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Tactics

Uruguay v South Korea preview – by @Zonal_Marking

June 26, 2010 — by Suman

Lifted from Zonal Marking’s very readable, must-read second round preview:

Uruguay v South Korea

Uruguay have been one of the most impressive teams so far – playing for and achieving a draw against France, destroying South Africa and recording a solid 1-0 victory over Mexico.

They started the competition with a 3-5-2 shape, which became more like a 5-3-2 when the wing-backs had to contain France’s wingers. They’ve since switched to a 4-3-1-2 with Diego Forlan playing behind the main two forwards, and they’ll surely play the same formation after their two wins.

South Korea’s first XI is fairly predictable. The only changes they’ve made so far have been at right-back, bringing in Oh Bum-Suk against Argentina – but he was the worst player on the pitch, so Cha Du-Ri has regained his place.

The formation will probably be 4-2-3-1. Playing Park Ji-Sung on the left-hand side might be useful to track the forward runs of Maxi Pereira, although he was fielded in the centre of the three against Argentina.

Picking up Forlan is the obvious task – with two holding midfielders, Korea will have a man tracking him, but must worry this will concede the midfield ground to Uruguay. Korea should look to play down their left-hand-side, because Uruguay’s shape tends to be slightly lopsided. Alvaro Pereira, generally a left wing-back, is playing a more central role but tends to drift back out wide, sometimes meaning Uruguay look like two banks of four minus a right-sided midfielder.

[via World Cup second round preview (part one) | Zonal Marking]

Thoughts?

Video

Tuhon 2010 – Be the Reds! #KOR

June 26, 2010 — by Suman2


via YouTube – Nike Tuhon 2010, where the description reads:

This is the movie Nike Korea produced for their Korea National Soccer Team. It’s about Korean traditional fighting spirit, Tuhon.
Below, I put the English translation what you see in the movie. Quite a piece, I think.

Forget Your Name.
Tear out your name on your back.
Just remember TUHON on your heart.
People would tremble by the name of KOREA .
People would fear at the RED jersey that you wear.
Feel the 23 TUHONs linked to your heart.
Rule every moment with TUHON.
WRITE THE FUTURE

Video

World Cup Video Highlights: South Korea #KOR

June 26, 2010 — by Suman

Video highlights (courtesy of @footytube) from South Korea’s 3 group matches collected below.

Tues June 22 (Day 12): South Korea 2, Nigeria 2

An exciting and crucial match which could have swung either way.  Had Nigeria managed to win, they would have advanced to the Round of 16 instead of South Korea.

Events

Our 1st Fan Giveaway! Uruguay v South Korea tix @iplaybeautiful

June 25, 2010 — by Suman1

Our first fan giveaway..our friend/fan Joyce has 2 reservations for tmrw morning’s Uruguay v South Korean match at the PlayBeautiful NYC pop-up virtual stadium, located on Mulberry Street in Nolita NYC.

Joyce is not going to use them (as she’d prefer a quieter place to concentrate on her Reds), and neither can we…so if anyone wants them comment to this post and they’re yours!

(We went there for Portugal-Brazil this morning, and it’s a cool place to watch a game–stadium seating for 100 in front of a huge projection TV image, with concession stands serving coffee, tea, beer, snacks, etc. There was a good turnout of Brazilians this morning..we imagine the atmosphere will only be better for the 1st Round of 16 match!)

Uncategorized

Brazil v Portugal – 1966 (via @NYTimesGoal)

June 25, 2010 — by Suman

Eusebio conquers Pele

Just came across this history lesson and video via the NYT Goal blog’s entry for this morning’s highly anticipated intra-lusophonal match:

And now, a history lesson. The Seleção and Selecção never played each other until 1956, but since then they have met 18 times. Brazil emerged the winner 12 times, with 2 draws, though most of the games were played in Brazil. Yet how often do you think these sister nations have clashed in anger? Answer: only once, at the 1966 World Cup … and Portugal won, 3-1.

That match at a packed Goodison Park in Liverpool — the meeting of the all-time greats Eusébio and Pelé — was the group finale for both teams, and it eliminated Brazil while sending Portugal on a path to the semifinals in their first World Cup appearance. Eusébio scored twice, but many remember the game for its hard fouls, especially the one from defender João Morais against Pelé: