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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
  • Sports

    S. Korea chasing knockout berth in final Group A match vs. South Africa

    3 MIN READBy Yonhap
    S. Korea chasing knockout berth in final Group A match vs. South Africa
  • Sports

    S. Korean defender ready to shut down South Africa

    2 MIN READBy Yonhap
    S. Korean defender ready to shut down South Africa
  • Sports

    Lionel Messi becomes top scorer in World Cup history with two more goals for Argentina

    4 MIN READBy AP
    Lionel Messi becomes top scorer in World Cup history with two more goals for Argentina
  • Sports

    Monterrey Koreans rally behind national team at FIFA World Cup

    2 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    Monterrey Koreans rally behind national team at FIFA World Cup
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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

Rio 2016: S. Korean Lee Dae-hoon wins taekwondo bronze

South Korea’s Lee Dae-hoon, left, competes against Jaouad Achab of Belgium in the men’s -68kg taekwondo bronze medal contest at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics on Thursday. Lee defeated Achab 11-7. / YonhapLee Dae-hoonSouth Korea's Lee Dae-hoon won a bronze medal in men's taekwondo at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics on Thursday.Lee defeated Jaouad Achab of Belgium 11-7 in the men's -68kg bronze medal match at Carioca Arena 3.Earlier in the day, Lee lost in the quarterfinals to Ahmad Abughaush of Jordan 11-8. The South Korean moved into the repechage stage when Abughaush reached the final.Lee, who won the 2012 silver in the -58kg, needed to win two matches to claim one of the two bronze medals at stake. He beat Ghofran Ahmed of Egypt 14-6 in the first contest and then Achab for his second Olympic medal.He became the first South Korean man to win taekwondo medals in back-to-back Olympics, and the first South Korean, male or female, to win taekwondo medals in two straight Olympics in different weight classes.Achab took a 3-0 lead with a strong kick near the end of the first round, b

Aug 19, 2016
Rio 2016: S. Korean Lee Dae-hoon wins taekwondo bronze
  • Rio 2016: Korean golfers ignite golden dreams
  • Rio 2016: S. Korean team wins bronze in women's badminton doubles
Sports

S. Korean Lee Dae-hoon wins taekwondo bronze

South Korea's Lee Dae-hoon won a bronze medal in men's taekwondo at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics on Thursday.Lee defeated Jaouad Achab of Belgium 11-7 in the men's -68kg bronze medal match at Carioca Arena 3.Earlier in the day, Lee lost in the quarterfinals to Ahmad Abughaush of Jordan 11-8. The South Korean moved into the repechage stage when Abughaush reached the final.Lee, who won the 2012 silver in the -58kg, needed to win two matches to claim one of the two bronze medals at stake. He beat Ghofran Ahmed of Egypt 14-6 in the first contest and then Achab for his second Olympic medal. (Yonhap)

Aug 19, 2016
Sports

S. Korean Park In-bee leads women's golf at halfway point

South Korean Park In-bee took the sole possession of the lead at halfway point in the women's golf tournament at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics on Thursday.Park In-bee fired her second straight round of five-under 66 at the par-71, 6,425-yard Olympic Golf Course. She leads Stacy Lewis of the United States by one stroke with two rounds to go.Park began the day tied for second place with fellow South Korean Kim Sei-young. Park traded two birdies with a bogey on the quiet front nine, but recorded four more birdies on the back nine, including three of the last four holes."I putted better than yesterday, and after the tee shot at the 10th, I didn't make any mistake on the back nine," she said. "I am feeling great and I hope to keep this up over the next two days."Park reached 17 greens in regulation while missing just two fairways.Chun In-gee is the next best South Korean at six-under, in a five-way tie for eighth. For the second straight round, Chun was all over the place on the score card. She picked up two eagles along with four birdies, one bogey and one double bogey for a 66.She followe

Aug 19, 2016
Sports

S. Korean coach of Japanese badminton says Rio medals 'only beginning'

After guiding Japan to its first Olympic badminton gold medal at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics, the team's South Korean-born coach, Park Joo-bong, said Thursday it's "only the beginning."Misaki Matsutomo and Ayaka Takahashi captured the women's doubles gold medal Thursday, defeating Christinna Pedersen and Kamilla Rytter Juhl of Denmark 2-1 (18-21, 21-9, 21-19).In the decisive third game, the No. 1-ranked team from Japan rallied from a 19-16 deficit to clinch the country's first Olympic badminton gold.Park, who has been coaching Japan since 2004, said while he was hoping for good results, he wasn't entirely convinced his athletes were ready to win a gold this year.Both Matsutomo, 24, and Takahashi, 26, were making their Olympic debuts."I knew there was a possibility," he said. "I wanted them to gain experience here and try to win gold four years later at the Tokyo Olympics. But they did a great job here. This gold medal came four years ahead of time." Park is best remembered among South Koreans for winning the men's doubles gold medal in 1992, and then the mixed doubles silver in

Aug 19, 2016
Sports

S. Korean title favorite loses in taekwondo quarterfinals

South Korean taekwondo title hopeful Lee Dae-hoon lost in the quarterfinals at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics on Thursday.Lee lost to Ahmad Abughaush of Jordan 11-8 in the men's -68kg competition at Carioca Arena 3. Lee won the 2012 Olympic silver in the -58kg and was going for his first Olympic gold in the new weight class.While Abughaush is only No. 40 on the World Taekwondo Federation's Olympic rankings, 38 spots below Lee, the South Korean had considered him a dark horse.Lee led 5-2 after two rounds but Abughaush rallied in the final period to upset the South Korean.Lee has won two world championships, two Asian Games gold medals and two Asian titles. An Olympic gold is the only missing piece in his decorated resume.Not all is lost on Lee, however, as he got into the repechage stage when Abughaush made the final.Lee will have to win two matches later Thursday to secure one of two bronze medals in taekwondo. (Yonhap)

Aug 19, 2016
Sports

Former table tennis champion joins IOC

Ryu Seung-min / YonhapRyu Seung-min, the newest member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) from South Korea, said Thursday he'd like to dedicate himself to developing the country's sports in his new capacity.The 2004 Olympic men's singles table tennis champion was elected to the IOC's Athletes' Commission, a result that surprised many, including Ryu himself.He finished second in the voting by the athletes participating in the Rio de Janeiro Olympics. Four seats on the 15-member commission will be vacant after Rio, and Ryu was joined by former German fencer Britta Heidemann, Hungarian swimmer Daniel Gyurta, and Russian pole vaulter Yelena Isinbayeva."I am going to do the best I can to contribute to the development of South Korean sports," Ryu said at a press conference for the South Korean journalists in Rio.Ryu, 34, is the second South Korean to be elected to the commission, after former Olympic taekwondo gold medalist Moon Dae-sung.Moon is one of four outgoing members whose eight-year terms will end this month. Moon was suspended last month over plagiarism in his doctoral d

Aug 19, 2016
Former table tennis champion joins IOC
Sports

Rio 2016: S. Korean team wins bronze in women's badminton doubles

South Korea’s Shin Seung-chan, left, and Jung Kyung-eun competes against China’s Tan Yuanting and Yu Yang in the women’s badminton doubles bronze medal match at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics on Thursday. South Koreans won 2-0. / YonhapThe South Korean women's badminton doubles team of Jung Kyung-eun and Shin Seung-chan captured a bronze medal at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics on Thursday.Jung and Shin defeated Tan Yuanting and Yu Yang beat 2-0 (21-8, 21-17). This was South Korea's first badminton medal in Rio and will also be the only one this Olympics.Jung and Shin were the only team to even take a crack at a medal. Four other doubles pairs -- two in men's, one in women's and one in mixed doubles -- lost in the quarterfinals. Two singles players, Sung Ji-hyun for women and Son Wan-ho for men, only reached as far as the quarters.South Korea has never been shut out of badminton medals since the sport joined the Olympics in 1992.The South Koreans, ranked No. 5, lost their only previous meeting against the No. 2-ranked Chinese team. But this time Jung and Shin dominated fro

Aug 19, 2016
Rio 2016: S. Korean team wins bronze in women's badminton doubles
  • Rio 2016: Korean golfers ignite golden dreams
  • Rio 2016: S. Korean Lee Dae-hoon wins taekwondo bronze
Sports

Son Yeon-jae in Rio

South Korean rhythmic gymnast Son Yeon-jae is seen training at the Rio de Janeiro Athletes’ Park, Wednesday. Son will compete in the women’s individual all-around, Friday. / Yonhap

Aug 18, 2016
Sports

Rio 2016: Korea bags first taekwondo gold

South Korea’s Kim So-hui, left, lands a kick on Serbia’s Tijana Bogdanovic in the women’s 49 kg taekwondo gold medal bout at the 2016 Summer Olympics at Carioca Arena 3 in Rio, Wednesday. Kim clinched the gold after defeating Bogdanovic 7-6. / YonhapKim So-hui beats Serbia’s Bogdanovic 7-6By Baek Byung-yeulKim So-hui clinched South Korea’s first taekwondo gold on day 12 of the Rio de Janeiro Olympics, ending the nation’s medal drought that lasted for four straight days.With taekwondo’s two lightest weight classes being contested Wednesday, Kim won gold in the women’s 49 kg category while Kim Tae-hun won bronze in the men’s 58 kg category.During her first Olympic bout at Carioca Arena 3 in Rio’s Barra Olympic Park, the 22-year-old Kim beat Serbia’s Tijana Bogdanovic 7-6.The gold medal bout turned out to be tougher than expected for Kim as the 18-year-old Serbian advanced to the final after defeating defending champ Wu Jingyu of China 17-7 in the quarterfinals.Facing Bogdanovic, Kim dominated at the beginning, winning th

Aug 18, 2016
  • Olympic fever wanes
Sports

Rio 2016: Two faces of Olympians' social media

South Korean netizens wrote insults in Korean on Honduran footballer Alberth Elis’ Twitter after South Korea lost to Honduras in the quarterfinals on Aug 14. / Courtesy of Alberth Elis' Twitter By Park Jae-hyukAthletes participating in the Olympics are increasingly sharing their experiences with fans through social media.They have posted the dramatic moments of victory or embarrassing incidents in real time and fans have been checking the athletes’ updated SNS posts.South Korean golfer Chun In-gee, right, hugs her golf bag with caddie David Jones, Monday. / Courtesy of Chun In-gee's InstagramOn Monday, South Korean golfer Chun In-gee captured being reunited with her golf bag, which arrived late in Rio due to an airline mistake. She posted the photo on Instagram, saying: “Thank Goodness … I got my golf bag back just now! Let's move on!”On the same day, Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt celebrated on Twitter after he clinched the gold medal in the men’s 100-meter with 9.81 seconds. He wrote: “Jamaica Stand Up!!! This for you my people.&rd

Aug 18, 2016By Park Jae-hyuk
Rio 2016: Two faces of Olympians' social media
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