Korean K.League Football - Park Ji-sung
& Park Chu-young
John Duerden reports on the dynamic duo of Korean football
South Korean has its own ‘dynamic duo' – the Two Parks-
Ji-sung and Chu-young– the hottest properties in Asian soccer.
The older of the two, Ji-sung, has just joined Manchester
United in a $7.4 million deal; one that thrusts the shy Suwon
native stumbling onto one of the brightest stages on the planet.
Manchester United is the biggest and richest sports franchise
in the world, have fans from Auckland to Argentina, have lifted
the English title eight times in the past thirteen years and have
young players like Wayne Rooney and Cristiano Ronaldo and will be
challenging for titles at home and abroad for years to come.
The 24-year-old will need to use all of his, not inconsiderable,
experience in England. He took the unusual route of moving to Japan
without ever appearing in the Korean league. His two years at Kyoto
Purple Sanga in the J-League were
successful ones but they weren't the reason why the midfielder earned
a move to Dutch giants PSV Eindhoven.
Ji-sung's exploits in South Korea's run to the semi-finals in
the 2002 World Cup were the clincher to his European move as was
his relationship with then Korean boss Guus Hiddink. When Park scored
an exquisite goal against Portugal in Incheon, he ran straight to
the Dutchman and jumped into his arms.
Hiddink has since been reluctant to let go and when he took over
the reins at Eindhoven he wasted no time in persuading Park to join
him and despite some initial settling-in problems, the Korean established
himself as an integral part of the midfield in southern Holland,
leading the team to the semi-finals of the UEFA Champions League.
Such performances inevitably attracted the attention of bigger
fish and they don't come any bigger than Manchester United. It's
difficult for any player to turn down the "Red Devils" and Park
will soon become the first South Korean to play in the Premier League.
Equally inevitable were suggestions in the English and European
media that United bought Park to ‘crack' the Asian market
– to help boost the focus of the club's smooth merchandising
machine in the east.
The biggest service the star, for a star he now is, can provide
to Asian soccer during his time at United is to prove that European
clubs can actually sign Far Eastern players for their talent and
skill and not for the dubious perceived benefits of selling shirts
in the Orient.
It won't be easy, as he has to break into the first eleven in
England and stay there but playing with stars like Rooney and Ronaldo
can only help the Asian develop.
"What is important for me is whether I can play in games or not,''
Park, who is planning to study English, said in a press conference.
"I don't think I will become a big star like David Beckham right
now," joked the Korean about the former Manchester player. "Maybe
I can if I was that handsome, but I am always trying to be a better
player, so I don't think it is impossible to become a player like
Beckham.''
Such humor will serve him well as will his typical Korean determination
to succeed. English fans prize effort, heart and willingness to
give everything for the team above everything, qualities that Park
has in abundance as well as no little skill.
Park Chu-young
If the elder Park is Batman then Chu-young is certainly the boy
wonder and plans to follow the trail blazed by the United man, repeatedly
stating his desire to play in England. With the meteoric rise of
the player, who turned 20 on July 10, few would bet against the
sensation doing just that.
To anyone living in north-east Asia, it is scarcely believable
that the Daegu native was unknown just a year ago. The striker's
six goals during last November's Asian Youth Championship, won the
title for his team and the prize of MVP for himself.
The greater award of the AFC's Young Asian Player of 2004 title
was received in January 2005 as was attention from a host of K-League
clubs with FC Seoul eventually capturing the services of the emerging
celebrity.
Encouragingly for Park and for South Korea, he seems to be able
to make the step up to the next level with breathtaking effortlessness.
He finished the pre-season Hauzen Cup
competition as joint top scorer and then went one better by becoming
the outright leading marksman in the first stage of the K-League,
despite missing five games due to international duty. His mere presence
tempts the sometimes reluctant Korean public to pour into stadiums
all over the republic.
If observers didn't believe the hype, they had to reconsider in
June. After only three appearances in the K-League, national coach
Jo Bonfrere bowed to media pressure and included the deeply- religious
goalgetter in the starting line-ups for the vital World
Cup Qualifiers in Uzbekistan and Kuwait.
A last minute equalizer in Tashkent kept his country on the road
to Germany 2006 and five
days later, the striker scored the first goal in a sweltering Kuwait
City and earned the penalty for the second to secure the win that
guaranteed South Korea a place in a seventh World Cup.
Rarely has a rise been so dramatic but the ambitious and single-minded
20-year-old doesn't plan to stop anytime in the near future as his
avowed intent is to move to England as soon as possible.
South Korea just may have a pair of global stars on its hands.
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