Stats by Nakayama#9, updated by ttt1009Name: Yoo Sang-ChulNickname: ''Yoo-Bi'' (유비)

Country:

Republic of South Korea
Club:
Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i (Ulsan HD FC);
Yokohama F. Marinos;
Kashiwa ReysolNumber: 6
Position:
*CMF,
DMF,
AMF,
WB,
CBSide: RF/BS
Age: 27-31 years (18/10/1971)
Height: 184 cm
Weight: 78 kg
Attack:
77Defence:
72Balance:
85Stamina:
84Top Speed:
78Acceleration:
77Response:
83Agility:
79Dribble Accuracy:
78Dribble Speed:
73Short Pass Accuracy:
81Short Pass Speed:
83Long Pass Accuracy:
80Long Pass Speed:
78Shot Accuracy:
75Shot Power:
88Shot Technique:
77Free Kick Accuracy:
75Curling:
76Header:
86Jump:
85Technique:
83Aggression:
78Mentality:
82Keeper Skills:
50Team Work:
80Injury Tolerance:
BForm/Condition/Fitness:
6Weak Foot Accuracy:
7Weak Foot Frequency:
6Consistency:
6Growth type:
StandardCARDS:S01: Marauding
S05: 1-Touch Play
P11: Long Ranger
P15: Free Roaming
SPECIAL ABILITIES: Reaction - Tactical Dribble - Middle Shooting - Centre - Playmaking - Scoring - 1-Touch Pass
Attack/Defence Awareness Card: BalancedINFOYoo Sang-chul (유상철) built a career around doing elite-level “connector work” across roles and leagues. After establishing himself in Korea, he tested himself in Japan with Yokohama F. Marinos and Kashiwa Reysol before returning to the K League, where he remained a high-value presence into the later stages of his playing days. Internationally, he’s inseparable from Korea’s 2002 World Cup story—most memorably for his goal against Poland, a moment still highlighted in FIFA’s official archive.
Stylistically, Yoo was a powerful, intelligent midfielder whose impact came less from raw pace and more from control of space. He could progress play with real quality: short combinations under pressure, but also long diagonals and switches, and he wasn’t one-footed—he could deliver with either left or right depending on angle and tempo. Yoo was also an excellent aerial competitor—strong timing, body use, and bravery—which is why it’s fair to frame him as capable of battling top European aerial threats (the Ballack/Klose/Morientes/Helguera type profiles) on equal terms in duels. Rather than sprinting past people, he defended and attacked through positioning and reaction speed: arriving early to cut lanes, stepping out at the right moment, and then turning recoveries into useful passes or late runs.