| AFC Champions League Qualification | 10/24 10:00 | 2 |
[1] Suwon Bluewings v
Kashima Antlers
[2]
|
D | 3-3 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 10/20 05:00 | 33 |
[5] Suwon Bluewings v
Pohang Steelers
[4]
|
W | 2-0 | |
| South Korea Cup | 10/17 10:30 | 3 |
Suwon Bluewings v
Jeju United
|
W | 4-3 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 10/07 05:00 | 32 |
[10] Sangju Sangmu
v
Suwon Bluewings [5]
|
W | 1-2 | |
| AFC Champions League Qualification | 10/03 10:00 | 2 |
[2] Kashima Antlers
v
Suwon Bluewings [1]
|
L | 3-2 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 09/29 05:00 | 31 |
[5] Suwon Bluewings v
Ulsan Hyundai
[3]
|
D | 2-2 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 09/26 05:00 | 30 |
[6] Tanupat/Tantianankul
v
Suwon Bluewings [4]
|
L | 1-0 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 09/23 07:00 | 29 |
[4] Suwon Bluewings v
Jeonbuk Motors
[1]
|
D | 0-0 | |
| AFC Champions League Qualification | 09/19 10:00 | 3 |
Suwon Bluewings v
Jeonbuk Motors
|
L | 4-5 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 09/15 07:00 | 28 |
[12] Incheon Utd
v
Suwon Bluewings [4]
|
D | 0-0 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 09/08 07:00 | 25 |
[7] Jeju United
v
Suwon Bluewings [4]
|
D | 0-0 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 09/02 10:00 | 27 |
[10] Daegu FC
v
Suwon Bluewings [4]
|
L | 4-2 | |
| AFC Champions League Qualification | 08/29 10:00 | 3 |
Jeonbuk Motors
v
Suwon Bluewings
|
W | 0-3 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 08/25 10:00 | 26 |
[4] Suwon Bluewings v
Gyeongnam FC
[2]
|
W | 1-0 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 08/22 10:30 | 25 |
Jeju United
v
Suwon Bluewings
|
- | Postponed | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 08/19 10:00 | 24 |
[12] Jeonnam Dragons
v
Suwon Bluewings [4]
|
L | 6-4 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 08/15 10:00 | 23 |
[3] Suwon Bluewings v
FC Seoul
[7]
|
L | 1-2 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 08/12 10:00 | 22 |
[4] Ulsan Hyundai
v
Suwon Bluewings [3]
|
L | 1-0 | |
| South Korea Cup | 08/08 10:00 | 4 |
Cheonan City
v
Suwon Bluewings
|
W | 2-4 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 08/04 11:00 | 21 |
[8] Sangju Sangmu
v
Suwon Bluewings [3]
|
D | 1-1 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 07/29 10:00 | 20 |
[3] Suwon Bluewings v
Gangwon FC
[6]
|
W | 2-0 | |
| South Korea Cup | 07/25 10:30 | 5 |
Suwon Bluewings v
Gimpo Citizen FC
|
W | 6-1 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 07/21 10:00 | 19 |
[2] Gyeongnam FC
v
Suwon Bluewings [3]
|
D | 2-2 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 07/18 10:30 | 18 |
[4] Suwon Bluewings v
Incheon Utd
[12]
|
W | 5-2 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 07/14 10:00 | 17 |
[2] Suwon Bluewings v
Jeonbuk Motors
[1]
|
L | 0-3 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 07/11 10:30 | 16 |
[10] Jeonnam Dragons
v
Suwon Bluewings [4]
|
W | 0-2 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 07/07 10:00 | 15 |
[2] Suwon Bluewings v
Jeju United
[3]
|
L | 2-3 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 05/20 07:00 | 14 |
[8] Pohang Steelers
v
Suwon Bluewings [2]
|
D | 1-1 | |
| AFC Champions League Qualification | 05/16 11:00 | 4 |
[1] Suwon Bluewings v
Ulsan Hyundai
[2]
|
W | 3-0 | |
| South Korea K League 1 | 05/13 07:00 | 13 |
[5] Suwon Bluewings v
Daegu FC
[12]
|
W | 2-0 |
The Suwon Samsung Bluewings (Korean: 수원 삼성 블루윙즈) are a South Korean football club based in Suwon that competes in the K League 2, the second tier of South Korean football. Founded in December 1995, they have won the K League on four occasions (1998, 1999, 2004 and 2008), as well as the Asian Club Championship twice, in 2000–01 and 2001–02.
The club was formally founded on 15 December 1995 by Samsung Electronics, becoming the ninth member of the K League from the 1996 season. It was also the first club to be founded in one specific city, a plan which led to the K-League initiating plans to encourage its other clubs to forge similar links with local communities.
Former South Korean national team manager Kim Ho took charge of the side from their first season in the K-League, and the team finished runners-up in the championship play-off that season. The championship was secured in 1998 and retained in 1999 as Suwon started to dominate Korean football.
Suwon lifted the Asian Club Championship twice in succession in 2000–01 and 2001–02, and also added the Asian Super Cup to their roll of honors on two occasions.
In the 2002 season, Suwon also won the Korean FA Cup for the first time, achieving a continental double.
The departure of Kim Ho in 2003 saw Korean football legend Cha Bum-kun appointed manager ahead of the 2004 season, and the club won its third league title in his debut season as manager.
Suwon finished runners-up in both major domestic competitions in 2006, as Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma claimed victory in the K-League championship play-off final and Chunnam Dragons won in the FA Cup final, thwarting Suwon's attempts to win the first ever domestic double in South Korean football.
The 2008 season became one of the most successful seasons in the club's history. Suwon achieved a domestic double by winning the K League Championship and the League Cup.
After the appointment of coach Seo Jung-won in 2013, the team started focusing on financial self-sufficiency and reducing expenditures, marking a shift away from reliance on generous support from its parent company Samsung Electronics, with ownership eventually being transferred to Cheil Worldwide, a Samsung affiliate. The club began transitioning from being a "team that wins by effectively utilizing the parent company's budget" to "a team that generates its own revenue and maintains appropriate performance."
Despite failing to win another domestic or continental title, the club continued to be a force in South Korea and Asia, finishing as K League runners-up in the 2014 and 2015 seasons, as well as reaching the semi-finals of the 2018 AFC Champions League. Suwon's last major honour came in 2019, winning the Korean FA Cup and qualifying for the 2020 AFC Champions League.
Major financial changes at the club led to poor results, and in the 2023 season, the club was relegated to the second-tier K League 2 for the first time in its history after finishing last.