World Cup Qualifying 2008 - Korea
v Jordan
John Duerden reports from Seoul as South Korea make hard work
of qualification
"I couldn't understand it," said South Korean coach Huh
Jung-moo last Saturday night.
He wasn't alone. Around 55,000 people in Seoul World Cup
Stadium were also scratching their heads and shouting their disapproval
after watching the national team somehow allow Jordan to come back
and draw 2-2 in a qualification match for the 2010 World Cup.
It had looked so good - the situation that is. The performance
was nothing special but early in the second half, South Korea was
leading 2-0 thanks to a goal from Manchester
United forward Park
Ji-sung that brought the house down and then a penalty from
Park Chu-young that seemed to have brought the curtain down on the
fixture with the middle-eastern team ranked 104 in the world by
FIFA.
Then it all went wrong. Substitute Hasan Abdel-Fattah scored with
Jordan's second attack of the match after 72 minutes. Then
the Korean players lost their heads and shape. Seven minutes later,
the whole Korean backline may as well have been at the anti-US beef
protests in downtown Gwanghwamun for all the good they did in allowing
Hasan to stroll through the middle and export something of his own
that sent the visitors crazy.
It was a hugely disappointing end. A win would have seen Korea
take control of the Group Three at the halfway stage. The top two
progress to the final round of qualification.
Seoul debutant's Lee Jang-soo and Lee Chung-young did enough
to keep their places though the former will be told to keep his
place at the back when you are defending a 2-1 lead with ten minutes
to go.
For the rest, there is much for coach Huh to ponder. Fortunately,
he and the players can make amends quickly. The two teams meet again
in Jordan on Saturday. A defeat in Amman would put Korean hopes
of a seventh successive World Cup appearance in danger. For so long
have the Taeguk Warriors appeared on the global stage every four
years that it is taken for granted.
With players such as Park Ji-sung, Lee
Young-pyo, Kim Do-heon and others, perhaps that is to be expected
but the last 20 minutes of the Jordan match was a wake-up call that
qualification through Asia, is getting tougher all the time.
After saying last week that Jordan was nothing to be scared of,
coach Huh seems to have changed his tune. "Jordan is strong.
There are no nations easy to play against and the away match will
be a tough one for us to handle."
It will be. Instead of arriving in Amman four points clear of
their rivals, the gap is just a point. Jordan will be even happier
after witnessing the way Korea crumbled under pressure in the final
20 minutes. King Abdullah International Stadium is expected to be
sold-out with 54,000 people hoping to see stars such as Park Ji-sung
and Ahn Jung-hwan leave empty-handed.
Three and a half years ago, South Korea crashed 2-0 in Saudi Arabia
in a match that became known as 'The Damman Shock'.
An 'Amman shock' would be much more serious.
|