2017 K League Challenge

Last updated

KEB Hana Bank
K League Challenge
2017 K League Challenge.png
Season 2017
Champions Gyeongnam FC
(1st title)
Promoted Gyeongnam FC
Matches played180
Goals scored454 (2.52 per match)
Best Player Marcão
Top goalscorer Marcão
(22 goals)
Biggest home win Bucheon 6–2 Anyang
(19 June 2017)
Biggest away win Daejeon 1–4 Seongnam
(27 August 2017)
Anyang 1–4 Gyeongnam
(2 September 2017)
Highest scoring Bucheon 6–2 Anyang
(19 June 2017)
Highest attendance10,683
Anyang 1–4 Gyeongnam
(2 September 2017)
Average attendance2,324
2016
2018

The 2017 K League Challenge was the fifth season of the K League 2, the second-highest division in the South Korean football league system. Champions and winners of the promotion playoffs could be promoted to the K League 1.

Contents

Teams

Team changes

Relegated from K League Classic

Promoted to K League Classic

Newly joined

Withdrawn

Locations

Locations of the 2017 K League Challenge clubs K League Challenge 2017 english Version.png
Locations of the 2017 K League Challenge clubs

Stadiums

Ansan Greeners FC Anyang Asan Mugunghwa Bucheon FC 1995 Busan IPark
Ansan Wa~ Stadium Anyang Stadium Yi Sun-sin Stadium Bucheon Stadium Busan Gudeok Stadium
Capacity: 35,000Capacity: 17,143Capacity: 19,283Capacity: 34,545Capacity: 12,349
Ansan Wa stadium3.JPG Anyang-stadium.jpg Yi Sun-sin Stadium1.JPG Bucheonstadium3.JPG Gudeok Stadium 3.JPG
Daejeon Citizen Gyeongnam FC Seongnam FC Seoul E-Land Suwon FC
Daejeon World Cup Stadium Changwon Football Center Tancheon Stadium Seoul Olympic Stadium Suwon Sports Complex
Capacity: 40,535Capacity: 15,500Capacity: 16,146Capacity: 69,950Capacity: 11,808
Daejeon World Cup Stadium.JPG Changwon Soccer Center 2.JPG Tanchon20100223 1.JPG Suwon Sports Complex.JPG

Personnel and sponsoring

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

TeamManagersKit manufacturerMain sponsor
Ansan Greeners Flag of South Korea.svg Lee Heung-sil Kelme Ansan Government
FC Anyang Flag of South Korea.svg Kim Jong-pil Astore Anyang Government
Asan Mugunghwa Flag of South Korea.svg Song Sun-ho Puma Asan Government
Bucheon FC 1995 Flag of South Korea.svg Jeong Gab-seok Astore Bucheon Government
Busan IPark Flag of South Korea.svg Cho Jin-ho Adidas Hyundai Development Company
Daejeon Citizen Flag of South Korea.svg Lee Young-ik Astore Daejeon Government
Gyeongnam FC Flag of South Korea.svg Kim Jong-boo Hummel Gyeongnam Government
Seongnam FC Flag of South Korea.svg Park Kyung-hoon Umbro Seongnam Government
Seoul E-Land Flag of South Korea.svg Kim Byung-soo New Balance E-Land
Suwon FC Flag of South Korea.svg Cho Duck-je Hummel Suwon Government

Foreign players

Restricting the number of foreign players strictly to four per team, including a slot for a player from AFC countries. A team could use four foreign players on the field each game.

ClubPlayer 1Player 2Player 3Asian Player
Ansan Greeners Flag of Montenegro.svg Luka Rotković Flag of Uruguay.svg Raúl Tarragona Flag of Uzbekistan.svg Bahodir Nasimov
FC Anyang Flag of Brazil.svg Flag of Brazil.svg Lukian Flag of Cote d'Ivoire.svg Aubin Kouakou
Bucheon FC 1995 Flag of Brazil.svg Nilson Júnior Flag of Brazil.svg Waguininho Flag of Brazil.svg Rodrigo Paraná Flag of Uzbekistan.svg Bakhodir Pardayev
Busan IPark Flag of Brazil.svg Danny Morais Flag of Brazil.svg Rômulo Flag of Brazil.svg Léo Mineiro Flag of Japan.svg Michihiro Yasuda
Daejeon Citizen Flag of Brazil.svg Bruno Cantanhede Flag of Georgia.svg Levan Shengelia Flag of Romania.svg Cristian Dănălache
Gyeongnam FC Flag of Brazil.svg Alex Bruno Flag of Brazil.svg Marcão Flag of Croatia.svg Ivan Herceg
Seongnam FC Flag of Brazil.svg Dário Júnior Flag of Croatia.svg Marin Oršulić Flag of Slovakia.svg Filip Hlohovský
Seoul E-Land Flag of Brazil.svg Wesley Alex Flag of Brazil.svg Daniel Lovinho Flag of Japan.svg Tomoki Wada Flag of Japan.svg Atsuki Wada
Suwon FC Flag of Australia (converted).svg Bruce Djite Flag of Brazil.svg Pedro Carmona Flag of Montenegro.svg Vladan Adžić Flag of Australia (converted).svg Adrian Leijer

League table

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1 Gyeongnam FC (C, P)3624756936+3379Promotion to the K League 1
2 Busan IPark 36191165230+2268Qualification for the promotion playoffs semi-final
3 Asan Mugunghwa 36159124437+754Qualification for the promotion playoffs first round
4 Seongnam FC 36131493830+853
5 Bucheon FC 1995 36157145046+452
6 Suwon FC 361112134248645
7 FC Anyang 361091740581839
8 Seoul E-Land 367141542551335
9 Ansan Greeners 367121736541833
10 Daejeon Citizen 366111941601929
Source: K League
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goals scored; 3) Goal difference; 4) Wins; 5) Head-to-head points.
(C) Champions; (P) Promoted

Positions by matchday

  Leaders
  Qualification for the promotion playoffs

Round 1–18

Team ╲ Round123456789101112131415161718
Gyeongnam FC 433111111111111111
Busan IPark 412422222222222222
Asan Mugunghwa 944245434334333343
Bucheon FC 1995 167553345443455434
Seongnam FC 988101010101091099777655
Suwon FC 121334553566666776
FC Anyang 61010877666655444567
Ansan Greeners 155666777877899888
Seoul E-Land 6999999910788988999
Daejeon Citizen 67678888891010101010101010
Source: K League

Round 19–36

Team ╲ Round192021222324252627282930313233343536
Gyeongnam FC 111111111111111111
Busan IPark 222222222222222222
Asan Mugunghwa 344553335555553333
Seongnam FC 666445454444334444
Bucheon FC 1995 433334543333445555
Suwon FC 555666677666677766
FC Anyang 777777766777766677
Seoul E-Land 9999109888888888888
Ansan Greeners 888888999999999999
Daejeon Citizen 10101010910101010101010101010101010
Source: K League

Results

Matches 1–18

Home \ Away ANS ANY ASM BUC BIP DJC GNM SEN SEL SUW
Ansan Greeners 1–02–12–40–32–13–30–11–23–3
FC Anyang 2–10–23–10–13–21–22–02–01–2
Asan Mugunghwa 1–04–02–10–23–11–11–11–01–0
Bucheon FC 1995 2–06–21–21–01–12–20–22–10–1
Busan IPark 3–11–11–11–02–11–11–23–02–2
Daejeon Citizen 1–20–21–10–12–30–21–12–14–3
Gyeongnam FC 3–02–11–02–11–02–11–13–02–0
Seongnam FC 0–00–01–01–20–11–01–20–20–1
Seoul E-Land 1–02–21–14–12–33–30–10–00–0
Suwon FC 0–43–30–21–01–03–11–10–12–2
Source: K League
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Matches 19–36

Home \ Away ANS ANY ASM BUC BIP DJC GNM SEN SEL SUW
Ansan Greeners 2–20–10–20–11–11–01–11–10–0
FC Anyang 2–01–31–31–20–01–41–32–00–0
Asan Mugunghwa 0–02–01–10–11–22–30–22–02–1
Bucheon FC 1995 1–10–03–00–21–02–43–21–00–1
Busan IPark 3–00–01–11–04–21–20–02–12–2
Daejeon Citizen 1–12–01–10–10–02–11–40–12–0
Gyeongnam FC 3–10–13–12–12–04–21–02–12–2
Seongnam FC 1–01–01–01–11–11–11–32–23–0
Seoul E-Land 3–32–33–22–22–20–01–01–10–0
Suwon FC 0–24–00–11–20–13–22–10–03–1
Source: K League
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Promotion playoffs

Bracket

First round Semi-final Final
           
2 Busan IPark 3
3 Asan Mugunghwa 0
3 Asan Mugunghwa 1
4 Seongnam FC 0
Busan IPark 0 1 1 (4)
Sangju Sangmu (p)1 0 1 (5)

First round

Asan Mugunghwa 1–0 Seongnam FC
Jung Sung-min Soccerball shade.svg65' Report
Yi Sun-sin Stadium, Asan
Attendance: 3,840
Referee: Kim Jong-hyeok

Semi-final

Busan IPark 3–0 Asan Mugunghwa
Report
Busan Gudeok Stadium, Busan
Attendance: 2,710
Referee: Kim Dong-jin

Final

The promotion-relegation playoffs were held between the winners of the 2017 K League Challenge playoffs and the 11th-placed club of the 2017 K League Classic. The winner on aggregate score after both matches earned entry into the 2018 K League 1.

Busan IPark 0–1 Sangju Sangmu
Report Yeo Reum Soccerball shade.svg7'
Busan Gudeok Stadium, Busan
Attendance: 1,322
Referee: Lee Dong-jun

1–1 on aggregate. Sangju Sangmu won 5–4 on penalties and therefore both clubs remain in their respective leagues.

Player statistics

Top scorers

RankPlayerClubGoals
1 Flag of Brazil.svg Marcão Gyeongnam FC 22
2 Flag of Uruguay.svg Raúl Tarragona Ansan Greeners 15
3 Flag of Brazil.svg Waguininho Bucheon FC 1995 12
4 Flag of South Korea.svg Jung Won-jin Gyeongnam FC 10
5 Flag of South Korea.svg Ko Kyung-min Busan IPark 9
Flag of South Korea.svg Lee Jeong-hyeop Busan IPark
Flag of Romania.svg Cristian Dănălache Daejeon Citizen
Flag of South Korea.svg Park Sung-ho Seongnam FC
Flag of South Korea.svg Jin Chang-soo Bucheon FC 1995
10 Flag of South Korea.svg Baek Sung-dong Suwon FC 8
Flag of South Korea.svg Jeong Jae-hee FC Anyang

Top assist providers

RankPlayerClubAssists
1 Flag of South Korea.svg Chang Hyuk-jin Ansan Greeners 13
2 Flag of South Korea.svg Jung Won-jin Gyeongnam FC 10
3 Flag of Brazil.svg Alex Bruno Gyeongnam FC 8
Flag of South Korea.svg Kim Shin Bucheon FC 1995
5 Flag of Japan.svg Atsuki Wada Seoul E-Land FC 7
6 Flag of Brazil.svg Rômulo Busan IPark 6
Flag of South Korea.svg Lee Ho-seok Daejeon Citizen
Flag of South Korea.svg Kim Shin Bucheon FC 1995
9 Flag of South Korea.svg Kim Bong-rae Suwon FC 5
Flag of South Korea.svg Lee Ju-yong Asan Mugunghwa
Flag of South Korea.svg Jeong Jae-hee FC Anyang

Attendance

Attendants who entered with free ticket were not counted.

PosTeamTotalHighLowAverageChange
1 FC Anyang 60,07810,6831,3603,338+82.7%
2 Seongnam FC 50,4276,7001,4102,802−58.4%
3 Ansan Greeners  48,6358,4059152,702n/a
4 Busan IPark 43,3026,3371,0242,406+56.8%
5 Gyeongnam FC 39,2737,2787132,182+81.8%
6 Daejeon Citizen 38,7875,1361,0322,155−15.2%
7 Suwon FC 38,6558,4557112,148−51.0%
8 Asan Mugunghwa  35,1887,9337261,955+94.5%
9 Bucheon FC 1995 35,0477,20901,947−6.4%
10 Seoul E-Land 28,9964,5316311,611+22.9%
League total418,38810,68302,324+54.3%

Updated to games played on 29 October 2017
Source: K League Classic
Notes:
Team played previous season in K League Classic.

Awards

The 2016 K League Awards was held on 20 November 2017. [1]

Main awards

Best XI

PositionPlayerClub
Goalkeeper Flag of South Korea.svg Lee Bum-soo Gyeongnam FC
Defenders Flag of South Korea.svg Choi Jae-soo Gyeongnam FC
Flag of South Korea.svg Park Ji-soo Gyeongnam FC
Flag of Croatia.svg Ivan Herceg Gyeongnam FC
Flag of South Korea.svg Woo Joo-sung Gyeongnam FC
Midfielders Flag of South Korea.svg Jung Won-jin Gyeongnam FC
Flag of South Korea.svg Hwang In-beom Daejeon Citizen
Flag of South Korea.svg Moon Ki-han Bucheon FC 1995
Flag of South Korea.svg Bae Ki-jong Gyeongnam FC
Forwards Flag of Brazil.svg Marcão Gyeongnam FC
Flag of South Korea.svg Lee Jeong-hyeop Busan IPark

Player of the Round

Manager of the Month

MonthManagerClubDivision
March Flag of South Korea.svg Jo Sung-hwan Jeju United K League Classic
April Flag of South Korea.svg Kim Jong-boo Gyeongnam FC K League Challenge
May Flag of South Korea.svg Choi Yun-kyum Gangwon FC K League Classic
June Flag of South Korea.svg Choi Kang-hee Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors K League Classic
July Flag of South Korea.svg Seo Jung-won Suwon Samsung Bluewings K League Classic
August Flag of South Korea.svg Hwang Sun-hong FC Seoul K League Classic
September Flag of South Korea.svg Kim Do-hoon Ulsan Hyundai K League Classic
October Flag of Brazil.svg André Daegu FC K League Classic

See also

Related Research Articles

The 2011 Korea National League was the ninth season of the Korea National League. The number of post-season playoffs' teams were increased to six and the playoffs were operated in the same format as the K League Championship. Before the start of the 2011 season, Yesan FC withdrew from the league due to its financial difficulty.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Busan IPark</span> Football club

Busan IPark is a South Korean professional football club based in Busan that competes in K League 2, the second tier of the South Korean football pyramid. They play their home games at the Busan Asiad Main Stadium.

The 2012 Korea National League was the tenth season of the Korea National League.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2013 K League Classic</span> 31st season of top-tier football league in South Korea

The 2013 K League Classic was the 31st season of the top division of South Korean professional football. The South Korean professional football league, K League, was split into two divisions since this year, and the top division was named the "K League Classic". Its fixtures were announced on 30 January, and began on 2 March.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2014 K League Classic</span> 32nd season of top-tier football league in South Korea

The 2014 K League Classic was the 32nd season of the top division of South Korean professional football, and the second season of the K League Classic.

The 2014 season is FC Seoul's 31st season in the K League Classic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2014 K League Challenge</span> Football league season

The 2014 K League Challenge was the second season of the K League 2, the second-highest division in the South Korean football league system. Since the 2014 season, the champions was promoted to the K League Classic and three teams from second to fourth-placed team qualified for the promotion playoffs after the regular season.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2015 K League Challenge</span> Football league season

The 2015 K League Challenge was the third season of the K League 2, the second-highest division in the South Korean football league system. Champions and winners of promotion playoffs could be promoted to the K League Classic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2015 K League Classic</span> 33rd season of top-tier football league in South Korea

The 2015 K League Classic was the 33rd season of the top division of South Korean professional football, and the third season of the K League Classic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2016 K League Classic</span> 34th season of top-tier football league in South Korea

The 2016 K League Classic was the 34th season of the top division of South Korean professional football since its establishment in 1983, and the fourth season of the K League Classic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2016 K League Challenge</span> Football league season

The 2016 K League Challenge was the fourth season of the K League 2, the second-highest division in the South Korean football league system. Originally, K League Challenge champions could be promoted to the K League Classic, but Ansan Mugunghwa lost its qualification for the promotion after Ansan Government decided to break up with police football team from next year. Runners-up Daegu FC directly qualified for the Classic instead of champions Ansan Mugunghwa, and third, fourth and fifth-placed team advanced to the promotion playoffs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2017 K League Classic</span> 35th season of top-tier football league in South Korea

The 2017 K League Classic was the 35th season of the top division of South Korean professional football since its establishment in 1983, and the fifth season of the K League Classic.

The 2018 K League 1 was the 36th season of the top division of professional football in South Korea since its establishment in 1983, and the sixth season of the K League 1, former K League Classic. The K League Classic was changed its name to "K League 1" in this season. As the 2018 FIFA World Cup start on 14 June, the last round before stoppage will be held on 19–20 May. The league will resume games on 7 July.

The 2018 K League 2 was the sixth season of the K League 2, the second-highest division in the South Korean football league system.

The 2019 K League 1 was the 37th season of the top division of professional football in South Korea since its establishment in 1983, and the seventh season of the K League 1. Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors were the defending champions.

The 2019 K League 2 was the seventh season of the K League 2, the second-highest division in the South Korean football league system. Its champions could be promoted to the K League 1 the next season, and second, third and fourth-placed team advanced to the promotion playoffs.

The 2020 K League 2 is the eighth season of the K League 2, the second-tier South Korean professional league for association football clubs since its establishment in 2013, and the third one with its current name, the K League 2. The top-ranked team and the winners of the promotion play-offs among three clubs ranked between second and fourth got promoted to the 2021 K League 1.

The 2021 K League 2 was the ninth season of the K League 2, the second-tier South Korean professional league for association football clubs since its establishment in 2013, and the fourth one with its current name, the K League 2. The top-ranked team and the winner of the promotion-relegation play-off got promoted to the 2022 K League 1.

The 2022 K League 2 was the tenth season of the K League 2, the second-tier South Korean professional football league, and the fifth one under its current name, the K League 2. The top-ranked team and the winners of the promotion/relegation playoff series were promoted to the 2023 K League 1.

The 2023 K League 2, also known as the Hana 1Q K League 2 for sponsorship reasons, was the 11th season of the second division of professional football in South Korea since its establishment in 2013 as the K League Challenge and the sixth season under its current name, the K League 2. Gwangju FC were the defending champions and were promoted to K League 1. The 2023 season kicked off at 1 March 2023.

References

  1. [K리그 어워즈] 챌린지는 경남 천하! MVP 말컹-감독상 김종부 (챌린지 종합). Naver.com (in Korean). InterFootball. 20 November 2017.