Soccer-With fighting spirit, South Korea's beauty triumphs over Czech set-piece beasts


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group A - South Korea v Czech Republic - Estadio Guadalajara, Guadalajara, Mexico - June 11, 2026 South Korea's Son Heung-min in action with Czech Republic's Pavel Sulc REUTERS/Paul Childs

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GUADALAJARA, ⁠Mexico, June 11 (Reuters) - It was the tale of "Beauty and the Beast" that lit up the Estadio ⁠Guadalajara on Thursday, with South Korea's prettier, stylish football triumphing over the Czech Republic's rugged, route-one ‌tactics in an adrenaline-fuelled World Cup encounter.

South Korea were more than worthy of the 2-1 win, showing their trademark indomitable spirit with a come-from-behind victory to join Mexico atop Group A, all packed into the scintillating second half of a match the Asian side dominated.

The Koreans had ​their game plan and stuck to it, taking it to the Czechs ⁠throughout, with silky, intricate play and precision ⁠passes that put their opponents on the back foot.

Talisman Son Heung-min got the lion's share of the chances, yet - ⁠frustratingly - ‌none of the goals.

South Korea demonstrated their World Cup pedigree, present in 11 successive tournaments and unbeaten in qualifying with a whopping 40 goals scored, delivering on Thursday an early message of intent that a ⁠deep run could be on the cards.

Son worked seamlessly with the impressive ​Lee Kang-in and Lee Jae-sung to ‌create a host of first-half chances, with the trio combining darting runs through the middle with ⁠a succession of dangerous ​pass-and-go moves that they just could not finish.

BRUTE STRENGTH AND GARGANTUAN THROWS

But in a game of stark contrasts, it was the Czechs and their direct, physical play who scored first through Ladislav Krejci just before the hour with a perfectly timed header from ⁠a 35-metre, slingshot-like throw from Vladimir Coufal.

South Korea were buoyed by ​a largely Mexican crowd in Guadalajara that was clearly rooting for them.

They kept cool heads and levelled eight minutes later, when Hwang In-beom picked up Lee Kang-in’s neat through pass and turned brilliantly to fool two defenders, before deftly lifting ⁠the ball over advancing goalkeeper Matej Kovar.

They seized the momentum and battled hard for the win, going ahead after 80 minutes when Hwang turned provider with a precise low cross for substitute Oh Hyeon-gyu to turn into the net.

Strong and dangerous on almost every set-piece, the Czechs stuck with what they knew best as they pushed for an ​equaliser in a dramatic finish, with Adam Hlozek close to scoring from another ⁠gargantuan throw and Tomas Soucek's headed goal from a free kick disallowed for offside.

South Korea coach Hong Myung-bo commended his ​players for their fighting spirit and an approach that went just as ‌he had instructed.

"Before the match I gave the players ​two messages," he said. "To not give up until the end, and to unite as one and play together."

(Reporting by Martin Petty in Santa Clara, California; Additional reporting by Natalia Siniawski, Editing by Ken Ferris)

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