Boeun Sangmu W vs Suwon FMC W: Mid-Season Benchmark in WK-League
In the 2026 WK-League regular season, this Round 13 fixture between Boeun Sangmu W and Suwon FMC W shapes up as a mid-season benchmark: Boeun trying to stabilise after an erratic start, Suwon looking to consolidate what already profiles as a title-contending campaign. With no neutral venue or cup stakes involved, it is a straightforward league test of whether Boeun can slow down one of the division’s most efficient attacks.
Head-to-Head Tactical Summary
On 5 May 2026, Boeun Sangmu W hosted Suwon FMC W in the WK-League (Regular Season - 6) and lost 1-3 after a 1-1 first half, a match that underlined Suwon’s ability to pull away late away from home.
On 8 September 2025 at Suwon Sports Complex, Suwon FMC W came from behind after a 0-1 half-time deficit to beat Boeun Sangmu W 2-1, showing strong second-half adjustment at home.
On 12 June 2025 at Mungyeong Public Stadium, the sides played out a 0-0 draw, with neither team able to break down the opposition over 90 minutes.
On 1 May 2025 at Suwon Sports Complex, Boeun Sangmu W led 0-1 at half-time and held on to win 0-1, built on defensive resilience in an away setting.
On 20 March 2025 at Mungyeong Public Stadium, Boeun Sangmu W beat Suwon FMC W 2-1 after a 1-1 first half, capitalising on home advantage and a tight scoreline.
Overall, Suwon have taken the upper hand in the most recent meetings, especially in 2026, but Boeun have shown they can edge close contests when they keep the game low-scoring.
Global Season Picture
- League Phase Performance: Standings data is unavailable, so precise goals for/against and points in the league phase cannot be cited. The analysis of table position and exact title/top-4/relegation margins must therefore rely on form and underlying metrics rather than confirmed rankings.
- Season Metrics: In the league phase, Boeun Sangmu W have played 10 matches (5 wins, 1 draw, 4 losses), scoring 11 and conceding 12, which points to a broadly balanced but slightly negative goal difference (1.1 scored vs 1.2 conceded per match). Their defensive record is heavily skewed by home games (12 conceded in 7 at home, 0 conceded in 3 away), suggesting they are more compact and counter-oriented on the road, while more exposed when they have to push at home.
In the league phase, Suwon FMC W have played 9 matches (7 wins, 0 draws, 2 losses), with 23 goals for and 8 against, averaging 2.6 scored and 0.9 conceded per game. This is the profile of a high-ceiling attack with a disciplined back line, both home (2.5 scored, 0.8 conceded) and away (2.6 scored, 1.0 conceded). Both teams show clean-sheet capacity (Boeun 5, Suwon 4), but Suwon’s ability to score in every match (0 failed to score) makes them structurally more reliable. - Form Trajectory: Boeun’s form string of WWWDWLWLLL tells the story of an early surge (three straight wins, then a draw) followed by volatility and a recent downturn with three consecutive defeats. Momentum is negative, and defensive frailties at home are a concern. Suwon’s form line WWLWLWWWW shows only two setbacks and a current run of four straight wins; they are trending upwards, with confidence and rhythm on both sides of the ball.
Tactical Efficiency
Without explicit comparison indices, efficiency has to be inferred from production and defensive leakage. Suwon’s attack functions at elite efficiency: 23 goals in 9 matches (2.6 per game) with no blanks indicates they consistently turn possession and territory into end-product. Their defensive record of 8 conceded (0.9 per game) with 4 clean sheets underlines a compact structure that does not need to dominate the ball to control matches.
Boeun, by contrast, are operating at a more fragile efficiency level. Eleven goals in 10 games (1.1 per match) is modest, and while 12 conceded overall looks manageable on paper, the split is revealing: all 12 conceded at home, none away. That suggests their home game model—likely more proactive, higher line, more numbers ahead of the ball—has not been matched by defensive control. Their five clean sheets show they can execute a low-block, containment plan effectively, but that version appears more sustainable away than at home.
In a direct tactical matchup, Suwon’s high-scoring, structurally solid profile should stress Boeun’s weaker home-phase defending. For Boeun to be efficient, they need to keep the game in the 0–1 goal band, leveraging their clean-sheet capacity rather than trying to trade chances with a side that averages more than double their scoring rate.
The Verdict: Seasonal Impact
With no table data, the exact numerical stakes cannot be quantified, but the trajectory signals are clear. For Suwon FMC W, an away win here would reinforce a title-challenger profile: 8 wins from 10 would likely keep them at or near the top of the WK-League and build a cushion over the chasing pack. It would also confirm their dominance in the head-to-head in 2026 and strengthen their psychological edge going into the second half of the year.
For Boeun Sangmu W, the result has more to do with stabilisation than immediate title ambitions. A defeat would extend their current losing run and risk dragging them into the lower half, where pressure and confidence issues can quickly compound. A positive result—especially a win—would not only snap the negative streak but also validate a more conservative, structurally sound home approach against top opposition, offering a template for the remainder of 2026.
Strategically, this match is a pivot point: Suwon can use it to turn strong form into a sustained title push, while Boeun must use it to arrest a slide and reframe their season as a controlled climb away from mid-table or relegation anxiety rather than a campaign spent reacting to setbacks.

