Soccer-'One match, one chance' - unfazed South Korea eye Brazil World Cup upset


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 - South Korea Press Conference - Main Media Center, Doha, Qatar - December 4, 2022 South Korea coach Paulo Bento and Kim Jin-su during the press conference REUTERS/Gareth Bumstead

(Fixes typo in paragraph 11)

AL RAYYAN, Qatar (Reuters) - Wild cards South Korea say they have nothing to fear and nothing to lose when they take on five-times champions Brazil on Monday, with their sights set on another giant-killing feat in a World Cup where big names have taken a beating.

After an extraordinary group phase that saw former winners Brazil and Argentina defeated by low-ranked opponents, plus Belgium and Germany eliminated, South Korea see this World Cup as their best chance in decades to make their mark.

"Every match, every minute is very valuable and precious. The entire team has great morale, great teamwork " said wingback Kim Jin-su.

"We all have truly wanted to get this far and we are all really thirsty for this."

South Korea have pedigree, having dumped former champions Germany out of the group stages in the 2018 World Cup. As co-hosts with Japan in 2002, they reached the semi-finals, knocking out Italy and Spain along the way.

Known for lethal counter-attacking and indomitable spirit, South Korea looked to be heading for elimination but delivered a surprise stoppage-time winner in Al Rayyan on Friday to beat Portugal and reach the last 16.

Monday's match against injury-hit Brazil is their first in the knockout rounds since 2010 and only their third overall.

Kim said there were a few injury concerns among the South Korean squad, but the team were well prepared, capable and confident.

"Of course tomorrow will be a very challenging match. We really want to show everyone what we've got and show what we've been waiting 12 years for," Kim said.

"Our fighting spirit will be important and we have to sacrifice ourselves for the team."

South Korea's Portuguese coach Paulo Bento complained about a gap of just 72 hours between matches and said his team had physical and emotional fatigue, compared to a Brazil who had a squad with enough depth to rest players.

He said he was expecting Brazil to take the game to South Korea but was confident his players could keep them at bay.

"We're up against world-class players we are not intimidated," he said. "In our squad we have world-class players."

"One match it's not an entire tournament, we have one chance... Most important is we show we are a team that wants to win, wants to compete and fight until the last whistle," he said.

"Based on that, everything is a victory." (This story has been refiled to fix typo in paragraph 11)

(Reporting by Martin Petty; editing by Clare Fallon)

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