Gwangju Sangmu FC

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Gwangju Sangmu
광주 상무
File:Emblem of Gwangju Sangmu Phoenix.svg
Full name Gwangju Sangmu Football Club
광주 상무 프로축구단
Nickname(s) Bulsajo (Phoenix)
Founded 2003 as Gwangju Sangmu Bulsajo[1]
1984 as Sangmu FC (Original)
Dissolved 2010
Ground Gwangju World Cup Stadium
Ground Capacity 44,118
Owner South Korea Korea Armed Forces Athletic Corps
Chairman South Korea
Manager South Korea
League South Korea
Current season
Korea Armed Forces
Athletic Corps
  • First Athletics Unit

  • Second Athletics Unit

  • Third Athletics Unit
    • Aquatics
    • Archery
    • Athletics
    • Biathlon
    • Cycling
    • Fencing
    • Modern pentathlon
    • Shooting
    • Taekwondo
    • Women's football

Gwangju Sangmu FC (Korean: 광주 상무 프로축구단), was a professional football club that participates in the K League Challenge. The club was based in Gwangju, South Korea. Sangmu (상무, 尙武) is the sports division of the Military of South Korea.

K-League officially considers Gwangju Sangmu FC as a defunct club. Sangju Sangmu FC, what is essentially its successor military club, cannot include Gwangju Sangmu FC's records as its own, since they are treated as two distinctive clubs.

History

Origin – Army FC, Navy FC, Air Force FC era (?-1983)

There were ROK Army FC, ROK Navy FC, ROK Air Force FC until 1983 in Korea. ROK Marine Corps FC became ROK Navy FC in 1973. The 3 military football clubs were consolidated into one, football side of Korea Armed Forces Athletic Corps in January 1984.

Founding and Sangmu Semi-professional FC era (1984–2002)

Sangmu FC was founded on 11 January 1984, as the football side of Korea Armed Forces Athletic Corps.[2][3] Although Sangmu squad was composed of professional players from K-League club, Sangmu FC competed in the Semi-professional league (present Korea National League). In 1985 Sangmu joined the K-League for the 1985 season, but spent only one year in the league before dropping out.

Sangmu's playing staff is made up of young Korean professional footballers serving their compulsory two-year military duty. Fifteen players join up at the start of every season and spend two years with the side before returning to their previous professional club. Sangmu are not allowed to sign any foreign players because of their military status. The military nature of the club means that the overwhelming majority of the players are in their early 20s, and thus lack the playing experience of the opponents. As a consequence, the club has historically been underachievers in the K-League.

The reserve side, Sangmu B, competed in the K2 League from 2003 to 2005 before joining the K-League reserve league. It finished runners-up in the 2003 K2 League season, and was based in Icheon for the three years it competed at K2 level.

Gwangju Sangmu FC era (2003–2010)

After establishing a home base in Gwangju, the club rejoined the K-League at the start of the 2003 season as Gwangju Sangmu Bulsajo. Since 2004, the club has been known as Gwangju Sangmu FC.

Records

Season Division Tms. Pos. FA Cup AFC CL
1985 K1 8 6 - -
1996 Semi-professional Era Round of 16 -
1997 1st Round -
1998 Round of 16 -
1999 Quarter-final -
2000 Round of 16 -
2001 Round of 16 -
2002 Round of 16 -
2003 K1 12 10 Round of 16 -
2004 K1 13 8 Quarter-final -
2005 K1 13 13 Round of 16 -
2006 K1 14 14 Round of 16 -
2007 K1 14 14 Round of 16 -
2008 K1 14 14 Quarter-final -
2009 K1 15 11 Round of 16 -
2010 K1 15 14 Quarter-final -
Key
  • Tms. = Number of teams
  • Pos. = Position in league

Honours

Reserve team

2003

Amateur

1984
1996

Managers

# Name From To Season Notes
South Korea Kim Young-Bae 1984/01/11 1984/??/?? 1984 (Semi-professional)
South Korea Jang Jong-Dae 1985/??/?? 1985/07/09 1985
South Korea Kim Young-Bae 1985/07/10 1989/12/?? 1985
1986–1989 (Semi-professional)
South Korea Lee Kang-Jo 1990/??/?? 2010/10/27 1990–2002 (Semi-professional)
2003–2010
South Korea Lee Soo-Chul 2010/10/28 2011/07/13 2010–2011

Season record

K League

Gwangju Sangmu
Season Teams P W D L GF GA GD Pts Position Korean FA Cup League Cup Top scorer
(League goals)
1985 8 21 6 7 8 23 30 −7 19 6th None None South Korea Hong Seok-Min (6)
2003 12 44 13 7 24 41 60 −19 46 10th Round of 16 None South Korea Lee Dong-Gook (11)
2004 13 24 6 11 7 18 20 −2 29 8th Quarter-finals 10th South Korea Park Jung-Hwan (4)
2005 13 24 4 5 15 23 38 −15 17 13th Round of 16 11th South Korea Kim Sang-Rok (5)
2006 14 26 5 8 13 17 29 −12 23 14th Round of 16 11th South Korea Kang Yong (4)
South Korea Chung Kyung-Ho (4)
2007 14 26 2 6 18 14 44 −30 12 14th Round of 16 Group stage South Korea Namgung Do (7)
2008 14 26 3 7 16 22 46 −24 16 14th Quarter-finals Group stage South Korea Kim Myung-Joong (7)
2009 15 28 9 3 16 33 40 −7 30 11th Round of 16 Group stage South Korea Choi Sung-Kuk (9)
2010 15 28 3 10 15 17 43 −26 19 14th Quarter-finals Group stage South Korea Choi Sung-Kuk (4)

R League

Gwangju Sangmu Reserves
Season Stage Teams P W D L GF GA GD Pts Position Top scorer
(League goals)
2002 South Group 5 16 7 7 2 33 18 +15 28 1st
Playoff 4 1 0 0 1 0 1 −1 0 Semi-finals
2006 Group A 4 18 6 4 8 23 26 −3 22 4th
2007 Group B 4 18 7 4 7 28 25 +3 25 3rd
2008 Group B 8 21 9 4 8 29 29 0 31 6th
2009 Group B 4 12 5 3 4 20 15 +5 18 2nd
2010 Group B 8 14 6 2 6 23 24 −1 20 4th
Sangju Sangmu Phoenix Reserves

Korea National League

Icheon Sangmu
Season Stage Teams P W D L GF GA GD Pts Position League Cup Top scorer
(League goals)
2003 First Stage 10 9 4 2 3 15 13 +2 14 4th None South Korea Lee Gwang-Jae (7)
Second Stage 10 9 5 4 0 18 9 +9 19 1st
Playoff 2 2 0 1 1 4 5 −1 1 Runner-up
2004 First Stage 10 9 6 1 2 12 9 +3 19 3rd Group stage South Korea Kim Man-Joong (3)
South Korea Park Jung-Hwan (3)
Second Stage 10 9 2 4 3 11 12 −1 10 6th
2005 First Stage 11 10 4 3 3 11 8 +3 15 6th Semi-finals South Korea Oh Jung-Seok (7)
Second Stage 11 10 5 3 2 11 6 +5 18 2nd

Crests

Kit Supplier

See also

References

  1. Official Club Profile at K League Website (Korean)
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