World Cup Match Report
John Duerden reports on Korea's battling draw with France
Meeting Kevin Gallacher wasn't quite the highlight of the evening
– especially for the amiable Scot after I told him that I
had been present when he had broke his leg on two occasions - but
it came close to matching a dull game between France and South Korea
in Leipzig.
Lunchtime was spent with a group of L'Equipe journalists who were
convinced that the team was on its last legs and was about to be
put out of its misery.
Their pessimistic mood was in marked contrast to that of a group
of Swiss sports scribes I had dinner with five days previously,
after the Korea-Togo
match. Upon witnessing that Korea victory and the subsequent
turgid 0-0 draw between their team and France,
the writers upgraded their team's expected finishing position from
second to an unequivocal first.
On the afternoon of the game, it was hard to navigate the narrow
streets of Leipzig's historic city centre, filled as they
were with people packed taking advantage of the many outside bars
and pubs.
The Koreans were louder – they almost always are –
as they proved in the stadium. The communist built ZentralStadion
looked to be mostly blue upon entrance but the sound that could
be heard on a warm Saxony evening came from the red section –
one that never stopped singing and dancing.
South Korea v France
Desperate to avoid more barbs from the likes of L'Equipe, the
French started brightly and it was little surprise when Thierry
Henry put the team ahead in the ninth minute.
On the half-hour it should have been two as Patrick Viera's
header certainly crossed the line before being beaten away by Lee
Woon-jae in goal - the ‘keeper has answered his critics with
two fine performances so far in Group G.
The Taeguk Warriors offered little as an attacking force but improved
in the second half as Park Ji-sung was moved into the midfield from
the wing. His energy in the middle redressed the balance somewhat,
especially as France
seemed satisfied with the scoreline as it was.
Korea's attempts to break through the excellent defensive
pairing of William Gallas and Lilian Thuram were helped by the introduction
of Ahn Jung-hwan
with 20 minutes remaining. For the second time in a week, the Lord
of the Ring changed the pace of the game and Korea came more and
more into it.
The equaliser was a fairly shambolic one from a French point of
view though the sight of the ball looping over a hitherto unemployed
Fabian Barthez was a delicious one from the Korean perspective –
one not shared by the obviously furious Gallas who booted the ball
to Dresden.
There was no doubt which set of fans and players were happier
after the game. The Koreans stayed on the pitch to salute their
wonderful fans while the French players showed more urgency in leaving
the field than they did for most of the second half – a speedy
exit matched by their fans. The Koreans stayed to sing and judging
by the sounds coming out of Leipzig
city centre in the early hours, their numbers were swelled by a
number of new Red Devils.
The French were disappointed but not overly so, in the mixed zone
their players pointed out that they only had to defeat Togo to reach
the second round while the Switzerland
defeat of the Africans by two goals mean that South Korea also have
to win in Hanover
on Friday night to be sure of progressing from Group
G.
It should be some night.
Related Links
Group
G - South Korea, Switzerland, Togo, France
Korea-Togo
match report
Switzerland team profile
Togo team profile
France team profile
Official South Korean jerseys
South Korean soccer t-shirts
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