Pim Verbeek Resigns After Asian Cup
- Here We Go Again
John Duerden reports from Seoul
Fans of the South Korean national team and the Korean Football
Association (KFA) have been here before.
Korea is now looking for a sixth post-Hiddink coach. Pim Verbeek's
resignation at the end of the Asian
Cup means that five coaches have now come and gone in the Land
of the Morning Calm since the 2002 World Cup.
After three spells with the Korea national team, the first two
as the assistant at the 2002 and 2006 World Cups, Verbeek
is a familiar figure in modern Korean soccer and has been a good
servant. Taking the reins last summer, the tall 51-year-old had
a long-term vision for Korean soccer, up to and beyond the 2010 World Cup.
In the global game however, things rarely go according to plan.
The Asian Cup was one of those things. Verbeek led the team to
third place in a continental campaign that ended in a bizarre fashion
as his team defeated Japan in a penalty shootout to finish third.
Banished to the sidelines by an overzealous referee for protesting
the dubious sending off of Kang Min-soo, Verbeek was forced to sit
among the spectators as his team battled until the end.
The win means that Korea will now not have to qualify for the
2011 Asian Cup in Qatar,
and if that is a positive legacy then there are one or two others.
Following the retirement of the much-heralded back-line of 2002,
the team has gone through defenders in an attempt to find a settled
and competent back four.
At the end of the trip to Southeast Asia, however, it looks like
an answer has finally been found. Oh Beom-seok, Kang Minsoo and
Kim Jin-kyu and Chiwoo went seven hours without conceding a goal
and, even better, the quartet are all under 24.
The experienced stars were absent, however. After the withdrawal
of Park Ji Sung, Lee
Young-pyo, Seol
Ki-hyeon and Kim Nam-il through injury, it was going to be tough
for Korea to end its 47-year-long continental drought.
The team stayed positive and an Asian Football Confederation official
remarked that it was the first time he could remember a Korean team
taking the competition with the utmost seriousness.
Unfortunately, scoring three goals in six games is going to win
neither points nor plaudits.Verbeek was unable to solve the team's
problems. As the defense tightened, fewer chances were created and
the strikers rarely looked like they could score. Unrest in the
Korean media grew - not to severe levels - but enough to question
the leadership off the field and the lack of diversity in attack
on it.
The knockout stage was a slog with all three games lasting two
hours with no goals scored or conceded. Those six hours were more
than long enough to demonstrate the fighting spirit and fitness
of a team, but also showed little in the way of creativity and initiative.
It should be mentioned that such qualities are in short supply
in a low-scoring K-League with overseas stars responsible for most
of what does exist. Goals are not just a national team problem,
they are a commodity not abundant domestically and only two out
of the top 10 marksmen so far this season hold Korean passports.
That is another issue and not one that Verbeek will have to deal
with. Soon, it will be the responsibility of someone else.
The early front-runner is Jorvan Vieira. The Brazilian led Iraq
to the Asian Cup title. Before he did so, he confirmed that not
only will he step down from that post but that he has been contacted
by the Korean Football Association. The fact that he did so before
Verbeek announced his departure was not appreciated in Seoul and
does not reflect well on Vieira.
There is no need for the KFA to rush as little will happen for
the next few months on the national team level and it is important
to find the right person.
There is always the inevitable talk of big-name coaches, but with
the World Cup three years away, tempting, as well as paying, such
people is difficult. This is not a bad thing as perhaps it is time
to avoid the stop-start effect that is in danger of becoming the
norm.
It is all very well appointing famous coaches who become more
attracted to Korea the closer a World Cup becomes, but as soon as
the competition ends, they take their talents elsewhere and Korea
finds itself almost back at square one.
For now however, it's time for a new start - again.
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