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h2mark Chapter 9. Asia/Africa > South Korea K League

♣ K League

K League (Korean: K리그) is South Korea's professional football league. It includes the first division K League 1 and the second division K League 2. Clubs competing in the K League have won a record total of twelve AFC Champions League titles, the top continental competition for Asian clubs.

South Korea K League Emblem
▲ K League Emblem

▼ Connection Pages

♣ History

Until the 1970s, South Korean football operated two major football leagues, the National Semi-professional Football League and the National University Football League, but these were not professional leagues in which footballers could focus on only football. In 1979, however, the Korea Football Association (KFA)'s president Choi Soon-young planned to found a professional football league, and made South Korea's first professional football club Hallelujah FC the next year. After the South Korean professional baseball league KBO League was founded in 1982, the KFA was aware of crisis about the popularity of football. In 1983, it urgently made the Korean Super League with two professional clubs (Hallelujah FC, Yukong Elephants) and three semi-professional clubs (POSCO Dolphins, Daewoo Royals, Kookmin Bank) to professionalize South Korean football. Then, the Super League accomplished its purpose after existing clubs were also converted into professional clubs (POSCO Atoms, Daewoo Royals) and new professional clubs joined the league. In the early years, it also showed a promotion system by giving qualifications to the Semi-professional League winners. (Hanil Bank in 1984, Sangmu FC in 1985)

However, the number of spectators was consistently decreased despite KFA's effort, and so the professional league, renamed as the Korean Professional Football League, operated home and away system to interest fans since 1987. On 30 July 1994, the Professional League Committee under KFA was independent of the association, and renamed as the "Korean Professional Football Federation". In 1996, South Korean government and the Football Federation introduced a decentralization policy to proliferate the popularity of football nationally in preparation for the 2002 FIFA World Cup, which they wanted to host. Several clubs located in the capital Seoul moved to other cities according to the new policy, but this was abolished after only three years and is regarded as a failed policy because it gave up the most populous city in South Korea. In 1998, the league was renamed again as current K League.

2002 FIFA World Cup South Korea/Japan
▲ 2002 FIFA World Cup South Korea/Japan

It had the current format by abolishing the K League Championship and the Korean League Cup after the 2011 season, and being split into two divisions in 2013. The first division's name was the K League Classic, and the second division's name was the K League Challenge at the time. The fact that both the first and the second divisions had very similar names caused some degree of confusion and controversy. Beginning with the 2018 season, both divisions were renamed the K League 1 and the K League 2 respectively.

In February 2021, an OTT service for international markets called K League TV was officially launched.

♣ Structure

Below K League 1 is the second-tier K League 2, and both form the K League as professional championships. Under them, there are two semi-professional leagues (K3 League and K4 League) and three amateur leagues (K5, K6 and K7 Leagues). At present, promotion and relegation exists within each of the three levels (professional, semi-professional, and amateur) but clubs from K3 and below cannot be promoted to the K League. However, the KFA has announced plans to combine the three promotion-relegation systems into one from 2027.

Since 2021, K League 1 and K League 2 teams have been permitted to field their reserve teams in the K4 League.

♣ Clubs

Current clubs

Clubs

▤ View all Clubs →

Location of the 2024 K League 1 teams
▲ Location of the 2024 K League 1 teams
Location of the 2024 K League 2 teams
▲ Location of the 2024 K League 2 teams

♣ Champions

Tables

▤ View all tables →

♣ Records and statistics

Top scorers

Stefan Mugoša (Top scorers 2024)
▲ Stefan Mugoša (Top scorers 2024)

Winning managers

Kim Pan-gon (Ulsan Hyundai 2024)
▲ Kim Pan-gon (Ulsan Hyundai 2024)

▶ K League Go Page

▸ K League Top Scorer Award →
▸ K League Player of the Year →
▸ K League Best Young Player →
▸ K League Top Assist Provider →
▸ K League Manager of the Year →
▸ K League Best XI of the Season →
▸ K League Special XI (30th anniversary) →
▸ K League Top scorers of the Season →
▸ K League Top assists of the Season →
▸ K League Player of the Month →
▸ K League Young Player of the Month →
▸ K League Goal of the Month →
▸ K League Manager of the Month (Mixed) →
▸ K League Player of the Round (Weekly MVP) →
▸ K League Clubs & Standings →
▸ K League Result Table →

▶ Player Records and statistics Go Page

▸ K League All-time Top scorers →
▸ K League Most appearances →
▸ K League All-time Top assist providers →
▸ K League All-time Top clean sheets →
▸ K League Most goals 2005s-present →
▸ K League Most assists 2010s-present →
▸ K League Multiple Weekly MVP 2015s-present →
▸ K League Hat-tricks →

♣ Awards

Annual awards

  1. K League Most Valuable Player Award
  2. K League Top Scorer Award
  3. K League Top Assist Provider Award
  4. K League Young Player of the Year Award
  5. K League Manager of the Year Award
  6. K League Best XI
  7. K League FANtastic Player

♣ Sponsorship

  1. Hite 1994–1995 Hite Cup Korean League
  2. Rapido 1996–1997 Rapido Cup Professional Football League
  3. Hyundai Group 1998 Hyundai Cup K-League
  4. Hyundai Securities 1999 Buy Korea Cup K-League
  5. Samsung Electronics 2000 Samsung DigiTall K-League
  6. POSCO 2001 POSCO K-League
  7. Samsung Electronics 2002 Samsung PAVV K-League
  8. Samsung Electronics 2003–2008 Samsung Hauzen K-League
  9. Hyundai Motor Company 2010 Sonata K League
  10. Hyundai Oilbank 2011–2016 Hyundai Oilbank K League
  11. Hana Bank 2017–2018 KEB Hana Bank K League
  12. Hana Bank 2019–present Hana 1Q K League
Hana 1Q K League Sponsor Event
▲ Hana 1Q K League Sponsor Event
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