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Goyang KB Kookmin Bank
고양 KB국민은행
Goyang KB Kookmin Bank logo
Full nameGoyang KB Kookmin Bank
Football Club
고양 KB국민은행 축구단
Nickname(s)Goyang KB
Short nameGKB
Founded1969
2000 (refounded)
Dissolved1997 (first iteration)
2012
Ground Goyang Stadium
Capacity41,311
Owner KB Financial Group
ChairmanKang Jung-Won
ManagerLee Woo-Hyung
League National League
2012 SeasonRunner-up
Current season

Goyang KB Kookmin Bank FC ( Korean: 고양 KB국민은행 축구단) was a South Korean football club based in the Seoul satellite city of Goyang. It played in the National League, the third tier of Korean football. The club was officially dissolved in November 2012.

K-League Membership

Kookmin Bank FC was founded in September 1969 and competed in the various amateur football competitions at the time. The club enjoyed success in tournaments such as the Korea Semi-Professional Football League (winners in 1978) and the President's Cup (winners in 1978 and 1983) before becoming founder members of the K-League, the professional football league in South Korea, in 1983.

The club's stay in the professional ranks was a short one, as it finished 5th out of the five teams in the first year. When it came in 8th out of the eight teams in 1984 the decision was made for the club to return to the amateur ranks.

After the K-League

Upon returning to the amateur ranks, the club returned to winning ways and managed President's Cup triumphs in 1986, 1990 and 1995. It also won the 3rd edition of the Industrial Amateur Football championship in 1993, a tournament they would win again in 1996.

The financial crisis that struck South Korea in 1997 saw the club temporarily wound up, with the official decision to pull the plug on the team coming on December 31, 1997. After two years out of the game, Kookmin Bank reconstituted their club on February 28, 2000 and the team returned to the amateur ranks, eventually winning a sixth President's Cup crown in 2003.

Life at K2 Level

Organised league football at amateur level came about in 2003 with the establishment of the National League, a competition with ten members, of which Kookmin Bank were one. Initially based in Gimpo, the club won the first stage of the 2003 championship and then moved its home base to Goyang and the team's name was changed to Goyang Kookmin Bank for the second stage where they finished runners-up on goal difference. They defeated the reserve team of military side Sangmu 5-4 on aggregate in the playoff final to win the league. They retained their championship crown in 2004 with a 4-1 aggregate win over Gangneung City FC after having again won the first stage of the league season.

Despite a lacklustre 2005 season, the club bounced back to win the 2006 championship (now rebranded the National League], triumphing 2-1 on aggregate in the final after winning the first stage of the season.

Promotion Controversy

It was planned that, subject to meeting certain financial requirements, the winner of the National League in 2006 would be promoted to the K-League. However Goyang Kookmin Bank caused controversy by winning the league but declining to move up. Team owners Kookmin Bank cited a Korean law where banks in Korea were not allowed to be involved in profitable ventures outside of banking which of course a professional football team could be. However the more likely reason is the large financial losses that most K-League teams endure each year as the league struggles for sponsorship money and suffers through low crowd numbers. On top of that any National League champion seeking promotion from the second tier is required to pay an 'entry fee' of around 2 million US dollars simply to join the league. Goyang Kookmin Bank received several threats from the League ranging from being thrown out of the competition, to fines, to point deductions for the upcoming 2007 season. In the end the side received a points deduction penalty, to be split into ten point deductions in the first and second stages of the 2007 season.

Current team squad

As of 1 March 2012

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK South Korea  KOR Kim Byung-Gon
3 DF South Korea  KOR Han Gun-Hee
4 DF South Korea  KOR Kim Hyo-Joon
5 DF South Korea  KOR Kim Gi-Joong
6 DF South Korea  KOR Lee Sang-Woo
7 FW South Korea  KOR Park Byung-Won
8 MF South Korea  KOR Park Sung-Jin
9 MF South Korea  KOR Cha Jong-Yun
10 FW South Korea  KOR Kim Young-Nam
11 FW South Korea  KOR Ha Jung-Heon
13 DF South Korea  KOR Lee Sang-Yong
14 FW South Korea  KOR Lee Jae-Won
15 MF South Korea  KOR Lee Su-Hwan
16 FW South Korea  KOR Hwang Ho-Ryoung
17 DF South Korea  KOR Lee Dong-Jun
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 MF South Korea  KOR Chun Won-Goo
20 GK South Korea  KOR Hwang Hee-Hoon
21 GK South Korea  KOR Jung Min-Gyo
22 MF South Korea  KOR Yu Byeong-Uk
23 MF South Korea  KOR Lee Yoon-Ho
24 MF South Korea  KOR Jung Da-Seul
27 FW South Korea  KOR Jung Hee-Jin
30 DF South Korea  KOR Oh Jeong-Hwan
31 DF South Korea  KOR Sung Jong-Hyun
33 DF South Korea  KOR Don Ji-Duk
38 DF South Korea  KOR Ryu Byung-Hoon
40 GK South Korea  KOR Choi Ik-Hyung
66 MF China  CHN Bai Zijian
77 MF South Korea  KOR Kim Won-Min
88 MF South Korea  KOR Park Jeong-Sik

Honours

Domestic competitions

League

Winners (3): 2003, 2004, 2006
Runners-up (2): 2011, 2012

Cups

Statistics

Season K-League FA Cup League Cup Top scorer
(League goals)
Manager
Stage Teams P W D L GF GA GD Pts Position
1983 Single Stage 5 16 3 2 11 11 30 –19 8 5th None None South Korea Lim Seok-Hyun (3)
South Korea Kim Su-Gil (3)
Season Stage Teams P W D 0D L GF GA GD Pts Position FA Cup League Cup Top scorer Manager
1984 First Stage 8 14 1 2 2 9 12 25 –13 20 8th None None South Korea 6 players (3)
Second Stage 8 14 2 4 0 8 15 33 –18 14 8th
1985-95 None None None
1996 Round 1
1997-99 On Hiatus
2000 None Round 1 None
2001 Round 1
2002 did not qualify
Season Korea National League FA Cup League Cup Top scorer
(League goals)
Manager
Stage Teams P W D L GF GA GD Pts Position
2003 First Stage 10 9 6 2 1 14 6 +8 20 1st Round of 16 None South Korea Ko Min-Gi (8)
Second Stage 10 9 5 4 0 13 5 +8 19 2nd
Playoff 2 2 1 1 0 5 4 +1 4 Champion
2004 First Stage 10 9 7 2 0 17 5 +12 23 1st Round of 16 Semifinal South Korea Kim Dong-Min (6) South Korea Lee Woo-Hyung
Second Stage 10 9 3 3 3 9 8 +1 12 4th
Playoff 2 2 2 0 0 4 1 +3 6 Champion
2005 First Stage 11 10 6 2 2 15 6 +9 20 3rd Quarterfinal Group Stage South Korea Choi Bae-Sik (9)
Second Stage 11 10 4 3 3 13 7 +6 15 3rd
2006 First Stage 11 10 8 2 0 26 8 +18 26 1st Semifinal Quarterfinal South Korea Ko Min-Gi (7)
Second Stage 11 10 4 2 4 12 10 +2 14 6th
Playoff 2 2 1 1 0 2 0 +2 4 Champion
2007 First Stage 12 11 7 2 2 20 8 +12 131 6th Round of 16 Runner-up South Korea Lim Jin-Young (7)
Second Stage 12 11 6 2 3 26 13 +13 101 9th
2008 First Stage 14 13 6 3 4 23 14 +9 21 6th Semifinal Quarterfinal South Korea Kim Hyun-Gi (5)
South Korea Kim Yo-Han (5)
South Korea Cha Jong-Yoon (5)
Second Stage 14 13 5 4 4 12 12 0 19 7th
2009 First Stage 14 13 4 4 5 18 16 +2 16 8th Round of 16 Winner South Korea Park Byung-Won (7)
Second Stage 13 12 5 4 3 17 15 +2 19 5th
2010 First Stage 15 14 7 3 4 19 12 +7 24 4th Semifinal Quarterfinal South Korea Lee Wan-Hee (7)
Second Stage 15 14 7 4 3 20 15 +5 25 5th
Playoff 4 1 0 0 1 1 2 –1 Semifinal
2011 14 26 13 8 5 37 25 +12 47 2nd Round of 32 Group Stage South Korea Park Sung-Jin (8)
Playoff 6 3 1 1 1 4 4 0 4 Runner-up
2012 14 26 15 10 1 51 20 +31 55 1st Quarterfinal Semifinal
Playoff 6 2 1 0 1 2 4 -2 3 Runner-up

1: Goyang KB Kookmin Bank was docked 10 points due to rejecting of promotion.

See also

External links