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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

Olympic fever wanes

By Nam Hyun-woo More and more South Koreans are finding the Rio Olympic Games not as interesting as previous games.Before the Games, there were expected reasons that the Rio Games might not be popular among South Koreans — the 12-hour time difference between Seoul and Rio de Janeiro and South Korea’s “star drought” delegation. South Koreans also cited those reasons, but some said they are losing interest in the Olympics itself.Park In-seong, 43, a bank worker in Gwangmyeong, Gyeonggi Province, said the time difference was the biggest reason for him to give up watching the Games.“Most of the matches are past midnight. I can’t watch them all and be in the office on time with fresh mind and body, so I just check the results through articles on my way to the office,” he said. “As most of my colleagues are doing the same, we don’t talk about the Olympics much. When you don’t watch the matches live, you don’t have many things to talk about.”Kang Keon-tae, a 22-year-old collegian who said he is a huge sports fan, s

Aug 18, 2016
Olympic fever wanes
  • Rio 2016: Korea bags first taekwondo gold
Sports

Fans uncomfortable with nationalistic, one-sided broadcasts

By Park Jae-hyukSouth Korean broadcasters’ nationalistic, one-sided comments focusing on their own country’s athletes are apparently making TV viewers uncomfortable.Some South Korean Olympic fans are posting online complaints of TV broadcasters’ “too patriotic” comments during the Olympic Games.On Aug. 14, SBS announcer Jang Ye-won fought back her tears after Korean footballers lost 0-1 to Honduras in the quarterfinals of the 2016 Rio Olympics.She tried to continue her speech but kept stuttering, saying, “I feel sorry for the players who are going through such hard times. I apologize for my poor broadcast.”SBS posted the video clip online, where it drew a negative response from Korean internet users.Some said they could sympathize with her patriotism as a Korean, while others said she was not being professional. A student surnamed Jeon said, “She overreacted and is unqualified as an announcer.”KBS football commentator Lee Young-pyo, on the contrary, criticized the Korean players in the same game. He said, “Korean footballers

Aug 18, 2016By Park Jae-hyuk
Sports

수중 발레 국가대표 영상 화제

우크라이나 수중 발레 선수 안나 볼로시나 (Anna Voloshyna)가 자신의 인스타그램에 공개한 영상이 네티즌들 사이에서 화제가 되고 있다.영상 속 볼로시나 선수는 브라질 리우 올림픽 훈련용 수영장에서 선수 가운을 벗으며 다른 선수들과 장난을 치고 있는 모습을 보였다.그녀는 영상과 함께 “(훈련 시작 전에) 좋은 유머를 가져야 훈련도 기분 좋게 끝낼 수 있다”라는 글을 게재했다.올림픽 위원회에 따르면, 볼로시나 선수는 자유 부문 듀엣 결승전에서 94점을 기록해 아쉽게 최종 5위를 차지했고, 19일 새벽 1시 (한국 시각) 기술 부문 단체전에 참가할 예정이다.디지털뉴스부@

Aug 18, 2016
수중 발레 국가대표 영상 화제
Sports

Rio 2016: Korean golfers ignite golden dreams

Park In-bee hits her tee shot on the seventh hole during the first round of the women’s golf event at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Wednesday. / AP-YonhapPark In-bee, Kim Sei-young tied for 2ndBy Kim Jeong-kyooSouth Korean golfers lived up to the expectations of their homeland in the opening round of the Rio Olympics women’s golf tournament on Wednesday.Park In-bee and Kim Sei-young fired bogey-free five-under 66s at the par-71, 6,245-yard Olympic Golf Course. They’re tied for second place in a field of 60. One shot ahead of Park and Kim is Ariya Jutanugarn, the world No.2 from Thailand.Park, an LPGA Hall of Famer, made a birdie at the par-5 fifth and par-4 seventh on the front nine. After making the turn in a 2-under 33, she added three consecutive birdies at holes 10, 11 and 12.Park has battled a thumb injury all season while preparing for the Olympic golf tournament. She still continues to deal with the injury. She missed the cut in her tune-up for the Olympic Games at a recent tournament on the Korean LPGA. Kim Sei-young chips to the g

Aug 18, 2016
Rio 2016: Korean golfers ignite golden dreams
  • Rio 2016: S. Korean team wins bronze in women's badminton doubles
  • Rio 2016: S. Korean Lee Dae-hoon wins taekwondo bronze
Sports

Rio has four different colors

A pedestrian takes a photo of the Olympic rings while walking along the promenade on Copacabana beach during the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Aug. 12. /  AP-YonhapBy Valter Junior RIO DE JANEIRO ― No matter which city hosts the Olympics, the life of the residents of the host city feel connected to the Games and are touched by the event.And so it is with the people of Rio de Janeiro. This city with a population of 7 million has been affected by the Olympics, but each part of the city is reacting differently, which can be divided into four zones.In the port area, people are living the Olympic fever. The region, located in the center of Rio, will be one of the legacies of the Olympics after the games are finished. The region was one of the most degraded of the city. The view was ugly and dark with badly painted buildings. Now there is life and color there. The whole area was refurbished and an electric train, linking the area to the municipal airport, was installed. Now, it is possible to visit the Museum of Tomorrow, a museum built so people will

Aug 18, 2016
Rio has four different colors
Sports

Rio 2016: Bulgarian rower accused of hitting maid with broomstick

Georgi Bozhilov and colleague Kristian Vasilev compete in the men's double sculls final at the Rio Olympics on August 11. / AP-YonhapBy Choi Ha-youngRio de Janeiro’s police authority has accused Bulgarian rower Georgi Bozhilov of using violence against cleaners in the Olympic Village. According to a maid in the village, Bozhilov, 27, demanded that cleaners who were in his room leave, hitting one with a broomstick. One female cleaner was choked, police said. “A procedure has been opened to investigate injuries inflicted by an athlete of the Bulgarian delegation on several chambermaids working at the Olympic Village,” police said. Rio Games organizers are “very concerned” about the incident, Reuters said. But the Bulgarian, who returned home Wednesday, denied the claims. “Several maids were sitting in our room, it was obvious that they were not preparing to clean, and I told them to leave,” Bozhilov told Bulgarian Nova TV. He said thieves had been loitering in the village and athletes’ belongings were disappearing. The rower finished

Aug 18, 2016
Rio 2016: Bulgarian rower accused of hitting maid with broomstick
Sports

Rio 2016: Lonely Games for Russia's sole field athlete

 Russia's Darya Klishina competes in the women's long jump final at the Olympic Stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Wednesday. She finished ninth. / AP-YonhapBy Choi Ha-youngRussia’s Darya Klishina said it was hard being her country’s only field athlete at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics.“It is very hard being the only Russian, as normally we are a big team with big support and I am alone,” she said after advancing to the final of the women’s long jump, Tuesday. She went on to finish ninth in Wednesday’s final.Klishina, 25, had an appeal against a ban overturned Monday so she could compete.But it was a bumpy road to Rio for her. Because she trained in the U.S., Klishina was initially exempt from bans imposed because of a state-sponsored Russian doping program. Later, the International Amateur Athletic Federation (IAAF) overruled the decision based on “additional information.”But the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) this week overturned the ban, allowing Klishina to compete in the Games. “Last week it was really tough and a really hard

Aug 18, 2016
Rio 2016: Lonely Games for Russia's sole field athlete
Sports

Rio 2016: S. Korean taekwondo bags gold, bronze

South Korea’s Kim So-hui, right, competes against Tijana Bogdanovic of Serbia in the women’s -49kg title at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics on Wednesday. / YonhapBy Ko Dong-hwanSouth Korea’s taekwondo athletes won gold and bronze medals at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics on Wednesday.Kim So-hui defeated Tijana Bogdanovic of Serbia 7-6 for the women's -49kg title at Carioca Arena 3, winning South Korea's first taekwondo gold medal.Kim, a two-time world champion making her Olympic debut in Rio, is 10th on the World Taekwondo Federation's Olympic rankings, three spots above Bogdanovic. Kim Tae-hun won a bronze medal in men's taekwondo.South Korea’s Kim Tae-hun, right, competes against Carlos Navarro of Mexico in the bronze medal contest in the men’s -58kg match on Wednesday. / YonhapThe two-time world champion defeated Carlos Navarro of Mexico 7-5 in the bronze medal contest in the men's -58kg.Kim, No.2 on the World Taekwondo Federation’s Olympic rankings, fell into repechage after losing his first match of the day to Tawin Hanprab of Thailand. When Hanp

Aug 18, 2016
Rio 2016: S. Korean taekwondo bags gold, bronze
  • Rio 2016: S. Korea misses bronze against Germany in table tennis
Sports

Rio 2016: S. Korea misses bronze against Germany in table tennis

South Korea’s Joo Sae-hyuk, top, competes against Germany’s Timo Boll in the bronze medal match in the men’s table tennis team event at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics on Wednesday. Germany defeated South Koreans 3-1. / YonhapSouth Korea finished just shy of a medal in the men's table tennis team event at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics on Wednesday.Germany defeated South Korea 3-1 in the bronze medal contest at Riocentro-Pavilion 3, taking two singles and one doubles match. South Korea claimed one singles match.The men's team held South Korea's last hope for a medal in Rio, with all the singles players and the women's team having failed to deliver.This marks the first time South Korea has failed to win a medal in table tennis, which joined the Olympics in 1988.Jeoung Young-sik, world No. 12, beat the 24th-ranked Bastian Steger in the taut opening singles match 3-2 (12-10, 6-11, 11-6, 6-11, 13-11).Jeoung saw a 9-7 turned into a 10-9 deficit in the first game, but fought back to take it 12-10.It was Steger's turn to build an early lead in the second game, and the German stay

Aug 18, 2016
Rio 2016: S. Korea misses bronze against Germany in table tennis
  • Rio 2016: S. Korean taekwondo bags gold, bronze
Sports

Rio 2016: Love blooms at Olympics

U.K. race walker Tom Bosworth proposes to his boyfriend Harry Dineley at Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro, Wednesday. / Courtesy of Tom Bosworth’s Twitter By Park Si-soo,  Park Jae-hyukSeveral athletes have given their lives a whole new meaning during the Rio Olympics. And it has not essentially been related to a much-anticipated victory and subsequent medal, a reward for their hard work over the past four years.Here, some athletes have marked it with something special: finding their lifetime partner.So far, three couples have been born in Rio. Among them are four participating athletes ― U.K. race walker Tom Bosworth, Chinese divers Qin Kai and He Zi and Brazilian rugby player Isadora Cerullo.Bosworth proposed to his boyfriend Harry Dineley while strolling along a Rio beach on Wednesday. He celebrated his successful proposal through Twitter and it has gone viral.Bosworth posted a picture of the moment and wrote: “He said YES!!!” Dineley retweeted a picture of his finger with the ring and wrote: “OK then.”Qin Kai successfully proposed to

Aug 17, 2016
Rio 2016: Love blooms at Olympics
  • Rio 2016: What a 'Rio'mantic Olympics
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