Korean K.League Soccer News - February
2008
John Duerden reports from Seoul on a South Korean pop sensation
Not
too long ago, sexy Korean pop sensation Lee Hyo-ri famously sang
"just one ten minutes". The sultry songstress suggested that she
could score with any man within that period of time. After Wednesday's
defeat at the hands of Chile, South Korea's footballers would have
to sing "just 51 ten minutes" as the national team's scoring
drought stretches to almost biblical proportions.
Lee's song was probably top of the charts when the Taeguk Warriors
last hit the back of the net. While 90,000 Indonesians were present
when Kim Jung-woo scored in Jakarta last July, there was only a
select group of Korean witnesses. Soon, they could be sporting t-shirts
that read "I saw Korea score."
It won't be t-shirt weather on Wednesday night when Turkmenistan
comes to Seoul for the hosts' first game of the 2010
World Cup qualification campaign. It certainly wasn't last week
either when Chile coolly won 1-0 at a three-quarters empty Seoul
World Cup Stadium in Huh Jung-moo's first game back as coach. A
young and inexperienced team, freezing weather and Korea's Olympic
handball play-off with Japan had contrived to keep the fans away.
The exhibition display, described as 'toothless' by most TV news
stations, did little to warm those present . After 506 minutes of
goalless football, there is little to be happy about as a Korean
fan though Huh has promised a better performance on Wednesday.
He could be right as Park Ji-sung,
one of the few Koreans more famous than the ubiquitous Lee Hyo-ri,
returns home to take control of the situation. Park was absent from
the Asian Cup through injury, as was Tottenham's Lee Young-pyo and
Seol Ki-hyeon of Fulham, but now all three are fully fit and ready
to go. There should be a full house despite the fact that Seoul
almost empties during festivities that celebrate the Lunar New Year.
Despite the lack of action in front of goal, the consolation is
that Korea still managed to finish third at the Asian Cup and that
the real action starts now. Failure to defeat a fairly physical,
but rather limited, Turkmenistan team (ranked 128 in the world by
FIFA, Korea are 41st) would put real pressure not only on the team
but also the coach.
At this moment, few care if the next goal comes from a Christiano
Ronaldo-style super shot or if it hits the backside of captain Kim
Nam-il and rolls over the line. Three points are what is needed
if the Year of the Mouse is to start on a positive note.
Also positive is the fact that the other two teams in the group
are hardly Asia's finest. It could have been much worse for Korea.
Australia was drawn with China, Asian champions Iraq and Asian Games
winners Qatar. Korea has, as well as the Turkmen, only North Korea
and Jordan to worry about.
After Wednesday night, the next game in the group, from which
the top two progress to the final round of qualification, sees South
Korea make the short trip to Pyongyang in March. That will certainly
be an interesting trip both in football, and other, terms. It will
be a much more comfortable trip for the Taeguk Warriors if they
have three points under their belt.
Whether that happens or not depends on Wednesday. Three years ago
in the middle of the Lunar New Year holiday, Korea faced Kuwait
in Seoul in another World Cup qualifier. Lee Young-pyo got the ball
rolling that night, another sub-zero encounter, before a spectacular
volley from Lee Dong-gook settled the encounter.
The latter Lee is still banned from the national team after late-night
drinking sessions at the Asian Cup but even he may raise a glass
back in England if Korea's first steps on the road to South Africa
in 2010 turn out to be firm and steady.
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