SEOUL (Reuters) - After 55 years without continental football success and on the back of a dire World Cup campaign in Brazil, all the talk in South Korea has been of a "Time for Change" in the buildup to the Asian Cup in January.
The Koreans, who last won the region's showpiece tournament in 1960, arrive in Australia with a new coach, new faces and fresh legs hoping to show some of the sparkle that took them to the semi-finals of the 2002 World Cup on home soil.
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