Daegu FC explained

Clubname:Daegu FC
Upright:0.9
Fullname:Daegu Football Club
대구시민프로축구단
Ground:DGB Daegu Bank Park
Capacity:12,415
Owner:Daegu Government
Chairman:Hong Joon-pyo (Daegu mayor)
Mgrtitle:Head coach
Manager:Park Chang-hyun
League:K League 1
Season:2023
Position:K League 1, 6th of 12
Website:http://www.daegufc.co.kr
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Daegu FC (Korean: 대구 FC) is a South Korean professional football club based in Daegu. The club was founded as a community club at the end of 2002, and made their K League 1 debut in 2003. Daegu has played mostly in the K League 1 but was relegated at the end of the 2013 season to the K League 2. They were promoted back to the top tier for the 2017 season and went on to win the Korean FA Cup in 2018, which qualified them for the 2019 AFC Champions League. The club's best season in K League 1 was in 2021, when they finished third out of twelve teams. The same year, they were also runners-up in the Korean FA Cup and progressed to the round of 16 in the 2021 AFC Champions League.

History

Foundation

Daegu FC was established in 2002 as a community club (generally in South Korea, a "community-club" means that the club issues shares) based in the city of Daegu. The city is a key shareholder, and the current mayor is chairman of the club. Following their foundation, the club entered the 2003 season of the K League under manager Park Jong-hwan. Park had previously managed the national side for a number years in the 1980s and 1990s. The club's entry, together with that of Gwangju Sangmu, brought the number of teams participating in the league to 12.

Domestic competitions

Daegu finished the 2003 K League season in 11th place (out of 12 teams), winning seven games, and drawing sixteen. In the 2003 Korean FA Cup, Daegu reached the quarterfinals, where they were defeated 1–0 by Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i. Daegu improved in 2004 to tenth place in the league which, due to Incheon United's entry, now numbered 13 clubs. In the FA Cup, Daegu were knocked out in the round of 32 by National League side Ansan Hallelujah. In the Samsung Hauzen Cup, a new cup competition run as a league competition specifically for K League clubs (thus excluding National League and lower-tier clubs) during the K League's mid-season break, finished eighth out of 13 teams. The following season saw Daegu placed eighth place in the league and seventh in the Samsung Hauzen Cup. In the FA Cup, after defeating University and National League sides, Daegu were knocked out in the quarterfinals in a 2–1 loss to another K League side, the Chunnam Dragons.

For the 2006 K League season, the club placed seventh overall in the league and was 13th in Samsung Hauzen Cup. It reached the quarterfinals of the 2006 edition of the FA Cup but lost (again) to the Chunnam Dragons. Following completion of the 2006 season, Park Jong-hwan stepped down as manager after four years with the club. On 1 December 2006, Byun Byung-joo was appointed as the new manager.[1] A former South Korean international, Byun had no previous K League management experience prior to his appointment as Daegu FC's manager. The club's performance slipped in comparison to its previous two seasons, and it placed 12th. The club failed to get out of the group stage in the 2007 Samsung Hauzen Cup and achieved a similar level of performance in the FA Cup, where Daegu lost to Incheon United in the round of 16.

In 2008, Daegu played extremely aggressive football, becoming the joint equal top-scoring team of the K League, alongside Suwon Samsung Bluewings. However, they also conceded the most goals in the league. An 11th place in the K League standings was the eventual outcome. For the first time in its history, Daegu reached the semi-finals of the Korean FA Cup, by defeating Ulsan in the quarterfinals, following a win in the round of 16 over Ansan Hallelujah. However, they then lost to their opponents Pohang Steelers in a 2–0 loss. The club placed fifth (out of six teams) in their group in the Samsung Hauzen Cup.

The 2009 season was one of the worst in the club's history. In a now expanded league of 15 clubs, thanks to new entrant Gangwon FC, Daegu would place in the last, 15th place, winning only five games. In the FA Cup, Daegu reached the quarterfinals, against Daejeon Citizen, the game finished with a 1–1 scoreline. Daegu lost out in the subsequent penalty shootout. In the league cup, now known as the Peace Cup Korea 2009, the club finished third in their group, one point away from qualifying for the knockout phase of the cup. Later in the year, Lee Young-jin was appointed as manager for the 2010 season.[2] Lee, who has previously coached FC Seoul, replaced Byun who had resigned after being embroiled in a scandal involving a player's agent and payoffs for selecting specific players.[3]

On field, Daegu repeated their dismal performances of the previous season, finishing 15th in the K League standings, equal with Gwangju Sangmu on points. Daegu conceded the most goals of any club in the league, losing 19 games out of 28 games, with five wins and four draws. In the FA Cup, Daegu lost 1–0 after extra time to the National League side Suwon City. Better results were achieved in the League Cup, with Daegu progressing out of their group to the knockout stage, thanks to wins over Daejeon Citizen and Busan, before losing to FC Seoul after a penalty shootout.

By virtue of winning the 2018 Korean FA Cup, Daegu qualified for its first appearance in the 2019 AFC Champions League.[4]

After a controversial fall out with the club's executive director, Cho Kwang-Rae, its manager, André, left Daegu FC on January 27, 2020.[5] On February 5, 2020, the club announced Lee Byung-keun, who had joined the club as the chief assistant coach at the beginning of 2019 season, as a caretaker manager to lead the club in the upcoming 2020 K League 1 season.[6]

International competitions

Prior to the start of the 2006 K League season, Daegu participated in the Tongyeong Cup. The Tongyeong Cup was a four-team invitational tournament held in Tongyeong, South Korea. As well as Daegu and fellow K League club Incheon United, A-League side Queensland Roar and Beijing Guo'an were also part of the tournament. After beating both Incheon and Beijing, Daegu drew 0–0 with Queensland, winning the Tongyeong Cup and thus its first trophy.[7]

In 2019, the club played in the 2019 AFC Champions League, and for the group stage was placed with Sanfrecce Hiroshima, Guangzhou Evergrande and Melbourne Victory. Despite having the lowest wage bill of all the K-League clubs, it won its first game, against Melbourne Victory.[8] It went on to win two more games in the group stage but failed to progress to the knockout phase.

Stadium

The club's first home ground, Daegu Stadium (formerly Daegu World Cup Stadium), was opened on 28 June 2001 and is owned by the Daegu Metropolitan City. The stadium was one of the venues for the 2002 FIFA World Cup, hosting three group games, as well the 2002 FIFA World Cup play-off game for third place between South Korea and Turkey. Daegu FC used the stadium as their main venue between 2003 and 2018. The stadium has 66,422 seats, and it is covered by natural grass.[9] The name was changed to Daegu Stadium on 5 March 2008. Occasionally, Daegu FC played its home games at the Daegu Civic Stadium.

In the 2019 season, Daegu FC relocated to the DGB Daegu Bank Park, a 12,415 capacity football-specific stadium built at the same location as the demolished Daegu Civic Stadium.[10]

Players

Current squad

[11]

Retired number(s)

See main article: Retired numbers in football. 12Club Supporters (the 12th Man)
24Park Jong-jin

Captains

SeasonCaptain
2003 Oh Ju-po
2003 Kim Hak-chul
2004 Roh Sang-rae
2005 Jin Soon-jin
2005 Song Jung-hyun
2006 Lee Sang-il
2006–07 Kim Hyun-soo
2008 Hwang Sun-pil
2009 Jang Nam-seok
2010 Bang Dae-jong
2011 Back Min-chul
2012–13 Yoo Kyoung-youl
2014 An Sang-hyun
2015 Heo Jae-won
2016 Park Tae-hong
2017–19 Han Hee-hoon
2020 Hong Jeong-un
2021–2022 Kim Jin-hyuk
2022–present Cesinha

R-League

From 2008 to 2011, Daegu FC fielded a team in the R-League, established in 2000 for the reserve squads of the professional K-League clubs. The National Policy Agency also entered a team in the league. The league format provided for two groups of teams (six to eight in each group), each group member playing the others in the group, three or four times, depending on the number of teams in the groups.[12] The top two teams in each group moved onto a playoff round although from 2010, the title was shared between the winners of each group.

In 2008, Daegu placed 7th out of the 8 teams in their group, winning three of 18 games. They fared little better in 2009, finishing last in their group of five teams. In 2010, Daegu's reserve squad only won one of their group games, while they drew two, and lost 11 times. The side's return of 5 points saw it place 8th and last in their group. In 2011, the club improved to 5th in its group, with eight wins. It did not enter the 2012 edition of the competition.

U-18 (Hyunpung High School) squad

In 2008, Daegu FC established an under-18 side, to act as a development squad for the men's team. This is essentially Hyunpung High School's senior football team,[13] [14] and as of 2009, plays in the U-18 Challenge League. The side is managed by former Daegu FC player Kim Hyun-soo.

Club officials

Coaching staff[15]

List of managers

No.NameFromToSeason(s)
1 Park Jong-hwan2002/10/092006/11/052003–2006
2 Byun Byung-joo2006/11/282009/12/072007–2009
3 Lee Young-jin2009/12/222011/10/312010–2011
4 Moacir Pereira2011/11/022012/12/012012
5 Dang Sung-jeung2012/12/032013/04/202013
6 Baek Jong-chul2013/04/232013/11/302013
7 Choi Deok-ju2013/12/202014/11/182014
8 Lee Young-jin2014/11/242016/08/122015–2016
C Son Hyun-jun2016/08/132016/11/212016
92016/11/222017/05/222017
C André2017/05/232017/11/152017
102017/11/162020/01/282017–2019
C Lee Byung-keun2020/01/302020/11/052020
112020/11/062021/12/202021
12 Alexandre Gama2021/12/222022/08/142022
Calign=left rowspan="2" Choi Won-kwon2022/08/152022/11/072022
132022/11/072024/04/192023–2024
14 Park Chang-hyun2024/04/23present2024–

Honours

League

Runners-up (1): 2016

Cups

Winners (1): 2018

Runners-up (1): 2021

Season-by-season records

Domestic record

SeasonLeagueFA Cup
44 7 16 21 38 60 –22 37 11 QF
24 7 7 10 30 31 –1 28 10 Ro32
24 8 6 10 30 29 +1 30 8 QF
26 8 10 8 32 30 +2 34 7 QF
26 6 6 14 35 46 –11 24 12 Ro16
26 8 2 16 46 58 –12 26 11 SF
28 5 8 15 20 45 –25 23 15 QF
28 5 4 19 28 57 –29 19 15 Ro32
30 8 9 13 35 46 –11 33 12 Ro32
44 16 13 15 55 56 –1 61 10 Ro16
38 6 14 18 36 57 –21 32 bgcolor=pink13↓ Ro32
36 13 8 15 50 47 +3 47 7 Ro32
40 18 13 9 67 47 +20 67 3 Ro32
40 19 13 8 53 36 +17 70 2↑ Ro32
38 11 14 13 50 52 –2 47 8 Ro32
38 14 8 16 47 56 –9 50 7 bgcolor=goldW
38 13 16 9 46 37 +9 55 5 Ro16
27 10 8 9 43 39 +4 38 5 Ro16
38 15 10 13 41 48 –7 55 3 RU
38 10 16 12 52 59 –7 46 8 SF
38 13 14 11 42 43 –1 53 6 Ro16
Key

AFC Champions League record

All results list Daegu's goal tally first.

SeasonRoundOppositionHomeAwayAggregate
2019Group stage (Group F) Melbourne Victory4–03–13rd
Guangzhou Evergrande3–10–1
Sanfrecce Hiroshima0–10–2
2021Group stage (Group I) Kawasaki Frontale1–32–32nd
United City7–04–0
Beijing Guoan5–03–0
Round of 16 Nagoya Grampus2–4
2022Play-off Buriram United1–1
(3–2 pen.)
Group stage (Group F) Shandong Taishan4–07–01st
Lion City Sailors0–32–1
Urawa Red Diamonds1–00–0
Round of 16 Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors1–2

Sponsors

Kit manufacturer

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: 대구FC, 변병주 現청구고 감독을 새 사령탑으로 확정 . . 2006-11-28 . 2009-11-10 . ko . 2013-11-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131112201929/http://news.naver.com/main/read.nhn?mode=LPOD&mid=sec&sid1=001&oid=248&aid=0000000056 . live .
  2. News: 대구FC 제 3대 감독에 이영진 감독선임 . Daegu FC . 2009-12-22 . ko . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120327110555/http://www.daegufc.co.kr/board/content.html?tb=board_2&num=1533 . 2012-03-27 .
  3. News: Sports agent scandal taints Daegu FC manager . . 2009-12-09 . 2010-06-07 . 2011-01-23 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110123232126/http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2913665 . live .
  4. News: Duerden . John . Asia awaits again for K League clubs . 19 March 2019 . . 3 March 2019 . 8 March 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190308003102/http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/sports/2019/03/661_264703.html . live .
  5. Web site: 대구FC, 안드레 감독과 이별 . Daegu FC . 6 February 2020.
  6. Web site: 대구FC, 이병근 감독대행 체제로 2020시즌 치른다 . Daegu FC . 6 February 2020.
  7. News: http://news.naver.com/main/read.nhn?mode=LSD&mid=sec&sid1=001&oid=073&aid=0000020731& . ko:대구 통영컵 우승 . sportsseoul.com . . 2006-02-28 . 2009-11-10 . ko . 2019-08-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190816135626/https://news.naver.com/main/read.nhn?mode=LSD&mid=sec&sid1=001&oid=073&aid=0000020731& . live .
  8. News: Duerden . John . Daegu FC basking in international spotlight . 19 March 2019 . . 10 March 2019 . 15 March 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190315131717/http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/sports/2019/03/661_265092.html . live .
  9. News: http://www.daegu.go.kr/Sports/Default.aspx?cid=28:2&classNo=0&no=24&rNo=24&page=2&list=10&infoID=293 . ko:대구스타디움 . Daegu Sports Facilities Management Center . 2006-01-25 . ko . 2011-03-12 . 2022-07-26 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220726095020/http://www.daegu.go.kr/Sports/Default.aspx?cid=28:2&classNo=0&no=24&rNo=24&page=2&list=10&infoID=293 . live .
  10. Web site: 프로축구 대구FC 전용구장 `DGB 아레나` 완공…1만2천석 규모 . . 25 January 2019 . ko . 21 January 2019.
  11. Web site: 프로선수단 . daegufc.co.kr . Daegu FC . 18 July 2023 . ko.
  12. News: 2010년 R-리그 개막 . Daegu FC . 2010-03-23 . ko . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110722134128/http://www.daegufc.co.kr/board/content.html?tb=board_2&num=1561 . 2011-07-22 .
  13. News: 대구FC U-18(고교축구)팀, 현풍고등학교 선정 . Daegu FC . 2008-08-12 . ko . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110722133936/http://www.daegufc.co.kr/board/content.html?tb=board_2&num=1378 . 2011-07-22 .
  14. News: 대구FC 직영 U-18팀 현풍고 축구부 창단식 . Daegu FC . 2009-02-18 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110722133942/http://www.daegufc.co.kr/board/content.html?tb=board_2&num=1460 . 2011-07-22 .
  15. Web site: Staff . 24 October 2022. daegufc.co.kr . Daegu FC. ko.
  16. News: 대구FC – KAPPA코리아 용품후원 조인식 . Daegu FC . 2003-02-05 . ko . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110722134135/http://www.daegufc.co.kr/board/content.html?tb=board_1&num=16 . 2011-07-22 .
  17. News: 대구FC, 호마와 용품계약 . Daegu FC . 2004-02-06 . ko . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110722134141/http://www.daegufc.co.kr/board/content.html?tb=board_2&num=98 . 2011-07-22 .
  18. News: 대구FC-키카 용품후원계약 . Daegu FC . 2005-01-11 . ko . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110722134148/http://www.daegufc.co.kr/board/content.html?tb=board_2&num=422 . 2011-07-22 .
  19. News: 대구FC 로또(Lotto)와 용품 후원계약 체결 . Daegu FC . . 2006-11-10 . 2009-11-10 . ko . 2013-11-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131112235946/http://news.naver.com/main/read.nhn?mode=LPOD&mid=sec&sid1=001&oid=248&aid=0000000055 . live .
  20. News: 대구FC 출정식 및 JOMA(조마) 조인식 . Daegu FC . . 2009-02-25 . ko.
  21. Web site: Goal Studio firma i kit del Daegu FC per la stagione 2021 . goal.com . it . 26 January 2021 . 15 March 2022 . 15 March 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220315162534/https://www.goal.com/it/notizie/goal-studio-firma-i-kit-del-daegu-fc-per-la-stagione-2021/1ne74u4epmvno1idheyd6ngvdo . live .