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K League 15 June 20267 min read

Seongnam Chunma vs Gimhae City Government FC: Corner Stats Tell All

Six straight home games with 7+ corners. One side averaging 57% possession but just 1.0 xG. The data on this K League 1 fixture is genuinely strange.

Seongnam Chunma vs Gimhae City Government FC

The numbers tell an interesting story — and in Seongnam Chunma vs Gimhae City Government FC, two of those numbers are strange enough to reshape how you read the entire match.

Seongnam Chunma have produced 7 or more total corners in each of their last 6 home games. Not five. Not four. Six consecutive home fixtures, all clearing that threshold without exception. Meanwhile, Gimhae City Government FC arrive having conceded at least 3 corners in each of their last 3 away matches, adding fuel to a trend that already has momentum. When you layer those two streaks on top of each other, the corner market becomes the most analytically interesting part of this K League 1 fixture — more interesting, arguably, than the scoreline itself.

For the full match statistics, everything you need is already logged. But the story worth telling is in the patterns, not just the numbers.

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Six Home Games, One Corner Threshold: Seongnam's Most Reliable Stat

Six matches is not a small sample. It is enough to call something a trend with a straight face.

Seongnam Chunma's 6-match home corner streak — every game clearing 7 total corners — is the single most consistent data point this team has produced recently. Their own average sits at 4.2 corners per game across their last 5 fixtures. That means opponents are routinely contributing 3 or more on their own, pushing combined totals well above the threshold game after game.

What's Driving the Corners?

Seongnam's tactical fingerprint gives some context:

  • 57.0% average possession — they dominate the ball
  • 11.6 shots per game — above average attacking volume
  • xG of just 1.0 — those shots aren't particularly dangerous
  • That gap between shot volume and xG is telling. Seongnam are getting into wide areas, forcing play toward the byline, and generating dead-ball situations — but not consistently carving open high-quality chances. The profile is a team that creates pressure without efficiency. Pressure from wide areas means corners. Low xG means defences are holding the central spaces.

    The result: a lot of corners, not a lot of goals. Which is, paradoxically, exactly the data signature you want when focusing on set-piece volume markets.

    Check the Seongnam Chunma stats & profile and you'll see this wide, possession-heavy pattern holds across a broader dataset too.

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    Gimhae Can't Keep Corners Out — Even on the Road

    Gimhae City Government FC have conceded 3 or more corners in each of their last 3 away matches. That's a shorter run than Seongnam's home streak, but it fits a coherent picture.

    Gimhae's defensive shape on the road has been porous in a specific way — not necessarily conceding goals freely, but consistently giving up territory in wide zones. When teams press them back, Gimhae tend to concede ground out wide before winning the ball or clearing properly. That generates corners rather than clean defensive sequences.

    Gimhae's Away Profile

    The aggregate numbers paint a team that is functional but passive:

  • 49.3% average possession — roughly even, slightly below half
  • 8.3 shots per game — modest attacking output
  • 1.1 xG per game — marginally better than their hosts, but built on limited volume
  • 12.7 fouls per game — the highest foul rate in this matchup by a meaningful margin
  • That last figure deserves attention. Gimhae foul 2.3 more times per game than Seongnam on average. A team that fouls at that rate is reactive, chasing play rather than controlling it. Reactive defending in wide areas creates corners. This is not a coincidence — it's a mechanical relationship between defensive style and set-piece frequency.

    For a deeper look at how this has played out across their recent fixtures, the Gimhae City Government FC stats & profile is the cleanest reference point.

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    Seongnam's Possession Paradox: All That Ball, So Little Bite

    Here is the part of Seongnam's data that should make neutral observers stop scrolling.

    57% possession. 1.0 xG. Those two numbers should not coexist comfortably in the same team's profile. A side controlling nearly three-fifths of the ball in every game should be generating significantly more than a single expected goal per match. The K League 1 average for a team with that possession share is typically closer to 1.4–1.6 xG.

    Seongnam are losing nearly half a goal of expected value just through execution — or rather, through a structure that prioritises retention over penetration.

    The Form Table as Context

    Look at their last 5 results:

    1. D 0-0 vs Suwon City FC

    2. L 1-3 vs Seoul E-Land FC

    3. D 0-0 vs Gyeongnam FC

    4. D 0-0 vs Jeonnam Dragons

    5. W 2-1 vs Yongin City Government FC

    Three goalless draws in five games. The only win came against Yongin, and the only defeat was a 3-goal swing against Seoul E-Land. Seongnam are a team that processes matches slowly, keeps the ball, and struggles to convert that control into decisive moments. When the opposition shuts the middle down, Seongnam drift wide. Hence: corners, not goals.

    The 3.6 shots on target per game is another anchor. Of 11.6 total shots, fewer than a third are testing the goalkeeper. The volume is there. The accuracy is not.

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    Gimhae's Form Collapse and What It Means for This Match

    Four losses in their last five games. Gimhae City Government FC's recent form is not quietly poor — it's consistently poor, and the manner of the defeats matters.

  • L 1-2 vs Gimpo Citizen FC
  • W 1-0 vs Jeonnam Dragons
  • L 1-4 vs Daegu FC
  • L 1-2 vs Gyeongnam FC
  • L 0-1 vs Busan I Park
  • That single win came against Jeonnam Dragons, a side that has been among the division's more inconsistent performers. The 1-4 loss to Daegu is the most damaging data point — it suggests Gimhae can be overwhelmed when a team commits forward with conviction.

    The Foul Rate Problem

    Gimhae's 12.7 fouls per game average has a compounding effect that goes beyond free kicks.

    Teams that foul at high rates tend to:

  • Accumulate yellow cards — Gimhae average 1.2 per game, which is lower than expected for their foul rate, suggesting some bookings are being absorbed without discipline escalating
  • Concede set pieces in dangerous positions — high foul rates in defensive thirds create corners and free kicks in scoring zones
  • Lose momentum in games they're already chasing — when a team is 1-0 down and fouling at nearly 13 times a game, the match becomes fragmented and harder to rescue
  • The throw-in average is one curiosity that both teams share exactly: 18.3 per game each. That symmetry is unusual and suggests roughly similar pitch zones of play across their respective recent matches — both teams operating within similar territorial bands, neither dominating the deep defensive or high attacking thirds exclusively.

    For context on how these trends were identified, today's AI-powered analysis runs the full pattern detection across all K League 1 fixtures.

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    The Numbers That Matter Most

  • Seongnam Chunma have cleared 7 total corners in 6 consecutive home matches — a streak with no interruptions, built on a possession-heavy style that generates wide pressure without clean central penetration. Gimhae's last 3 away games have all produced 3+ corners against them. Both trends point in the same direction.
  • Seongnam's xG of 1.0 from 57% possession is analytically anomalous. A team controlling that much ball and generating so few quality chances is either tactically limited in the final third or tactically choosing safety. Either way, the result is corners over chances — a statistical profile that actually increases set-piece volume while suppressing scorelines.
  • Gimhae foul 2.3 more times per game than Seongnam — the largest individual gap between the two teams across all tracked metrics. High foul rates from reactive defences mechanically increase the number of dead-ball restarts, which includes corners when those fouls occur in wide defensive zones.
  • Three goalless draws in Seongnam's last five matches suggest a team that controls matches without unlocking them. Against a Gimhae side that has lost four of five, Seongnam's possession advantage is likely to be significant — but the xG data cautions against expecting a high-scoring outcome.
  • Both teams average exactly 18.3 throw-ins per game — a statistically unusual tie that suggests both sides operate in similar positional zones on average. In a game where one team dominates possession (Seongnam's 57% vs Gimhae's 49%), that symmetry is worth watching. It may indicate Gimhae press higher than their results suggest, creating a more even territorial battle than the form table implies.