Korean K.League Soccer News - October
2008
John Duerden reports from Seoul on a crazy weekend
"Seongnam
are the second strongest team in the league but we are the strongest,"
said Pohang Steelers boss Sergio Farias after his team defeated
the K-League leaders 2-1 last Saturday. The Brazilian is exaggerating
his team's abilities but at the moment in Korea, just as the weather
finally settles into seasonable temperatures, the football scene
has gone haywire.
How else can you explain Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors' 5-2 thrashing
of Suwon Samsung Bluewings in the once-feared Big Bird Stadium?
Earlier in the season, Suwon couldn't stop winning and the
Motors couldn't start. Now the Jeonju club collected three
successive wins; Suwon have lost five of their last seven.
For the Jeonju-based team, the fried egg on the bi-bim-bap was
the five star showing in Suwon, after the meeting between the two
earlier in the season had been a bad-tempered one.
In May, the Gyeonngi team went to Jeonju to win 2-1 with the last
kick of the game. By that 94th minute, emotions were running high
after Jeonbuk striker Cho Jae-jin scored and then, in the view of
the Suwon fans, celebrated provocatively in front of the massed
blue ranks. Cho told them he was only following what Suwon's
Seo Dong-hyun had done earlier in the game. Suwon fans told him
that they would 'see him at the Big Bird'.
They came, they saw but Cho conquered. The much-maligned male
model was roundly booed and jeered on his return to Gyeonggi but
he quickly made the catcalls stick in blue craws. Cho put Jeonbuk
ahead and although Suwon soon equalized, four goals from the men
in green in ten second half minutes stunned the home fans and kept
the visitors' hopes of a place in the top six and entry to
the championship play-off series alive. It was also the most goals
that Suwon goalkeeper Lee Woon-jae has ever conceded in a single
match.
"I expected it," smiled Cho after the game, not referring
to the 5-2 scoreline of course but the reception from the home fans.
"It didn't bother me. I was just focused on the game.
In fact, it motivated me to do better."
The feeling of defeat is becoming increasingly familiar for Blues
boss Cha Bum-keun. "Our condition is poor," said the
legend of Korean soccer. "We have many injuries but most importantly
because of results, the atmosphere around the team is bad."
It certainly is. A comprehensive 3-1 defeat at Jeju United the
week previously and a 5-2 thrashing at home at the hands of another
mid-table team leaves Suwon's season in danger of meltdown.
It is a big test for coach Cha, one known for buying good players
but his ability to build a team is not quite so respected. Runs
like the current one happen and are never easy for a coach to break.
The defeat sent Suwon, so long the leaders, down into third place
and looking over a shoulder at the approaching Ulsan in fourth.
It is FC Seoul that are the ones to watch. The capital club are
unbeaten for 15 league matches and brushed aside Chunnam Dragons
3-0 on Sunday to move above Suwon but below Seongnam. It wasn't
the best of performances for the hosts but confidence is coursing
through the veins of the players and with Dejan Damjanovic in great
form in attack, Seoul are looking good at a good time.
With Ulsan and Pohang looking fairly safe in fourth and fifth,
a number of clubs are chasing the sixth and final play-off spot
with all the fervour of a tired Seoul salaryman eyeing a free subway
seat in the evening rush hour.
The Uniteds of Jeju and Incheon are in there fighting along with
Gyeongnam FC, a resurgent Jeonbuk and an unpredictable Daegu. The
play-off system has its critics but there is no denying that at
this stage of the season, it provides a fascinating sideshow to
the increasingly fierce race at the top.
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