Name
FC Seoul

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Next Event
Gangwon FC vs FC Seoul (31 Mar)

Head Coach
None Found...
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League Position
7

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Established
1983 (41 years old)

Sport
Soccer

Stadium/Home
Seoul World Cup Stadium
(66,704 Capacity)

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Location
Seoul

Nicknames

Competitions
South Korean K League 1

Last Edit
zag: 22/Mar/24


Upcoming
31/03 Gangwon FC - FC Seoul
03/04 FC Seoul - Sangju Sangm
07/04 Daegu FC - FC Seoul
13/04 FC Seoul - Pohang Steel
20/04 FC Seoul - Jeonbuk Hyun

Results
16/03 FC Seoul 2 - 0 Jeju United
10/03 FC Seoul 0 - 0 Incheon Unit
02/03 Gwangju FC 2 - 0 FC Seoul
14/02 Roasso Kumam - FC Seoul
02/12 Daejeon Hana 2 - 2 FC Seoul

Description
Available in:

FC Seoul (Korean: FC 서울) is a South Korean professional football club based in Seoul, the capital of South Korea, that plays in the K League 1. The club is owned by GS Sports, a subsidiary of GS Group.

The club was officially founded as Lucky-Goldstar Football Club in 1983, by the Lucky-Goldstar Group. FC Seoul have won six League titles, two FA Cups, two League Cups and one Super Cup. FC Seoul is one of the most successful and popular clubs in the K League 1, with financial backing from the GS Group. In 2012, FC Seoul was evaluated as the most valuable football brand in the K League.

Team Members




Adhamat





Cho





Choi





Choi





Han





Iljutcenko





Kang





Kang





Ki





Kim





Kim





Kim





Kim





Kwon





Lee





Lim



10

Lingard





Paločević





Park





Ryu





Shigehiro



10

Sung-yueng



= Player Contract years remaining
Showing 0 to 22 (Total: 22)



Stadium or Home

The Seoul World Cup Stadium (Korean: 서울월드컵경기장), also known as Sangam Stadium, is a stadium used mostly for association football matches. The venue is located in 240, World Cup-ro, Mapo-gu, Seoul, South Korea. It was built for the 2002 FIFA World Cup and opened in November 2001. It is currently the second largest stadium in South Korea after Seoul Olympic Stadium, and is the largest rectangular stadium in Asia. It was designed to represent the image of a traditional Korean kite. The stadium has a capacity of 66,704 seats, including 816 seats for VIP, 754 seats for press and 75 private Sky Box rooms, each with a capacity for 12 to 29 persons. Due to table seats installation, capacity was reduced from 66,806 seats to 66,704 seats in February 2014. Since the World Cup it has been managed by the Seoul Metropolitan Facilities Management Corporation (SMFMC). FC Seoul moved to the Seoul World Cup Stadium in 2004.

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