Korean K.League Soccer News - November
2006
John Duerden reports from Seoul
The regular season of the 2006 K-League is over - now four of the
fourteen teams that started the season will do battle in the championship
play-offs starting on November 12.
The line-up is:
Saturday November 12
Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma - FC Seoul
Sunday November 13
Suwon Samsung Bluewings - Pohang Steelers
On the final weekend of the regular season, only Seoul had yet
to secure its place but did so with a sluggish 1-0 win over Gyeongnam
FC on a day when the first fingers of winter could be felt by the
17,000 fans in the cavernous Seoul World Cup Stadium.
Rumours from those in the know suggest that Seoul coach Lee Jang-soo
is done for, whatever happens in the next three weeks. Fans of the
club will be hoping that if he does go, he will leave the K-League
trophy behind.
It is unlikely as Seoul have looked uninspired for the majority
of the season and would usually come-off second best against Seongnam.
However, Seongnam, having booked their play-off place months ago,
have not won for the last five games - and even allowed the
shot-shy Jeju United and Jeonbuk
Hyundai Motors to score three goals each.
Whether coach Kim
Hak-bom can get his players back to their form earlier in the
season remains to be seen but the six-time champions are better
bets to lift a seventh title than FC Seoul are to win their first
(or fourth if one includes Anyang Cheetahs' three triumphs before
the club was uprooted and moved to the capital in 2004).
Suwon took the second stage with a series of effective rather
than impressive performances. The same can't be said of midfielders
Lee Kwan-woo and Baek Ji-hoon who have made the difference since
respectively heading north from Daejeon and south from Seoul in
the summer.
Last not probably not least are Pohang Steelers, a team that has
gone about its business quietly. Brazilian boss Sergio Farias has
built a solid team that scores more and concedes less than most.
To make matters better, Lee
Dong-gook has returned to the line-up after seven months out
with a torn cruciate ligament. The injury kept the Lion King out
of the World Cup but he announced his return in emphatic fashion
in the last game of the season.
Three minutes after coming off the bench, Lee headed home to give
Pohang three points at the home of champions Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i.
For those who believe in such things, some have suggested (OK,
only me) that fate will propel Lee to clinch the title for his team
and end what has been a miserable year on a high.
Changes to the K-League
Those boffins at the K-League like to keep things interesting.
Upon realizing that the league was in danger of heading for a fourth
season without being tinkered with, they got off their backsides
and did something about it - for the twelfth time in 24 years.
The two-stage season has been cut back down to one but the league
is hoping that the excitement will not be similarly reduced.
To such an end, one team will be promoted from the second tier
N-League to expand the top flight to fifteen teams and 28 games.
The number of teams qualifying for the play-offs has been expanded
to six. Concerned about attendances in the league, the powers-that-be
have decided that such a move will generate more interest and excitement.
With the absence of relegation and champions league qualification,
play-offs are a necessary evil in the league but extending the privilege
to six - 40% of clubs - is excessive.
As that old football saying goes:
"Too many clubs spoils the play-offs."
Lee Chun-soo
Lee Chun-soo,
the biggest star in the K-League has been hit with a big ban for
swearing at referee Lee Yong-chol in Ulsan's recent 1-0 defeat at
Incheon United.
Playing in his hometown, Lee took umbrage to the fact that the
ref disallowed an Ulsan equaliser after Lee Jong-min bundled the
ball into the net with his hand.
Lee left fly and was soon on his way off the pitch and possibly
out of the K-League.
The K-League handed him a three-match ban and then his club sentenced
him to three days community service.
"We've come to the conclusion of ordering him to take responsibility
for his misconduct with the community service," the champions
said in a press release.
"His deed really disappointed fans and tarnished our club's
honour."
Lee, who rejected a move to Portsmouth last August, was repentant
- in public at least.
"I will accept my punishment," said the baseball-cap sporting
star after the hearing.
"I am very sorry. As a professional player I want to win
every game and play well but what I did wasn't necessary.
"I would like to say sorry to the fans that go to the stadium
because they love football. After the sending off I reflected deeply
on what I had done."
"I'd like an opportunity to apologise to the referee directly.
I will use this experience to try and become a more mature player."
And before anybody familiar with the opinionated winger asks,
no, it wasn't possible to tell if his fingers were crossed.
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