Park Kun-ha

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Park Kun-ha
박건하
Personal information
Full name Park Kun-ha
Date of birth (1971-07-25) 25 July 1971 (age 50)
Place of birth Daejeon, South Korea
Height 1.82 m (5 ft 11+12 in)
Position(s) Utility player
Youth career
1990–1993 Kyunghee University
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1994–1995 E-Land
1996–2006 Suwon Samsung Bluewings 292 (44)
2000Kashiwa Reysol (loan) 5 (1)
National team
1996–1998 South Korea 20 (5)
Teams managed
2016 Seoul E-Land
2020- Suwon Samsung Bluewings
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only
Park Kun-ha
Hangul
박건하
Hanja
朴建夏
Revised RomanizationBak Geon-ha
McCune–ReischauerPak Kŏn-ha

Park Kun-ha (born 25 July 1971 in Daejeon, South Korea) is a retired South Korean footballer.

Career[]

He started his professional career in 1996 as the founding member of Suwon Samsung Bluewings. At first, he played as a striker and scored many goals and help the Bluewings to win the championship in 1998 and 1999 and Asian Champions Cup and Asian Super Cup in 2001 and 2002, respectively. Later, he changed his position to defender and helped the Bluewings to win their third championship in the history.

He retired in 2006 and became an assistant coach of the first team at the Suwon Bluewings. In 2009, he became the manager of Suwon Bluewings U18 team (Maetan High School Football Club).

With Bluewings, he won three K-League championships and also won the Rookie of the Year award in the 1996 season.

Club statistics[]

[1][2]

Club performance League
Season Club League Apps Goals
Korea Republic League
1996 Suwon Samsung Bluewings K-League 34 14
1997 19 2
1998 22 2
1999 39 12
2000 19 6
Japan League
2000 Kashiwa Reysol J1 League 5 1
Korea Republic League
2001 Suwon Samsung Bluewings K-League 30 4
2002 26 2
2003 31 0
2004 31 1
2005 26 1
2006 15 0
Country Korea Republic 292 44
Japan 5 1
Total 297 45

National team statistics[]

Korea Republic national team
Year Apps Goals
1996 2 0
1997 15 5
1998 3 0
Total 20 5

International goals[]

Results list South Korea's goal tally first.
Date Venue Opponent Scored Result Competition
25 January 1997 Sydney, Australia  New Zealand 1 goal 3–1
23 April 1997 Beijing, China  China PR 2 goals 2–0
28 May 1997 Daejeon, South Korea  Hong Kong 1 goal 4–0 1998 FIFA World Cup qualification
12 June 1997 Seoul, South Korea  Egypt 1 goal 3–1 1997 Korea Cup

References[]

  1. ^ Park Kun-ha at National-Football-Teams.com
  2. ^ K League profile

External links[]

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Shin Hong-gi
Suwon Samsung Bluewings captain
2001
Succeeded by
Seo Jung-won


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