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KOR 5(0), SPA 3(0): Korea Marches on
AP via FoxSports ^ | 06/22/02 | John Pye

Posted on 06/23/2002 12:13:39 AM PDT by TigerLikesRooster









Associated Press
South Korea kept its improbable World Cup run alive Saturday, upsetting Spain 5-3 in a penalty-kick shootout after a 0-0 tie to become the first Asian nation ever to reach the semifinals.

Hong Myung Bo scored the game-winner after goalkeeper Lee Woon-jae saved a penalty by Joaquin Sanchez.


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South Korea, which hadn't won a game at five previous trips to the World Cup, will play Germany in the semifinals on Tuesday in Seoul. The three-time champion Germans beat the United States 1-0 on Friday.

South Korean coach Guus Hiddink said his team's unprecedented achievement was "so outrageous, it's almost without limits." The victory followed a 2-1, come-from-behind upset of Italy in overtime in the second round.

"I cannot describe how I am feeling. I am so happy for the boys. I think now it is a complete dream," Hiddink said. "I think more dreams have come true now."

It was a bitter loss for Spain, which was in its 11th World Cup. The team had several excellent scoring opportunities late in the game, hitting the post on one shot and having a goal disallowed on a questionable call by the linesman, who ruled the ball had crossed the end line.

Spain coach Jose Camacho became the latest critic of the tournament's referees. Italy also had complained.

"We expected the officiating to be better. This was a quarterfinal match after all," Camacho said.

Spain had been considered one of the tournament favorites after winning its first four games. But co-host South Korea, one of the biggest surprises of a World Cup full of upsets, had other ideas, playing solid defense and scoring on all five of its penalty kicks.

"Is it true that we are advancing to the semifinals? It's unbelievable," defender Choi Jin-Cheul said.

Besides Hong, the penalty-kick goals were scored by Hwang Sun-hong, Park Ji-sung, Seol Ki-hyeon and Ahn Jung-hwan. For Spain, Fernando Hierro, Ruben Baraja and Xavi Hernandez scored. The team did not take its last kick.

When Sanchez approached the ball to take his penalty shot, he hesitated for a moment, then tried to place it in the right side of the goal. Lee guessed correctly, diving to his left to punch out the ball.

"I was very confident and expected I could save one or two penalty kicks," Lee said. "I missed the first three penalty shots, so I thought to myself, 'Do not move, rather wait for the ball.' Finally, Joaquin kicked the ball almost straight to me."

Moments after Lee's save, Hong, the South Korean captain, sealed the victory with his right-footed shot past goalkeeper Iker Casillas and into the right corner of the net. The 42,000 red-clad fans erupted in joy for the home team, screaming, singing and jumping up and down.

The players took a victory lap around the field, holding flags over their heads. Hiddink and his staff linked arms near the dugout.

Then, as the whole team danced in a long line, Hiddink carried two game balls and, giving the thumbs-up sign, walked slowly over to one end of the field and booted them into the crowd.

For a while, it looked as if the few Spanish supporters would be the ones celebrating.

In the 10th minute of overtime, Fernando Morientes almost scored the game-winner when his right-footed drive sailed past Lee and hit the left post.

Morientes, starting as the lone striker for Spain in the absence of injured teammate Raul Gonzalez, had scored three goals in four previous games but couldn't get the one his country desperately needed.

"It was tough for us because of our injuries. We're out, but we worked hard, they were just a little bit luckier than we were," Camacho said.

Lee Chun-soo had two shots in extra time and set up a chance for Hwang in the 110th minute, but the veteran striker missed his timing and bounced a weak shot to Casillas.

The Spaniards had goals disallowed in each half of regulation time on offside calls and a third in overtime. Morientes looked as if he had scored from close-range off a pass from Sanchez, but Sanchez was ruled to have dribbled out along the end line. Replays showed the ball never fully crossed the line.

When Hiddink took over the South Korean team 18 months ago, it was struggling. Now it is one victory from the World Cup final.

Hiddink guided his native Netherlands to the semifinals four years ago in France and he is now the only coach to take two nations to the semis.

"First we would like to have a little glass of champagne now and prepare for the next game. What comes tomorrow is tomorrow," he said.

"I am so proud of those guys. These fans are fantastic, without any violence, they are so fantastic."

After an uncharacteristically slow start, the buzzing South Korean offense moved into full swing, sparking a booming chorus of "Dae Han Min Guk" - "Republic of Korea" - from the crowd every time the home team had possession.

Park Ji-Sung had South Korea's first real shot on goal in the 67th minute, lashing a powerful right-footed shot that Casillas deflected around his right post with a diving punch.

Spain then started to retake control. Hierro's freekick in the 83rd minute was punched clear by Lee Woon-jae and Ruben Bajara popped a header onto the roof of the net a minute later.

Hiddink went on the all-out attack by substituting defender Kim Tae-young for Hwang, who ended up scoring the first penalty-kick goal.

South Korean President Kim Dae-jung was in the crowd. During the national anthem, South Koreans raised a banner at one end thanking the Netherlands for Hiddink.

White placards held over the sea of red shirts spelled "Pride of Asia." South Korea had been only the second Asian team to make the last eight at a World Cup, repeating the performance of North Korea in 1966.

In two previous head-to-heads in the World Cup finals, Spain won 3-1 at Udine, Italy, in 1990, and the Koreans forced a 2-2 draw in Dallas four years later.



TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: finalfour; korea; soccer; spain; worldcup
Korean Team had not recovered from fatigue resulted from overtime win against Italy. They did not dominated the midfield as they did well in previous games. Spanish offense exploited this and was able to set up good scoring opportunities. But they failed to score a goal. Later in the game, Korea and Spain had evenly matched game. Korea aced penalty shots. So they won.

I am wondering if this second overtime victory could made their fatigue worse. That is the biggest dampening factor coming into the match against Germany in the semifinal in Seoul on June 25, incidentally the day Korean War broke out 52 years ago. I hope that Korean team have a lot of sleep and take it esay on themselves rather than practising hard. They already know how to win. But their bodies should be fresh and ready.

Finally, I watched the first 20 minutes of Senegal-Turkey match. When the Turkish National Anthem was played, all Turkish players were singing with serious looks on their faces and one middle aged Turkish man in the Turkish cheering section was at full attention and singing the song like a military cadet. Obviously, in Turkey, the singing of National Anthem is a serious business:).

1 posted on 06/23/2002 12:13:39 AM PDT by TigerLikesRooster
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To: TigerLikesRooster
But they failed to score a goal.

Actually, Spain scored 2 goals, both disallowed. The replay camera showed that these were bad refereeing descisions, particularly in the case of the second goal, which definitely was not out of play.

You were lucky, but well done anyway!

2 posted on 06/23/2002 8:48:21 AM PDT by Da_Shrimp
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To: TigerLikesRooster
My husband (currently stationed in Korea) tells me if they win today (though he might have been referring to yesterday's win against Spain) Tuesday will be a national holiday. Whoever told him this wasn't joking, either. They take their futbol (sic) seriously.
3 posted on 06/23/2002 10:02:49 AM PDT by Spyder
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To: Spyder
South Korea will win it all. The referees will make sure they do.
4 posted on 06/23/2002 12:25:08 PM PDT by dfwgator
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To: dfwgator
There is no collusion between referees and Korean team.
Controversy occurred in other games including Germany (Handling) and Spain(foul inside penalty area). Referees
are rather stringent in officiating throughout this tournament. The best example is the ejection of Ronaldinho
in the game against England. If England had won, Brazil
would have erupted in the same protest as in Italy and
Spain. The reason people howl about officiating in the
game involving Korea is that Korea is not expected to
win. That creates the automatic suspicion which is
not warranted.
5 posted on 06/24/2002 12:39:17 AM PDT by TigerLikesRooster
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To: Da_Shrimp
Re #2

The "second goal" occurred when Korean players stopped playing after the line referee blew the whistle. If there was no whistle, the goal would not have happened.

It is a mistake to view this shot as being happened while the game is alive. The game was stopped a second or two when the whistle blew.

But Spain made other good attempts which missed the goal by a few inchies or hitting a goal post. The game could have gone either way, I admit.

6 posted on 06/24/2002 12:43:47 AM PDT by TigerLikesRooster
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