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This category is made up of the logos of South Korean football teams and includes current, historical, and variant logos. South Korean football clubs are listed in Category:Football clubs in South Korea .
The 2002 FIFA World Cup, also branded as Korea/Japan 2002, was the 17th FIFA World Cup, the quadrennial football world championship for men's national teams organized by FIFA. It was held from 31 May to 30 June 2002 at sites in South Korea and Japan , with its final match hosted by Japan at International Stadium in Yokohama .
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.
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 ...
Football at the Asian Games was a senior tournament until 1998. ... Japan: China: 2–0: South Korea: 8 6 2010 details: Guangzhou: Japan: 1–0: North Korea: South Korea:
Dynasty Cup was an East Asian international association football tournament organised by the Asian Football Confederation. It was hosted by China in 1990 and 1992, Hong Kong in 1995, and Japan in 1998. [1] The inaugural edition in 1990 was won by South Korea. [2] The next three editions were won by Japan, before the tournament was discontinued ...
Japan beat China in a thriller in Beirut, 3–2, to once again face the Saudis in the final. In the third place match, South Korea won bronze with a 1–0 win over China. The final in Beirut was filled with majority of Saudi supporters, and was seen as the rematch of the 1992 final and earlier group stage encounter.
Japan maintains a strong football rivalry with South Korea. The rivalry is long-seated and is often seen as an extension of an overall historic rivalry between the two nations. Japan have met South Korea 80 times, trailing the statistic at 15 wins, 23 draws, and 42 losses, while scoring 73 goals and conceding 153.