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Korea team coach Hong Myung-bo comforts winger Son Heung-min after Korea lost 0-1 to Belgium in its third and final Group H match at Itaquerao Stadium in Sao Paulo, Friday. With two losses and one draw, Korea failed to reach the round of 16. / Yonhap |
By Kim Tae-jong
Winger Son Heung-min cried uncontrollably on the pitch after Korea lost 0-1 to Belgium in Sao Paulo, Friday (KST), confirming the team's early exit from the World Cup.
"I am so sorry to all my teammates, coaches and everyone who helped us, and also to fans back home who watched our games on television in the very early morning," the 21-year-old said sobbing after the game. "It feels so bad that we failed to return their love with a victory."
Coach Hong Myung-bo and his teammates embraced the youngest player of the squad. The Bayer Leverkusen player was, by all indications, sure that he and his colleagues could and should have done better.
After all, virtually the entire nation stood behind Son and the Taeguk Warriors, being united in their wish to see them go against long odds and beat the Belgians and join the final 16.
The disappointment at the result was as intense as the anxiety for the victory was strong.
Before Korea's World Cup campaign began, some football fans joked with a sense of gravity that Hong and Co. should swim back home if they lost. They also carried the burden of bringing the Sewol tragedy-stricken nation out of a severe case of depression.
But now that no "miracle" has taken place against Belgium and the hope of advancing to the knockout stage has gone, the cruelty of that joke could be felt even more acutely.
After all, those players are from among us and their failure is ours as well.
If football is more than a sport, we should treat it accordingly.
The first in order is not to criticize the team and Hong for their loss but thank all the players and coaching staff for their efforts and devotion. Let's give a warm round of applause for them doing their best.
Of course, time to go over our performance and find what went wrong will come later because it is part of the indispensable process to improve for the next time.
To build a better team, we need to start with the positives from our failed Brazil campaign.
One such positive is Son, but other young players had a chance to experience the world's top soccer and test their mettle.
As a matter of fact, the Korean team was the youngest-ever World Cup squad with an average age of just over 26, with only five with World Cup experience.
If those young players learn from the Brazil experience and grow, our team may peak in time for the 2018 World Cup in Russia and repeat or exceed our 2002 World Cup result when Korea advanced to the semi-finals.
While our young players mature, the rest of us also have our roles to play.
For fans, it is their duty to develop an interest in the K-League, which attracts only small crowds of spectators and is ignored by television broadcasters. Clubs also should strategize to make it a real breeding ground for good and promising players, perhaps starting to get selective in hiring foreign players.
Although the team has to leave Brazil, fans are still able to enjoy football as the Korean league will begin on July 5.
Without efforts to nurture our own football league, it will be difficult to upgrade our players' skills and abilities. Key players in the league need more of a chance to have experiences at the highest levels of football, such as those found in leagues in Europe.
Simply, just months of training ahead of the World Cup will never guarantee a successful result. It is the same as relying on mere luck.
Although we proudly believe that Korea is the strongest in Asia, the country has not won the Asian Cup since 1960. Maybe, we first need to earn the Asian champion title first.
Then and only then, we may hope to see Son crying in joy over victories on the pitch come 2018.