Busan I Park vs Chungnam Asan: The xG Gap That Decides This
Busan haven't lost at home in 5 straight. Chungnam Asan generate just 0.9 xG per game. The numbers are brutal.
The numbers tell an interesting story — and in this K League 1 fixture, two of them almost tell the whole story by themselves.
Busan I Park vs Chungnam Asan on June 5 looks, on the surface, like a routine mid-table affair. Dig into the underlying data and you find something sharper: a side averaging 1.6 xG per game hosting a side averaging 0.9 xG per game, with Busan carrying a perfect five-match home record into the contest. That xG gap — 0.7 expected goals per game — is wide enough to matter. And Chungnam Asan's foul rate tells a secondary story about a team under pressure even before a ball is kicked. Check the full match statistics when they land, but here's what the pre-match data already reveals.
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The 0.9 xG Problem: Chungnam Asan's Attacking Floor Is a Basement
Expected goals don't lie about quality. They might flatter occasionally, they can be gamed with high-volume low-quality shots — but a five-game average of 0.9 xG is a red flag that goes beyond bad luck.
To put that in context: a team averaging 0.9 xG per game is essentially budgeting for fewer than one meaningful chance per match. Over 90 minutes, that's a side that creates threat in isolated moments rather than through sustained pressure.
The Shot Volume Problem Compounds It
Chungnam Asan are averaging just 8.8 shots per game across their last five outings. Of those, 4.3 land on target — a shots-on-target ratio of roughly 49%, which is actually respectable. The issue isn't conversion efficiency. The issue is volume. They're not taking enough shots to manufacture luck.
Busan, by comparison, are generating 10.5 shots per game with 4.0 on target. Their on-target ratio (38%) is lower than Chungnam Asan's, yet they're producing 78% more expected goals. That tells you Busan's shots are coming from better positions — higher-quality locations inside the box, not hopeful efforts from distance.
For Chungnam Asan to win this K League 1 match, they need a significant uplift in attacking output from what their recent form suggests is possible. Their last five results — W, D, L, W, L — mask an attacking engine that's been sputtering for weeks. The Chungnam Asan stats & profile paints the full picture.
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Busan's Five-Game Home Fortress — And Why It's More Than a Streak
Five consecutive home wins is a headline number. The underlying data makes it structural rather than lucky.
Busan I Park's 1.6 xG average over their last five games is the kind of figure that generates points over time. They're not scraping 1-0 wins on deflections and goalkeeping errors — they're building expected goal tallies that justify the results. The 4-1 win over Paju Citizen FC is the outlier that inflates the average slightly, but strip that out and the floor remains solid.
What 47.8% Possession Actually Means for Busan
Busan's average possession sits at 47.8% — almost exactly even. They're not a dominant ball-control side. They don't need to be. A team producing 1.6 xG while holding less than half the ball is a team that transitions efficiently and finishes its chances when they arrive.
That's a useful profile against Chungnam Asan, who carry 47.3% possession themselves. Neither side is going to dominate the ball. This shapes up as a contest decided by who makes better use of the moments they create — and on recent evidence, that advantage sits with Busan.
Their recent schedule included a 0-0 draw with Suwon Bluewings, which might look like a blot on the form record. Chungnam Asan, tellingly, also drew 0-0 with Yongin City Government FC. Both sides have shown they can stall in low-intensity games. But at home, Busan's output lifts. The Busan I Park stats & profile tracks the home/away split in more detail.
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Chungnam Asan's Foul Rate: The Stat That Signals Structural Stress
Here's the number that doesn't get enough attention: Chungnam Asan are averaging 14.3 fouls per game across their last five matches. Busan average 12.5.
The gap — 1.8 fouls per game — sounds marginal until you contextualise it. Chungnam Asan are also collecting 2.0 yellow cards per game to Busan's 1.4. A side fouling more frequently and getting booked more often is a side that's chasing games, scrambling defensively, or both.
Fouls as a Defensive Symptom
High foul rates in football rarely emerge from aggression alone. More often they're a symptom of defensive lines under pressure — teams that can't hold their shape, can't win the ball cleanly, and resort to tactical fouling to break up attacks.
For this K League 1 fixture specifically, that matters in two ways:
The contrast with Busan's 1.4 yellow cards per game is telling. Busan aren't a clean side by any means — 12.5 fouls per game puts them in mid-range territory — but they're committing fewer and getting punished less. That discipline, in tight games decided by fine margins, has value.
You can run the full tactical breakdown through today's AI-powered analysis for a more granular view of where on the pitch these fouls are concentrated.
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Head-to-Head: The Hidden Pattern in Five Meetings
The last five meetings between these sides produce a deceptively complex picture.
Busan have won three of the last five meetings. But the November 2025 result — a 0-3 home loss — is an outlier that demands scrutiny. That's a significant scoreline in a series where most results have been tight. It suggests Chungnam Asan are capable of exceptional output against this opponent even when their general form looks moderate.
Home Advantage and the Venue Pattern
Of the last five meetings, three were played at Busan's ground. Busan's record in those home fixtures: W 2-0, W (unspecified), L 0-3. Two wins, one heavy loss. The 0-3 defeat could represent a specific tactical setup by Chungnam Asan that Busan's coaching staff will have analysed thoroughly.
The away fixtures tell a different story. Chungnam Asan have managed just one goal across three away meetings against Busan — the three-goal swing in that November match is a significant anomaly against the broader trend.
What the head-to-head really tells us: this fixture can produce unexpected results. But the structural data — xG, foul rates, home record — all points in one direction when Busan are on home soil.
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Offsides, Throw-Ins, and the Marginal Data Worth Tracking
Some numbers look small until you frame them correctly.
Busan average 0.8 offsides per game. Chungnam Asan average 0.5. Neither side is running aggressive high lines or playing advanced pressing football that forces offside traps. These are relatively conservative attacking shapes — consistent with the possession figures (both below 48%) and the modest shot volumes.
Throw-Ins as a Possession Indicator
Chungnam Asan average 17.0 throw-ins per game to Busan's 16.0. The gap is small, but throw-in counts correlate with how often a team is playing the ball into wide areas and how frequently possession is being interrupted. A side averaging more throw-ins is generally working harder to maintain width and recover loose balls.
Combined with Chungnam Asan's higher foul rate and yellow card average, a portrait emerges of a side that plays with intensity but not always control. They press and they foul and they push play wide — but against a Busan side that transitions efficiently from even possession and generates 78% more expected threat, that style carries risk.
The marginal data reinforces what the headline numbers already suggest. This is a fixture where Busan's structural advantages compound across 90 minutes.
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