Rise with the Son


Reduced to tears: South Korea’s Son Heung-min cries at the end of the match against Portugal. — AFP

SOUTH Korea talisman Son Heung-min is still without a goal in Qatar but he ran himself into the ground against Portugal to ensure his team reached the last 16 in dramatic fashion.

The Asian side simply refused to accept that their World Cup dream was over and it was captain Heung-min who epitomised the Koreans’ relentless energy with a selfless display.

A day after Japan set the tone by stunning Spain 2-1 in their final game to reach the knockout phase on a night of mind-boggling drama, Heung-min made sure South Korea’s fans could kick-start their own party in the Education City Stadium.

The 30-year-old Tottenham forward, who has scored a record 35 goals for his country and is the darling of their fans, who wear his shirt with such pride, has played the whole tournament wearing a black mask to protect a cheek fracture.

With the match locked at 1-1 and the clock ticking into the first minute of stoppage time, it seemed Heung-min’s and South Korea’s World Cup was about to end in heartbreak with the win they needed to advance about to elude them.

But as he often does for his club, for whom he shared the Premier League Golden Boot last year with Liverpool’s Mohamed Salah, he produced something special when it mattered most.

From a Portugal corner, the ball was cleared and suddenly Heung-min found himself in acres of space on the lush turf.

Turning on the afterburners he bore down on goal and then, when it appeared the defence had closed him down, Heung-min had the presence of mind to thread a perfect pass to substitute Hwang Hee-chan who calmly slotted his shot past Diogo Costa.

That saw South Korea jump from bottom of the group to second, above Uruguay who beat Ghana 2-0 but were left in third place by virtue of scoring fewer goals than South Korea.

The Koreans, who had fallen behind early on to Ricardo Horta’s opener but levelled through Kim Young-gwon, looked out on their feet at times in the second half.

But Heung-min led by example, summoning the spirit of 2002 when South Korea reached the semi-finals on home soil, having also beaten Portugal to get out of the group.

At times the celebrated forward appeared to be trying almost too hard as he desperately tried to find a way through a Portuguese defence that was in no mood for charity.

However, Heung-min was not to be denied a key role in the winner and once again showed why he has been Asian Footballer of the Year seven times as his unbreakable spirit put South Korea into the knockout rounds for only the third time in 11 appearances. — Reuters

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World Cup , FIFA

   

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