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As of 19 November 2024 [2] [3]. A total of 47 managers managed South Korea during 74 appointments (excluding caretaker managers). [2]South Korean managers initially managed the national team as a sideline, but in 1992 the Korea Football Association adopted a policy that only full-time managers could manage the national team.
Kim Dong-jin (born 29 January 1982) is a South Korean football coach and a former professional footballer who played as a left full-back or wing-back. He is currently a coach of the South Korea national football team. [1]
EAFF E-1 Football Championship: 2022: Japan RR South Korea: 2025: EAFF U15 Men's Championship: 2023: China Final Japan: TBC East Asian Youth Games Men's Football Tournament: 2023: Chinese Taipei RR Hong Kong: 2027: EAFF Futsal Championship: 2022 Japan South Korea: 2024: Women's national teams EAFF E-1 Football Championship (women) 2022: Japan ...
On 10 August 2012, Hong Myung-bo coached the men's Olympic team to a 2–0 win over Japan to secure the bronze medal at the 2012 Summer Olympics, which set up a record by obtaining the first medal ever for South Korea in Olympic football as well as being the first Asian team in 44 years to win a medal at that event.
The "Japan–South Korea Regular Match" was held 15 times from 1972 to 1991, and South Korea led the event with 10 wins, 2 draws and 3 losses. [7] Its revival was steadily expected by the press, [ 8 ] [ 9 ] [ 10 ] but on the contrary, there were no "A" team matches between the two countries for ten years between 2011 and 2021, apart from the ...
China and U.S.-allied South Korea and Japan are trying to manage mutual distrust amid the rivalry between Beijing and Washington, tensions over democratically ruled Taiwan, which China claims as ...
Chung Mong-gyu (Korean: 정몽규; born 1961) is a South Korean businessman.He is one of his country's top business leaders and chairman of HDC Group.Since 2013, he has served two consecutive terms as the 53rd president of the Korea Football Association (KFA).
In 1954, South Korea entered FIFA World Cup qualification for the first time, and qualified for the 1954 FIFA World Cup in Switzerland by beating Japan 7–3 on aggregate. [9] South Korea were only the second Asian team to compete at a World Cup after the Dutch East Indies (Indonesia) in 1938, and the first fully-independent Asian nation to do so.