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    World Cup work still remains for Korea

    On Thursday morning in Korea, millions will tune in to see what transpires in the Mexican city of Monterey as Korea faces South Africa. A win or a draw will ensure second place in Group A, but defeat would mean a third-place finish — though that could still mean a place in the Round of 32 — or fourth, which would mean elimination and humiliation. Which version of the Taeguk Warriors will turn up? Will it be the team that looked full of energy, speed and imagination as they beat the Czech Republic 2-1? Or will it be the passive pack that lost 1-0 to Mexico? If they had won or tied the game, then the final group game could have been about resting a few players and getting ready for the Round of 32. Instead, there is work still to do. South Africa, ranked 38 places below Korea at 61st in the world, have yet to impress. Their opening games were a 2-0 defeat against Mexico and a 1-1 draw with the Czechs. Bafana Bafana’s Belgian boss Hugo Broos is expecting a tough test. "I'm very sorry to say this, but they are like Duracells: You plug them in, and they start running, and they run for

    2 MIN READBy John Duerden
    World Cup work still remains for Korea
  • Companies

    JTBC says 'no disruption' in World Cup broadcast despite financial issues

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    JTBC says 'no disruption' in World Cup broadcast despite financial issues
  • Sports

    South Africa coach says team will exploit Korea's weaknesses in crucial World Cup match

    3 MIN READBy Yonhap
    South Africa coach says team will exploit Korea's weaknesses in crucial World Cup match
  • Sports

    Defender Kim Min-jae wary of skilled, speedy South African players ahead of World Cup match

    2 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Defender Kim Min-jae wary of skilled, speedy South African players ahead of World Cup match
  • Sports

    Korea coach says team won't settle for draw in final group World Cup match

    2 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Korea coach says team won't settle for draw in final group World Cup match
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CEO & Publisher: Oh Young-jinDigital News Email: webmaster@koreatimes.co.krTel: 02-724-2114Online newspaper registration No: 서울,아52844Date of registration: 2020.02.05Masthead: The Korea TimesCopyright © koreatimes.co.kr. All rights reserved.

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Sports

SK, Samsung, ROX in e-sports world championship semis

The SK Telecom T1 team plays “League of Legends” during the online game’s World Championship group stage event against Cloud9 of the United States at the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco,Oct. 9.  / Courtesy of Riot GamesBy Baek Byung-yeulThree Korean e-sports clubs ― SK Telecom T1, Samsung Galaxy and ROX Tigers ― reached the semifinals of online game “League of Legends” World Championship, as the annual event wrapped up a series of quarterfinal matchups in Chicago, Sunday (local time).“League of Legends” is a five-on-five online game. Whoever destroys the other side’s base (known as Nexus) wins. The product of U.S.-based Riot Games has held an annual championship event since 2011 and Korea-based clubs have won the event for three consecutive years since 2013.The “League of Legends” tournament is also one of the most popular competitive gaming events in the world. Some 334 million watched last year’s tournament held in European cities for five weeks and about 36 million tuned in for the final

Oct 17, 2016
SK, Samsung, ROX in e-sports world championship semis
Sports

Ciganda clinches first LPGA win at KEB Hana Bank Championship

Carlota Ciganda of Spain poses with her trophy after winning the LPGA KEB HanaBank Championship at Sky72 Golf Club in Incheon, South Korea, Sunday. / AP-YonhapBy Kim Jeong-kyooCarlota Ciganda, 26, shouted with her arms wide after her championship birdie putt on the first sudden death playoff hole. After an enthralling final-round tussle with America’s Alison Lee, the Spanish golfer captured the LPGA KEB Hana Bank Championship trophy on Sunday. Ciganda birdied the first playoff hole while Lee made par.Ciganda started out pleasantly with a birdie on the first hole, adding four more birdies in the front nine. She birdied the first hole of the back nine, but double-bogeyed the par-4 14th hole. After that setback, she hit her next tee shot into the fairway bunker. But she safely hit the green in regulation, making par with an easy tap-in putt.She hit an erratic tee shot again into the deep rough, failing to reach the green with her next shot. She reached the green with her third shot, but far from the pin. On the 16th hole, she had her first bogey with a two-putt, leaving Lee one sh

Oct 16, 2016
Ciganda clinches first LPGA win at KEB Hana Bank Championship
Sports

LG Twins defeat Nexen Heroes 4-1 to take 2-1 lead in 1st round playoffs

Yoo Kang-nam of the LG Twins, right, high-fives base coach Yoo Ji-hyeon after hitting a two-run homer during his team’s first-round playoff game of the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) at Jamsil Baseball Stadium in southeastern Seoul, Sunday. The Twins won 4-1 to take a 2-1 series lead. / YonhapBy Baek Byung-yeulLG Twins defeated Nexen Heroes 4-1 to take a 2-1 lead in the first-round playoff series of the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) on a rainy Sunday afternoon.With the win, the Twins only need to win one more game to face the NC Dinos in the second round of playoffs. The Twins started the best-of-five series with a 7-0 win Thursday but gave the second game to the Heroes after losing 5-1 on Friday. The two Seoul-based teams will have their fourth match on Monday.Though it was expected to rain at Jamsil Baseball Stadium in southeastern Seoul, the third game between the two teams hosted capacity crowds with a total of 25,000 tickets sold.It was the Twins who got ahead in the game. At the bottom of the fourth inning with a runner on second base and two outs, Twins catcher Yo

Oct 16, 2016
LG Twins defeat Nexen Heroes 4-1 to take 2-1 lead in 1st round playoffs
Sports

Seoul to host Jeonbuk in Asian Champions League semifinal

By John DuerdenIt has not been a great few days for Korean football. The national team lost to Iran 1-0 on Tuesday, a first defeat in the qualifications for the 2018 World Cup. It was not just the fact that the Taeguk Warriors lost ― and it was a bigger loss than the scoreline suggests ― but what happened afterwards.Coach Uli Stielike said a few things after the game, lamenting the lack of quality strikers, for one. Son Heung-min, one of this season’s best performers in the English Premier League ― and the official EPL Player of the Month for September ― pointed out that there were plenty of good players in Korea. Captain Ki Sung-yueng was diplomatic about the coach’s comments, but didn’t seem especially pleased.Stielike later said that there had been a misunderstanding about his comments. The explanation did not sound especially convincing but regardless, the damage had been done. The reaction back in Korea was fierce with the German coming in for criticism for blaming the players for the defeat.There should be an opportunity to produce a better

Oct 16, 2016
Seoul to host Jeonbuk in Asian Champions League semifinal
Sports

Lang sits atop on day 2 of KEB Hana Bank Championship

Brittany Lang of the United States watches her shot on the third hole during the second round of the LPGA KEB Hana Bank Championship golf tournament at Sky72 Golf Club in Incheon, Friday. / AP-YonhapBy Kim Jeong-kyooBrittany Lang of the United States had a bogey-free 7-under-par 65 to sit atop the leaderboard on day two of LPGA KEB Hana Bank Championship, Friday. Her overall two-day score amounts to a 10-under-par 134.Alison Lee fired a 2-under-par 70, failing to hold off her compatriot Lang. She ended the second day with a 2-under-par 70.Lee struggled in the back nine. She first bogeyed the par-4 10th. She had difficulty making solid putting strokes. She appeared too cautious. Outwardly, she lost her confidence in her ability to make putts.Analyzing Lee’s lovely swing, she makes a typical one-plane golf swing. She addresses the ball with her rear end stuck out. Her spine tilted forward toward the ball and club shaft form a nearly 90-degree angle. She does not raise her hands high above her right shoulder on the backswing. At the top, her left arm rests in line with her shoulde

Oct 14, 2016
Lang sits atop on day 2 of KEB Hana Bank Championship
Sports

Boxer's death rekindles safety debate

High school boxer Kim Jung-hee’s funeral took place in Hwaseong City, Gyeonggi Province, on Monday. / YonhapBy Kang Hyun-kyungHigh school boxer Kim Jung-hee, 16, died on Oct. 9, about a month after he was hospitalized for a cerebral hemorrhage following the semifinal match of the 48th National Boxing Championship in the land-locked mid-western county of Cheongyang.His death stirred a debate about the safety and protection guidelines for boxers.On Sept. 7, the light welterweight boxer collapsed while resting after he lost the match by decision of judges. He was taken to Dankook University Hospital in the nearby city of Cheonan via helicopter and sent to the intensive care unit there. After an hour and 40 minutes of surgery, he was pronounced brain dead. He died about a month later.His funeral took place in Hwaseong City, Gyeonggi Province, on Monday.Choi Hee-bok, the managing director of the Boxing Association of Korea (BAK) consisting of amateur boxers, said Kim’s death “shocked” his fellow boxers.“Many boxers around his age know him very well because th

Oct 14, 2016
Boxer's death rekindles safety debate
Sports

Alison Lee leads LPGA KEB Hana Bank Championship after 1st round

By Kim Jeong-kyooAlison Lee fired a seven-under-par 65 with a sole bogey at the par-4 11th to head the scoreboard after the first round of the LPGA KEB Hana Bank Championship, Thursday.The event is being played on the par-72, 6,364-yard Sky 72 Golf Club Ocean Course near Incheon International Airport. The competition is the sole LPGA Tour event taking place in Korea every year.Lee, with a simple swing, had a good rhythm and tempo, plus balance. Impressively, she carried out a graceful chip shot at the final hole to make the putt for a birdie. Lee is the sole first round leader by three strokes.Despite her little lapse of concentration in the middle of the game, Lee was an all-round player. She was great in her swings, short games and putts. She birdied her final two holes.Last January, Golf.com introduced her under the title of “Most Beautiful Women in Golf 2016.” She is an ethnic Korean from America.Lee’s second shot at the par-4 9th hole was the best shot of the day. Korea’s Kim In-kyung fired a four-under-par 68, with her compatriot Cho Jeong-min, Amer

Oct 13, 2016
Sports

Retiring golf legend Pak Se-ri feted in ceremony at final tournament

Pak Se-ri wipes away tears as her fellow players bid her farewell after the first round of the LPGA KEB Hana Bank Championship, Thursday. Retiring Pak played her final tournament at the Sky 72 Golf &Resort Ocean Course in Incheon. / YonhapRetiring South Korean golf legend Pak Se-ri was feted in a ceremony held at her final tournament here on Thursday, with her fellow players bidding her a teary farewell.Pak, 39, has already played her final U.S. event at the U.S. Women's Open in California in July, but decided to make one last appearance at the LPGA KEB Hana Bank Championship, the only LPGA event held in her native country each year.She played the first round in the final pairing with defending champion Lexi Thompson and Feng Shanshan of China. Pak wiped away tears as she finished a round at eight-over 80, the worst score in the field with a birdie and nine bogeys, and she promptly withdrew from the event.Despite Pak's adventurous round, her pairing enjoyed a sizable following. At the start of the day, fans were given pink commemorative towels with the inscription, "Thank You Ser

Oct 13, 2016
Retiring golf legend Pak Se-ri feted in ceremony at final tournament
Sports

'Put equal emphasis on Paralympics'

Kim Sung-il, president of the Korea Paralympic Committee (KPC)  / Korea Times photoKPC head proposes bias-free 2018 Winter OlympicsBy Kang Hyun-kyungRetired General Kim Sung-il, president of the Korea Paralympic Committee (KPC), feels bad whenever he visits the northeastern city of Gangneung on business trips to Gangwon Province.There is a huge billboard near the Yeongdong Expressway facing the coastal city. It reads, “2018 PyeongChang Winter Olympics,” without mentioning the Paralympics that will start on March 9, 2018, for 10 days, once the Winter Olympic Games are completed on Feb. 25.   “I was wondering why the billboard has no information about the Paralympics,” he said during a recent interview with The Korea Times. “There’s enough space to add information that PyeongChang Paralympic Games are also to be held.”Gangneung is the city where the PyeongChang Olympic and Paralympic Games are to be held in 2018, along with PyeongChang and Jeongseon counties.Following his first discovery of the signboard, Kim encouraged

Oct 13, 2016
'Put equal emphasis on Paralympics'
Sports

Quiet drop at the top delivers on impact

 At the top of his swing, the palm of Ernie Els’ right hand faces the sky, anchoring the club in the so-called “tray” position. This is a very solid, no-nonsense position to begin his return swing to the ball. Because most of the work has been done in the backswing, the downswing appears to be quiet and fluid.As Els begins his downswing, three key moves occur simultaneously: (1) his left shoulder separates from his chin; (2) his hands separate from his right shoulder and (3) his left knee begins its drive to the target. This ensures that his hands have dropped straight down, with no tendency to throw the club over the top.” By T.J. Tomasi They call Ernie Els “The Big Easy,” but there is nothing “easy” when it comes to his application of force on the ball.Many amateurs leak energy as they start their downswing, which leaves little left for impact. In the photos below, you can see that Els begins the downswing with a quiet drop of the hands, conserving energy for a fluid release into

Oct 12, 2016
Quiet drop at the top delivers on impact
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