Boeun Sangmu W vs Suwon FMC W: Mid-Season WK-League Clash
Boeun Sangmu W host Suwon FMC W in a mid-regular-season WK-League 2026 fixture that carries clear directional weight: for the home side it is about stabilising after an inconsistent start, while for Suwon it is the kind of away game they must control to sustain a title-challenging points pace. With the match yet to start and no table data available, this serves as a momentum hinge rather than a definitive standings decider.
Head-to-Head Tactical Summary
The recent head-to-head record tilts towards Suwon FMC W but shows Boeun Sangmu W can trouble them, especially at home. On 5 May 2026, Boeun hosted Suwon and lost 1-3 after a 1-1 HT, suggesting Suwon’s second-half control and attacking depth can turn balanced games in their favour. In 2025 they met four times: on 8 September 2025 at Suwon Sports Complex, Suwon overturned a 0-1 HT deficit to win 2-1; on 12 June 2025 at Mungyeong Public Stadium, they played out a 0-0 draw; on 1 May 2025 at Suwon Sports Complex, Boeun won 1-0 after leading 0-1 at HT; and on 20 March 2025 at Mungyeong Public Stadium, Boeun came through 2-1 after a 1-1 HT. Overall, Boeun have taken two wins and a draw from five, but Suwon have won the last two meetings, both by single-goal or better margins, often swinging tight games with second-half efficiency.
Global Season Picture
- League Phase Performance: Standings data is unavailable, so rank, points, and exact goals for/against in the league phase cannot be quantified here.
- 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 balanced but slightly negative goal trend (1.1 scored vs 1.2 conceded per match). Their defensive profile is split: they have 5 clean sheets but have also allowed 12 goals at home alone, indicating vulnerability when their block is broken. Suwon FMC W have played 9 league-phase matches (7 wins, 0 draws, 2 losses), scoring 23 and conceding 8, an elite attacking output (2.6 goals per match) combined with a solid defence (0.9 conceded). They have yet to fail to score and have 4 clean sheets, underlining a consistently front-foot, high-conversion attacking model.
- Form Trajectory: Boeun’s form string “WWWDWLWLLL” shows a strong early run (three straight wins then a draw) followed by a sharp downturn, with three consecutive losses at the end of the sequence. Suwon’s “WWLWLWWWW” reflects a high ceiling with only isolated setbacks: two defeats scattered among eight wins, including a current surge of four straight victories. Coming into this fixture, Suwon’s trend is upward and stable, while Boeun’s is clearly negative and in need of a reset performance.
Tactical Efficiency
Across all phases of the competition, the raw scoring and concession rates act as proxies for attacking and defensive efficiency. Boeun Sangmu W’s 1.1 goals scored per match against 1.2 conceded suggests a side that needs a high level of defensive organisation to compensate for a modest attack; their five clean sheets show they can execute a low-error game plan, but once they concede, they struggle to outscore opponents. Suwon FMC W’s 2.6 goals per match and only 0.9 conceded illustrate a high “Attack/Defense Index” profile: they are capable of multi-goal wins (with biggest wins of 6-0 at home and 4-0 away) while keeping control at the back. The fact that Suwon have not failed to score yet and have four clean sheets points to superior tactical efficiency in both penalty areas compared with Boeun’s more fragile balance.
The Verdict: Seasonal Impact
For Boeun Sangmu W, a positive result here would halt a three-game losing slide and re-anchor them in the mid-table pack, turning their season narrative back towards stability and outside-chance contention for the upper half rather than drifting towards a relegation fight. Defeat, especially a heavy one, would deepen the negative trend and risk locking them into a lower-tier trajectory for the rest of 2026. For Suwon FMC W, this away match is the type of fixture title contenders must consistently win: three points would extend their winning streak, keep their points-per-game at a championship pace, and reinforce the psychological gap over mid-table opponents they have recently started to dominate. Dropped points would not end their title ambitions but would reopen the race, inviting rivals back into contention and raising questions about their ability to convert clear statistical superiority into results away from home.


