Gyeongnam FC

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gyeongnam FC
경남 FC
Club crest
Full nameGyeongnam Football Club
경남 도민프로축구단
Nickname(s)Gyeongnam Avengers
Short nameGFC
Founded2006; 16 years ago (2006)
GroundChangwon Football Center
Capacity15,074
OwnerSouth Gyeongsang Province Government
ChairmanGovernor of South Gyeongsang Province
ManagerSeol Ki-hyun
LeagueK League 2
2020K League 2, 3rd of 10
(promotional play-offs)
WebsiteClub website

Gyeongnam FC (Hangul:경남 FC) is a South Korean professional football club based in Gyeongsangnam-do. Its home stadium is in Changwon, the capital of South Gyeongsang Province. Gyeongnam FC was founded in 2006 and joined the K League as its 14th club for the 2006 season.

History[]

2006 season[]

Gyeongnam FC reached 12th place in 2006 K League in their first season, and achieved third place in the Hauzen Cup.

2007 season[]

Under the manager Park Hang-seo, Gyeongnam FC finished fourth in 2007 K League, but were defeated by the Pohang Steelers in a penalty shootout in the first round of the play-offs. Playing for Gyeongnam, Cabore became that season's K League top scorer with 18 goals in 26 matches. Also, he recorded continuous attack points during eight league matches. When he suddenly moved to FC Tokyo, Gyeongnam FC no longer did so well, and manager Park Hang-seo chief executive left immediately.

2008 season[]

Before the start of the 2008 season, Cho Kwang-rae was appointed as manager. The newly signed Seo Sang-min was a valuable player, and Brazilian attacking midfielder Índio filled the gap left by Cabore. The team failed to reach the playoff by losing to Jeonbuk Motors in the last match of 2008 K League. They reached the Korean FA Cup 2008 final thanks to Kim Dong-chan's continuous scoring, including a hat-trick in the semi-final, but they were defeated by the Pohang Steelers, thus failing to enter the AFC Champions League.

2009 season[]

In January 2009, Kim Jin-yong transferred to Seongnam Ilhwa, and Kim Dong-hyun, a member of the South Korean national football team, replaced him. In the 2009 season, former South Korean international goalkeeper Kim Byung-ji joined the club, and manager Cho signed many young players.

2010 season[]

In 2010 Gyeongnam moved from the Changwon Civil Stadium to Changwon Football Center. With Kim Young-woo as the new captain, they won the K-League – the first top position in their history. Cho left in the middle of the season, but the team continued to perform well under caretaker manager Kim Gwi-hwa. Yoon Bit-garam recorded nine goals and seven assists in 29 matches to take the K-League Best XI and K-League Rookie of the Year Award.

2013 season[]

On 12 May 2013, Gyeongnam FC achieved its 100th victory in the K League after defeating Daegu FC.[1]

2014 season[]

Gyeongnam FC relegated to K League Challenge.

2017 season[]

Gyeongnam FC won the K League Challenge title and was promoted to the K League 1.

2018 season[]

Gyeongnam FC finished 2nd place in K League 1, and was eligible for Asian Champions League.

2019 season[]

Gyeongnam FC finished 11th place in K League 1 and was relegated to K League 2. Gyeongnam FC's manager Kim Jong-Boo resigned as a result.[2] Seol Ki-Hyun was appointed as the new manager to lead the team in the 2020 season.[3]

Honours[]

Domestic competitions[]

League[]

runners-up (1): 2018
Winners (1): 2017

Cups[]

Runners-up (2): 2008, 2012

Season-by-season records[]

Season Division Teams Position FA Cup
2006 K League 14 12 Quarter-final
2007 K League 14 4 Round of 16
2008 K League 14 8 Runners-up
2009 K League 15 7 Round of 16
2010 K League 15 6 Round of 16
2011 K League 16 8 Round of 32
2012 K League 16 8 Runners-up
2013 K League Classic 14 11 Quarter-final
2014 K League Classic 12 11 Round of 32
2015 K League Challenge 11 9 Third round
2016 K League Challenge 11 8 Third round
2017 K League Challenge 10 1 Round of 16
2018 K League 1 12 2 Round of 32
2019 K League 1 12 11 Quarter-final
2020 K League 2 10 3 Third round

AFC Champions League record[]

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Position
2019 AFC Champions League Group E China Shandong Luneng 2–2 1–2 3rd
Malaysia Johor Darul Ta'zim 2–0 1–1
Japan Kashima Antlers 2–3 1–0

Players[]

Current squad[]

As of 27 February 2021

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK South Korea KOR Hwang Sung-min
2 DF South Korea KOR
3 DF South Korea KOR Yoo Ji-hoon
4 DF South Korea KOR Bae Seung-jin
5 DF South Korea KOR Kim Young-chan
6 MF South Korea KOR Lee Woo-hyeok
7 MF South Korea KOR Chang Hyuk-jin
8 MF South Korea KOR Lim Min-hyeok
9 FW South Korea KOR Yun Ju-tae
10 FW South Korea KOR Baek Sung-dong
11 FW South Korea KOR Hwang Il-su
13 MF South Korea KOR
14 MF South Korea KOR
16 FW South Korea KOR
18 FW South Korea KOR Lee Jeong-hyeop
19 FW South Korea KOR Ko Kyung-min
20 DF South Korea KOR Lee Kwang-seon
No. Pos. Nation Player
21 FW South Korea KOR Do Dong-hyun
22 DF South Korea KOR Kim Dong-jin
23 DF South Korea KOR Kim Myoung-jun
24 FW South Korea KOR
25 GK South Korea KOR Kim Min-jun
26 FW South Korea KOR
28 DF South Korea KOR
31 GK South Korea KOR Son Jeong-hyeon
33 GK South Korea KOR
34 DF South Korea KOR
39 MF South Korea KOR
66 MF South Korea KOR
77 MF South Korea KOR
88 FW South Korea KOR
94 MF Brazil BRA Willyan Barbosa
98 FW Brazil BRA Hernandes Rodrigues (on loan from Grêmio)

Out on loan[]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
DF South Korea KOR Park Kwang-il (to Jinju Citizen FC)
DF South Korea KOR Lee Kwang-jin (to Siheung Citizen FC)
DF South Korea KOR (to Changwon City FC)
No. Pos. Nation Player
15 DF South Korea KOR Woo Joo-sung (to Gimcheon Sangmu for military duty)
26 DF South Korea KOR (to Changwon City FC)

Captains[]

Name Start End
South Korea Kim Do-keun 2006 2006
South Korea Kim Hyo-il 2007 2008
South Korea Lee Sang-hong 2008 2009
South Korea Kim Young-woo 2010 2011
South Korea Jung Da-hwon 2011 2011
South Korea Kang Seung-jo 2012 2013
South Korea Kim Hyeung-bum 2013 2013
South Korea Lee Han-saem 2014 2014
South Korea Park Ju-sung 2014 2014
South Korea Jin Kyung-sun 2015 2015
South Korea Lee Won-jae 2016 2016
South Korea Bae Ki-jong 2017

Notable players[]

For details on notable players, see Category:Gyeongnam FC players.

Coaching staff[]

Position Name Notes
Manager South Korea Seol Ki-hyeon
Assistant Manager South Korea Kim Jong-young
First Team Coach South Korea Hong Joon-hyung
Goalkeeping Coach South Korea Yang Ji-won
Fitness Coach Brazil Rafael Cavenaghi

Managerial history[]

# Name From To Season Notes
1
South Korea Park Hang-Seo 2005-08-22 2007-11-16 2006–2007
2
South Korea Cho Kwang-Rae 2007-12-04 2010-07-31 2008–2010
C South Korea Kim Gwi-Hwa 2010-08-09 2010-11-29 2010 Caretaker
3
South Korea Choi Jin-Han 2010-12-01 2013-05-22 2011–2013
C South Korea 2013-05-22 2013-06-01 2013 Caretaker
4
Serbia Ilija Petković 2013-05-29 2013-12-11 2013
5
South Korea Lee Cha-Man 2013-12-17 2014-08-14 2014
C Serbia Branko Babić 2014-08-14 2014-12-09 2014 Caretaker
6 South Korea Park Sung-hwa 2014-12-26 2015-11-23 2015
7 South Korea Kim Jong-boo 2015-12-02 2019-12-26 2016–2019
8 South Korea Seol Ki-Hyun 2019-12-26 2020–present

Sponsorship[]

Kit supplier[]

Name Start End
Hummel 2006 2009
Kelme 2010 2011
Hummel 2012

Main sponsors[]

Name Start End
STX 2006 2013
DSME 2013 2014

References[]

  1. ^ "'보산치치 PK 2골' 경남, 대구에 역전승... 통산 100승 달성". InterFootball. Retrieved 12 May 2013.
  2. ^ "경남FC, 김종부 감독 사퇴 발표..."영광의 날들 잊지 않겠다"". Gyeongnam FC. Gyeongnam FC. Retrieved 26 December 2019.
  3. ^ "경남FC 신임감독에 한일월드컵 주역 설기현 선임". Yonhapnews. 26 December 2019. Retrieved 26 December 2019.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""