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Korean soccer : the official sites |
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AT LONG LAST A LEAGUE WORTHY OF KOREAN SOCCER ? South Korea's pro soccer league (K-League) definitely doesn't match the country's prestige (international stars like Cha Bum-Geun, victories in Asian cups and champions leagues, chain-qualifications to World Cup finals and a semi in 2002...). The fact is even after 2002, soccer isn't Korea's favorite sport : baseball and even basketball remain ahead, not to mention taekwondo. The national team draws attention, audience and attendance but the population doesn't identify with soccer clubs stuck in a rather confuse 20 year old competition. Two events - linked with each other - were bound to spur and lead to some change: the successful launch of Japan's J-League and the successful candidacy to the organization of World Cup 2002 (actually, sharing the event with Japan was a semi-failure but considering the fact Japan started much earlier and with a much stronger intensity the loss of face was more the other side of the former "Korean Sea"). Unfortunately, the country focalized on the event and the necessary reform of the K-League was postponed. Can Korea make up for the time wasted before China's C-League takes over ? Indeed, K-League is clearly experiencing a transition period between the "DYI" phase (from the creation to the candidacy to World Cup organization) and a "maturity" era I hope will start as early as possible. |
HALLELUJAH, HABEMUS LIGUAM ! South Korea professional soccer league or Superleague (K-League's first name) - Asia's oldest - was created in 1983 by 5 pioneers of which 3 were "amateurs" (Daewoo, POSCO et Kookmin Bank) and 2 really "pro" the Yukong Elephants and... Hallelujah FC, a club founded in 1980 by Christian missionaries and K-League's first champion. Hallelujah left the league two years later but could very well make it again to the top. Based in Gimpo near Seoul, the club plays in the semi-pro K2 League which could become the equivalent to a second division to K-League around 2007, if the main league were to abandon its closed system (no promotion, no relegation, same as American major leagues). An old K3 League project also came back into focus. Such a revolution would definitely mean the adulthood of the national competitions after decades of instability. Because ever amazing K-League has always been a shapeshifter of a league: . 1983 / 5 clubs : Yukong Elephants, POSCO, Daewoo, Kookmin Bank, Hallelujah . 1984 / 7 clubs : 3 arrivals (Hanil Bank, Hyundai Horang-i & Lucky Goldstar Hwangso), 2 name changes (Daewoo for Daewoo Royals, POSCO for POSCO Dolphins) . 1985 / 8 clubs : 1 arrival (Sangmu), 1 name change (POSCO again, for POSCO Atoms) . 1986 / 6 clubs : 2 departures (Hallelujah & Sangmu) . 1987 / 5 clubs : 1 departures (Hanil Bank) . 1988 : nothing to declare ! . 1989 / 6 clubs : 1 arrival (Ilhwa Chunma) . 1990 : nothing to declare ! . 1991 / 6 clubs : 1 name change (Lucky Goldstar Hwangso for LG Cheetahs) . 1992 : nothing to declare ! . 1993 : nothing to declare ! . 1994 / 7 clubs : 1 arrival (Chonbuk Hyundai Buffalo) . 1995 / 8 clubs : 1 arrival (Chunnam Dragons), 2 name changes (Chonbuk Hyundai Buffalo for Chonbuk Hyundai Dinos & POSCO Atoms for Pohang Atoms) . 1996 / 9 clubs : 1 arrival (Suwon Samsung Bluewings), 5 name changes (Hyundai Horang-i for Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i, LG Cheetahs for Anyang LG Cheetahs, Daewoo Royals for Busan Daewoo Royals, Ilhwa Chunma for Chunan Ilhwa Chunma and the till then rock steady Yukong Elephants for Bucheon Yukong) . 1997 / 10 clubs : 1 arrival (Daejeon Citizen), 2 name changes (Pohang Atoms for Pohang Steelers, Bucheon Yukong for Bucheon SK, SK Group having changed its gas station brandname) . 1998 : nothing to declare ! . 1999 : nothing to declare !... but the 10 teams decide to play each other 3 times a season . 2000 / 10 clubs : 3 name changes (Ilhwa Chunma moves from Chunan to Seongnam and following Daewoo's collapse, Busan Daewoo Royals becomes Busan I'Cons with Hyundai's sponsorship... the chaebol now advertising for both their I'Park complexes and their cars : Chonbuk Hyundai Dinos become Chonbuk Hyundai Motors - usually cars become dinosaurs and not the opposite but who gives a gimchi ?) . 2001 : nothing to declare ! . 2002 : nothing to declare ! . 2003 / 12 clubs : 2 arrivals (Daegu FC & Gwangju Sangmu Phoenix) and the teams meet each other 4 times a season . 2004 / 13 clubs : 1 arrival (Incheon United), 1 name change (Anyang LG Cheetahs becomes FC Seoul), the teams meeting twice a season The days of uncertainty and instability seem now over, but they certainly didn't help the drafting of big names in international soccer. The league may lack of frantic supporters but money isn't an issue. Korea knows how to invest massively when needed, building from scratch 10 beautiful stadia for the World Cup. Besides, the teams have always been backed by "chaebols", their names shining as as the ultimate proof of evidence. The case of Hyundai stands clearly out of this prestigious crowd : two teams of this small leagues were branded after this major sponsor of Korean soccer. The son of its founder (Chung Mong-Joon) used to seat at the head of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) and to dream of succeeding Joao Havelange. Even today, the "I" in the Busan I'cons logo is the same as Hyundai's I'park appartments. But the teams tend to get rid of the omnipresence of these corporate brands : reading the league standings gets as exciting as reading KOSPI quotations. What the league and what Korean soccer needs is clubs with a soul, deeply rooted in cities and regions, bringing life to the brand new World Cup stadia. Incheon United symbolizes perfectly this trend : sponsored by many smaller players and by the region, it will make good use of Incheon's Munhak stadium (where I watched Les Bleus abandon their last hopes a lovely June 2002 afternoon). Stephane MOT 2004-2005 |
One noticable improvement during the World Cup preparation years : the shaping of national cups. The FA Cup, organised by the federation - KFA) is open to all teams registered at the federation, beyond the pro teams of the K-League and K2 League (ie corporate, universities). Yet, the elite is too small, the base too narrow and the demand for soccer too fragile for a rather redundant League Cup to be attractive enough. FA Cup (recent seasons) 1996 Pohang d. Suwon (MVP : Cho Jin-Ho, Pohang) 1997 Cheonnam d. Chunan (MVP : Kim Jung-Hyuk, Cheonnam) 1998 Anyang d. Ulsan (MVP : Kang Joon-Ho, Anyang) 1999 Chunan d. Chonbuk (MVP : Park Nam-Yeol, Chunan) 2000 Cheonbuk d. Seongnam (MVP : Park Sung-Bae, Cheonbuk) 2001 Daejeon d. Pohang (MVP : Kim Eun-Jung, Daejeon) 2002 Suwon d. Pohang (MVP : Seo Jung-Won, Suwon) 2003 Cheonbuk d. Cheonnam (MVP : Edmilson, Chonbuk) 2004 Busan d. Bucheon (MVP : Kim Yong-dae, Busan) 2005 Cheonbuk d. Ulsan Mipo Dockyard (K2-L - MVP : Milton) 2006 Chunnam Dragons d. Suwon (MVP : Kim Hyo-Il) 2007 Chunnam Dragons d. Pohang Steelers K-League Pro Cup 1997 Busan d. Ulsan 1998 Ulsan d. Busan 1999 Suwon d. Cheonbuk 2000 Bucheon d. Busan 2001 Suwon d. Bucheon 2002 Seongnam d. Pohang |
K-League winners |
The competition usually spans from march / april to october. The regular season is followed by play-offs : the leaders of each half of the regular season plus the best two other overall teams meet for the semi finals (one game, two for the finals). Brasil's Nadson was the first foreign player to receive the MVP award. The K-League never brought top international players but times they are a-changin' and internationalization could happen. The sooner the better for Korea, since China's C-League is gaining momentum. SM 2004 |
CHAMPIONS 1983 Hallelujah 1984 Busan 1985 Anyang 1986 Pohang 1987 Busan 1988 Pohang 1989 Bucheon 1990 Anyang 1991 Busan 1992 Pohang 1993 Chunan 1994 Chunan 1995 Chunan 1996 Ulsan 1997 Busan 1998 Suwon 1999 Suwon 2000 Anyang 2001 Seongnam 2002 Seongnam 2003 Seongnam 2004 Suwon 2005 Ulsan 2006 Seongnam 2007 Pohang |
VICE-CHAMPIONS Busan Bucheon Pohang Anyang Pohang Ulsan Anyang Busan Ulsan Chunan Anyang Bucheon Pohang Suwon Cheonbuk Pohang Busan Bucheon Anyang Ulsan Ulsan Pohang Incheon Suwon Seongnam |
BEST SCORERS 1983 Park Yun-Gi (Bucheon) : 9 goals 1984 Baek Jong-Chul (Ulsan) : 16 goals 1985 Kim Yong-Se (Bucheon) & Pue-On Piyapong (Anyang) : 12 goals 1986 Jeong Hae-Won (Busan) : 10 goals 1987 Choi Sang-Guk (Pohang) : 15 goals 1988 Lee Gi-Geun (Pohang) : 12 goals 1989 Cho Geung-Yeon (Pohang) : 20 goals 1990 Yoo Sang-Chul (Anyang) : 12 goals 1991 Lee Gi-Geun (Pohang) : 16 goals 1992 Im Geun-Jae (Anyang) : 10 goals 1993 Cha Sang-Hae (Pohang) : 10 goals 1994 Yoo Sang-Chul (Anyang) : 21 goals 1995 Roh Sang-Rae (Cheonnam) : 15 goals 1996 Shin Tae-Young (Chunan) : 18 goals 1997 Kim Hyun-Seok (Ulsan) : 9 goals 1998 Yoo Sang-Chul (Ulsan) : 14 goals 1999 Sasa Drakulic (Suwon) : 14 goals 2000 Kim Do-Hoon (Cheonbuk) : 12 goals 2001 Sandro (Suwon) : 13 goals 2002 Edmilson (Cheonbuk) : 14 goals 2003 Kim Do-Hoon (Seongnam) : 28 goals 2004 Mota (Cheonnam) 2005 Leandro Machado (Ulsan) : 13 goals 2006 Chuba (Daejeon) : 13 goals 2007 Capore (Gyeongnam) : 17 goals |
MVP 1983 Park Sung-Hwa (Hallelujah) 1984 Park Chang-Sun (Busan) 1985 Han Moon-Bae (Anyang) 1986 Lee Heung-Sil (Pohang) 1987 Jung Hae-Won (Busan) 1988 Park Kyung-Hoon (Pohang) 1989 Noh Soo-Jin (Bucheon) 1990 Choi Jin-Han (Anyang) 1991 Jung Yong-Hwan (Busan) 1992 Hong Myung-Bo (Busan) 1993 Lee Sang-Yoon (Chunan) 1994 Ko Jung-Woon (Seongnam) 1995 Sin Tae-Yong (Seongnam) 1996 Kim Hyun-Seok (Ulsan) 1997 Kim Joo-Sung (Busan) 1998 Ko Jong-Su (Suwon) 1999 Ahn Jung-Hwan (Busan) 2000 Choi Yong-Soo (Anyang) 2001 Sin Tae-Yong (Seongnam) 2002 Kim Dae-Eui (Seongnam) 2003 Kim Do-Hoon (Seongnam) 2004 Nadson (Suwon) 2005 Lee Chun-Soo (Ulsan) |
National cup winners |
K-LEAGUE'S 14 TEAMS |
JEJU UNITED FC City : Seogwipo Foundation : 1982 Formerly : Yukong Elephants, Bucheon Yukong, Bucheon SK website : www.jeju-utd.com Stadium : Seogwipo World Cup Stadium (35,545 seats) Champion : 1989 FA Cup finalist : 2004 League Cup winner : 2000 League Cup finalist : 2001 |
BUSAN I'cons City : Busan K-League since 1983 Formerly : Daewoo, Daewoo Royals, Busan Daewoo Royals. website : www.busanicons.co.kr Stadium : Busan Asiad Stadium (53,800 seats) Champion : 1984, 1987, 1991, 1997 FA Cup Winner : 2004 League Cup winner : 1997 League Cup finalist : 1998, 2000 |
JEONBUK HYUNDAI MOTORS City : Jeonju K-League since 1994 Formerly : Buffalo, Dinos. website : www.hyundai-motorsfc.com Stadium : Jeonju World Cup Stadium (43,000 seats) FA Cup winner : 2000, 2003, 2005 FA Cup finalist : 1999 AFC Champions League : 2006 Asian Cup Winners' Cup finalist 2002 |
CHEONNAM DRAGONS City : Gwangyang K-League since 1995 website : www.dragons.co.kr Stadium : Gwangyang Football Stadium (15,000 seats) FA Cup winner : 1997 FA Cup finalist : 2003 Asian Cup Winners' Cup finalist 1999 |
DAEGU FC City : Daegu K-League since 2003 website : www.daegufc.co.kr Stadium : Daegu World Cup Stadium (65,000 seats) |
DAEJEON CITIZEN City : Daejeon K-League since 1997 website : www.fcdaejeon.com Stadium : Daegu World Cup Stadium (65,000 seats) FA Cup winner : 2001 |
FC SEOUL City : Seoul (Anyang 'till 2004) Foundation : 1983 Formerly : Lucky-Goldstar Hwangso, LG Cheetahs, Anyang LG Cheetahs. website : www.fcseoul.com Stadium : Seoul World Cup Stadium (64,000 seats) Champion : 1985, 1990, 2000 FA Cup winner : 1998 Asian Champions League finalist : 2002 |
GWANGJU SANGMU PHOENIX City : Gwangju K-League in 1985 and since 2003 website : www.gwangjusmfc.co.kr Stadium : Gwangju World Cup Stadium (44,000 seats) |
INCHEON UNITED City : Incheon Foundation : 2003 website : www.incheonutd.com Stadium : Incheon Munhak World Cup Stadium (52,000 seats) |
POHANG STEELERS City : Pohang Foundation : 1973 website : www.steelers.co.kr Stadium : Steelyard Stadium (20,000 seats) Champion : 1986, 1988, 1992 FA Cup winner : 1996 Asian SuperCup finalist 1997, 1998 Asian Champions League winner : 1997, 1998 Asian Champions League finalist : 2001, 2002 A3 Champions Cup finalist 2005 |
SEONGNAM ILHWA CHUNMA City : Seongnam Foundation : 1988 Formerly : Ilhwa Chunma, Chunan Ilhwa Chunma. website : www.seongnamilhwafc.co.kr Stadium : Seongnam City Stadium (21,000 seats) Champion : 1993, 1994, 1995, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2006 FA Cup winner : 1999 FA Cup finalist : 1997, 2000 League Cup winner : 2002 Asian Champions League winner : 1996 Asian Champions League finalist : 1997, 2004 A3 Champions Cup winner 2004 |
SUWON SAMSUNG BLUEWINGS City : Suwon Foundation : 1996 website : www.samsungbluewings.co.kr Stadium : Suwon World Cup Stadium (43,900 seats) Champion : 1998, 1999 FA Cup winner : 2002 FA Cup finalist : 1996 League Cup winner : 1999, 2001 Asian SuperCup winner 2001, 2002 Asian Champions League winner : 2001, 2002 Asian Cup Winners' Cup finalist 1998 A3 Champions Cup winner 2005 |
ULSAN HYUNDAI HORANG-I City : Ulsan Foundation : 1983 website : www.horangifc.co.kr Stadium : Ulsan World Cup Stadium (44,400 seats) Champion : 1996, 2005 FA Cup finalist : 1998 League Cup winner : 1998 League Cup finalist : 1997 A3 Champions Cup winner 2006 |
K-League's 17 teams since 1983 : |
All there is to know about Asia's first pro soccer league, South Korea's K-League. Stephane MOT |
K-League - a short history (1983-2004) |
K-League - Season 2005 |
Hausen League 1st Leg Busan 25 pts Incheon 24 Ulsan 22 Pohang 21 Seoul 19 Seongnam 16 +3 Bucheon 16 = Daejeon 14 = Suwon 14 -1 (18) Cheonnam 14 -1 (13) Daegu 9 -1 Cheonbuk 9 -6 Gwangju 6 |
Goal leaders (goals / games) Machado (Ulsan) 13/17 Park Chu-Young (Seoul) 12/19 Dudu (Seongnam), Sandro (Daegu) 10/24 Goal Leader (regular season) : Park Chu-Young : 12/19 Assist leaders (assists / games) Ricardo (Seoul) 9/16 Kim Do-Hun (Seongnam) 7/20 Lee Cheon-Soo (Ulsan) 5/14 Assist Leader (regular season) : Ricardo (Seoul) : 9/16 Rising star : PARK Chu-Young (Park Ju-Yeong) Hausen Cup 2005 Winner : SUWON d. Seongnam 1-0 |
. K-League seasons 2005, 2006, 2007 . K-League a short history (1983-2004) . K-League, K2 League, KWFL teams |
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Visitors to this site come from all 6 continents |
A3 Champions Cup The 3 champions of South Korea, China and Japan (K-League, China Super League and J-League) compete for this cup crowning Far East Asia as the soccer elite of the continent.. 2003 Kashima Antlers (J) Dalian (C) Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma (K) Jubilo (J) 2004 Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma (K) Yokohama FC Marinos (J) Shanghai Shenhua (C) Inter Shanghai (C) 2005 Suwon Samsung Bluewings (K) Pohang (K) Yokohama FC Marinos (J) Shenzhen Jianlibao (C) 2006 Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i Gamba Osaka (J) JEF United Ichihara Chiba (J) Dalian Shide (C) |
All Star Game : South 3-2 Center MVP : PARK Chu-Young (Seoul) |
Hausen League 2nd Leg Seongnam 27 Bucheon 26 Ulsan 21 +4 (15) Daegu 21 +4 (15) Incheon 21 +3 Pohang 19 Daejeon 16 Suwon 14 Seoul 13 Cheonnam 13 Gwangju 11 Cheonbuk 9 Busan 3 |
1/2 : Incheon d. Busan - Ulsan d. Seongnam F : ULSAN d. INCHEON : 5-1* - 1*-2 |
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Browse this site and my blogs |
Stephane Mot Personal Portal |
K-League |
Soccer home MLS (USA) K-League (Korea) U-League (Uqbar) AFC Champions L footlog blog (VF) |
K-League - Season 2006 |
GYEONGNAM FC Founded : 2005 City : Changwon K-League since 2006 website : www.gsndfc.co.kr Stadium : Changwon World Cup Stadium (27,085 seats) |
Ulsan and Incheon illustrate the trend from a chaebol-based to a city-based approach for Korea's soccer clubs : as the Ulsan Horangis won the K-League against Incheon United, Incheon Korail won the K2 League, and Ulsan Mipo Dockyard reached the FA Cup finals. Suwon and Busan had their good phases but didn't finish well. After drafting the promising Park Chu-young, the national team made it once again to the World Cup. Yet, Korean soccer failed to rule over Asia at the club as well as at the selection levels. |
Two major changes for the 2006 season : Gyeongnam FC (located in Changwon) becomes the League's 14th team, and in a last minute stunt, Bucheon SK moves to Seowipo and adopts a new name : Jeju United FC. Expect fresh wind from the South and exciting derbies with Busan. |
K-League 1st Stage (March 12th - May 10th) - Final Standings |
Leading teams : |
Top scorers : |
Assist Leaders : |
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. Busan I'cons (since 1983) . Cheonbuk Hyundai (since 1994) . Chunnam Dragons (since 1995) . Daegu FC (since 2003) . Daejeon Citizen (since 1997) . FC Seoul (since 1984) . Gwangju Sangmu Phoenix (1985 & since 2003) . Gyeongnam FC (since 2006 |
. Hallelujah FC (from 1983 to 1985) . Hanil Bank (from 1984 to 1986) . Incheon United (since 2004) . Jeju United FC (since 1983 - formerly Bucheon SK) . Kookmin Bank (from 1983 to 1984) . Pohang Steelers (since 1983) . Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma (since 1989) . Suwon Samsung Bluewings (since 1996) . Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i (since 1984) |
K-League 2006 the 14 teams |
League Cup (05/14-07/29) |
World Cup (06/09-07/09) - comments in French on my footlog blog |
06/13 - Korea - Togo (Frankfurt) : 2-1 (Lee Chun-Soo 54 - Ahn Jung-hwan 72) 06/18 - France - Korea (Leipzig) : 1-1 (Park Ji-sung 81) 06/23 - Switzerland - Korea (Hanover) 0-2 Korea #3 in Group G (4 pts - 1w 1l 1t - 3 gf 4 ga |
All Star Game (08/20) |
K-League 2nd Stage (08/23-11/05) - play offs (11/11) |
K-League championship games (11/19 & 11/26) SEONGNAM CHAMPION |
Preseason |
Seongnam (32 +12) Pohang (22 +6) Daejeon (19 +3) Seoul (16 +3) Cheonnam (16 +2) |
Woo Sang-yong (Songnam) : 8 Somaloa (Busan) : 7 Lee Dong-gook (Pohang), Bae Gi-jeon (Daejeon), Popo (Busan) : 6 |
Somaloa (Busan) : 5 Popo (Busan) : 4 7 tied with : 3 |
GK : LEE Woon-jae (Suwon 1), KIM Yong-dae (Seongnam 20), KIM Young-kwang (Chunnam 21). DF : KIM Dong-jin (Seoul), KIM Jin-kyu (Jubilo - 6), KIM Sang-sik (Seongnam 18), KIM Young-chul (Seongnam 2), CHO Won-hee (Suwon 23), CHOI Jin-cheul (Chonbuk 4), LEE Young-pyo (Tottenham 12), SONG Chong-guk (Suwon 22). MF : BAEK Ji-hoon (Seoul 15), KIM Do-heon (Seongnam 8), KIM Nam-il (Suwon 5), LEE Eul-yong (Trabzonspor 13), LEE Ho (Ulsan 17), PARK Ji-sung (ManU 7). FW : AHN Jung-hwan (Duisburg 9), CHO Jae-jin (Shimizu 19), CHUNG Kyung-ho (Gwangju 16), LEE Chun-soo (Ulsan 14), PARK Chu-young (Seoul), SEOL Ki-hyeon (Wolverhampton 11) |
Seoul (27 +9) Seongnam (22 +4) Gyeongnam (22 +2) |
Leading teams : |
Top scorers (overall) : |
Assist Leaders (overall) : |
Suwon (27 +9) Pohang (25 +8) Seoul (23 +6) |
Woo Seong-yong (Songnam) : 16 Popo (Busan) : 13 Kim Eun-jung (Seoul) : 8 |
Chuba (Daejeon) : 8 Kim Gi-dong (Pohang), Lee Gwan-woo (Suwon) : 6 |
Seongnam - Suwon : 1-0 - - - Suwon - Seongnam : 1-2 |
K-League - Season 2007 |
Pohang champion (see all results on my new K-League pages (in French) |
K-League, K2 League / N League & KWFL teams |
K2 League's 10 teams : |
. Gimpo Hallelujah . Icheon Hummel Korea . Incheon Korail (Korea National Railroad FC) . Seosan Citizen . Uijongbu Hummel . Ulsan Mipo Dockyard A quitte la ligue : Suwon City Hall |
KWFL's "industry teams" : (Korea Women's Football League) . Ini Steel Women's Football Club . Daekyo Kangaroos Women's Football Club . Hi Seoul Women's Football Club |
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. Busan Kyotong (Busan Transportation Corporation) . Changwon City Hall . Chungnam Omega FC . Daejeon Hydraulic Power . Gangneung City Hall . Goyang Kookmin Bank |
K2 League / N League champions |
K2 League's first tournaments took place in 2000 but the league actually started in 2003. 2000 Incheon Korail FC, Gangneung City Hall, Ulsan Mipo Dockyard 2001 Goyang Kookmin Bank 2002 Icheon Sangmu K2 League / N League (National League) : 2003 Goyang Kookmin Bank FC b. Sangmu Phoenix 2 2004 Goyang Kookmin Bank FC b. Gangneung City Hall 2005 Incheon Korail FC b. Suwon City Hall 2006 Goyang Kookmin Bank FC b. Gimpo Hallelujah |
This article has had a second life : I also used it to develop Korean soccer on Wikipedia. |
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See all results on my new K-League pages (in French) From the Han to the Seine river... come visit my footlog blog (in French only and utterly nonsensical) or my Seoul Village blog |