woo
17 FW Image NOR Martin Hoel Andersen
19 FW Image KOR Kim Gyeong-min
20 DF Image KOR Lee Ji-sol
21 GK Image KOR Yang Han-been (vice-captain)
22 MF Image KOR Seo Jae-min
23 FW Image KOR Yeom Do-hyun
No. Pos. Nation Player
24 DF Image KOR Kang Yun-koo
25 DF Image KOR Jang Young-woo
26 FW Image KOR Ahn Jun-kyu
27 DF Image KOR Lee Si-young
29 FW Image KOR Choi Gi-yun
31 GK Image KOR Moon Jung-woo
34 MF Image KOR Jang Yun-ho
38 DF Image KOR Baek Seung-hwan
40 MF Image KOR Kim Min-ho
41 GK Image KOR Choi Jun-young
44 FW Image BRA Willyan (vice-captain)
66 DF Image KOR Jang Yeon-woo
70 FW Image KOR Jung Seung-bae
77 FW Image KOR Baek Kyung
79 MF Image KOR Choi Ryun-seong
88 DF Image KOR Park Jae-hoon
89 MF Image KOR Lee Gwang-hyeok
91 MF Image KOR Kim Do-yoon
99 FW Image KOR Ha Jeong-woo

Out on loan

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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
GK Image KOR Lee Jae-hun (at Sejong SA)
DF Image KOR Han Sang-gyu (at Changwon FC)
DF Image KOR Kim Jae-sung (at Seoul Jungnang for military service)
DF Image KOR Park Cheol-woo (at Gimcheon Sangmu for military service)
MF Image KOR An Chi-woo (at Busan Transportation Corporation)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Image KOR Roh Kyung-ho (at Gimcheon Sangmu for military service)
FW Image KOR Choi Chi-ung (at Yongin FC)
FW Image KOR Kang Min-sung (at Yeoju FC)
FW Image KOR Park Yong-hee (at Gimcheon Sangmu for military service)
FW Image KOR Yang Woo-jin (at Busan Transportation Corporation)

Backroom staff

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Coaching staff

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Support staff

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  • Team doctor: South Korea Jung Tae-seok
  • Medical staff: South Korea Kim Jeong-won, South Korea Hwang Geon-ha, South Korea Im Jae-young, South Korea Choi Jung-ho
  • Scout: South Korea Kim Young-geun
  • Analyst: South Korea Chae Bong-joo
  • Interpreter: South Korea Park Hyung-man
  • Kit managers: South Korea Jang Jae-ho, South Korea Won Young-seung

Source: Official website[5]

Managers

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No. Name From To Season(s)
1
South Korea Kim Chang-kyum 2003/03/15 2011/11/14 2003–2011
2
South Korea Cho Deok-je 2011/11/15 2017/08/26 2012–2017
C South Korea Cho Jong-hwa 2017/08/26 2017/10/12 2017
3
South Korea Kim Dae-eui 2017/10/12 2019/10/29 2017–2019
C South Korea Lee Kwan-woo 2019/10/30 2019/11/13 2019
4
South Korea Kim Do-kyun 2019/11/14 2023/12/12 2020–2023
5
South Korea Kim Eun-jung 2023/12/20 2025/12/24 2024–2025
6
South Korea Park Kun-ha 2025/12/24 present 2026–

Honours

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League

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Cup

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Season-by-season record

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Season Division Teams P W D L GF GA GD Pts Position Korean FA Cup Top scorer
(league goals)
Manager
2013 2 8 35 13 8 14 53 51 +2 47 4th Quarter-final South Korea Park Jong-chan (11) South Korea Cho Deok-je
2014 2 10 36 12 12 12 52 49 +3 48 6th Round of 16 South Korea Jung Min-woo (8)
South Korea Kim Han-won (8)
South Korea Cho Deok-je
2015 2 11 40 18 11 11 64 54 +10 65 3rd Increase Third round Brazil Japa (19) South Korea Cho Deok-je
2016 1 12 38 10 9 19 40 58 –18 39 12th Decrease Round of 32 South Korea Lee Seung-hyun (6) South Korea Cho Deok-je
2017 2 10 36 11 12 13 42 48 –6 45 6th Third round South Korea Baek Sung-dong (8) South Korea Cho Deok-je
South Korea Cho Jong-hwa (C)
South Korea Kim Dae-eui
2018 2 10 36 13 3 20 29 46 –17 42 7th Round of 32 Brazil Fernando Viana (6) South Korea Kim Dae-eui
2019 2 10 36 11 10 15 49 55 –6 43 8th Round of 32 Nigeria Chisom Egbuchulam (18) South Korea Kim Dae-eui
South Korea Lee Kwan-woo (C)
2020 2 10 27 17 3 7 52 28 +24 54 2nd Increase Round of 16 North Korea An Byong-jun (20) South Korea Kim Do-kyun
2021 1 12 38 14 9 15 53 57 –4 51 5th Third round South Africa Lars Veldwijk (18) South Korea Kim Do-kyun
2022 1 12 38 13 9 16 56 63 –7 48 7th Third round South Korea Lee Seung-woo (14) South Korea Kim Do-kyun
2023 1 12 38 8 9 21 44 76 –32 33 11th Third round South Korea Lee Seung-woo (10) South Korea Kim Do-kyun
2024 1 12 38 15 8 15 54 57 –3 53 5th Third round South Korea Jeong Seung-won (11) South Korea Kim Eun-jung
2025 1 12 38 11 9 18 51 58 –7 42 10th Decrease Round of 16 Syria Pablo Sabbag (17) South Korea Kim Eun-jung

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Official Club Profile at K League Website Archived 2014-04-29 at the Wayback Machine (in Korean)
  2. ^ "Summary – 2015 K League 2 – Soccerway". soccerway.com. Retrieved 21 November 2022.
  3. ^ "Suwon soars to K-League Classic". koreajoongangdaily.joins.com. 6 December 2015. Retrieved 21 November 2022.
  4. ^ "선수소개" [Player introduction]. suwonfc.com (in Korean). Suwon FC. Retrieved 10 March 2026.
  5. ^ "코칭스태프" [Coaching staff]. suwonfc.com (in Korean). Suwon FC. Retrieved 17 February 2025.
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