PREVIEW
▲Argentina vs South Korea
South Korea will need to succeed where far more illustrious teams have failed this past year in trying to foil the at times unstoppable Lionel Messi.
And if that wasn’t daunting enough ahead of their Group B clash today, word from the increasingly confident Argentina camp is that Diego Maradona is starting to show his mettle as a coach, after being criticized back home for being tactically naive during the almost-disastrous qualifiers.
Messi, last year’s FIFA world player of the year, made a major impact on day two of the World Cup with a dazzling performance in a 1-0 win over Nigeria. He failed to score, but only because Nigerian goalkeeper Vincent Enyeama made some spectacular saves.
The Barcelona forward’s darting runs and ability to draw in opponents will be key to Argentina’s bid for a third title, and he looks determined to silence those who say he struggles to reproduce his brilliant form for Barcelona when wearing his country’s colors.
He said this week that his teammates should also get the credit.
But without Messi, Argentina would be far less threatening.
Another vital factor for the Argentines will be whether Maradona can prove he can cut it as a world-class coach.
Back home, where he’s enjoyed cult status since almost single-handedly leading Argentina to the 1986 World Cup title, he’s been branded by some a liability as a coach. In the qualifiers, he used more than 100 players as he struggled to settle on a team and formation.
However, Argentina’s players have been heaping praise on Maradona this week — and united in crediting him for Gabriel Heinze’s diving header from a corner, which proved just enough to beat Nigeria.
“Diego prepared us for a move like that,” Veron, who supplied the corner, said on Tuesday. “Luckily, it came off first time.”
The players said Maradona had been studying how Nigeria defended corners, and concluded that it would be best to exploit a perceived vulnerability by floating the ball to the edge of their area for an onrushing Argentine player to strike, as opposed to placing it nearer Nigeria’s imposing defenders.
“Heinze’s goal was the work of Diego,” defender Martin Demichelis said. “Diego prepared everything to perfection.”
Maradona is expected to make just one change to his starting lineup from the Nigeria match, with Liverpool midfielder Maxi Rodriguez coming in for Veron, who is struggling with a calf injury.
Striker Carlos Tevez said he would happily give up all the titles he’s won in his career to win a World Cup.
“It’s just unique,” the Manchester City striker said. “A good World Cup means winning it. It’s the only thing that’s important. Otherwise, the team will only be criticized.”
South Korea, the 2002 World Cup semifinalist, leads Group B on goal difference after beating Greece 2-0 on Saturday, and Manchester United’s Park Ji-sung is expected to be the main threat to the Argentines.
Park told Argentine newspaper Clarin this week that his team would be very wary of Messi.
“He’s magic,” Park said. “Argentina’s one of the best teams in the world. But Korea is in good form and will have to defend well — and then hit them on the counterattack.”
“As the team spirit is in upswing from the victory in the first match, we will face [Argentina] with confidence,” Park told reporters in Rustenburg. “We believe we can produce good results if we play at the top of our game.”
Tevez said he would offer advice to Argentina defender Jonas Gutierrez about Park, who captains the South Koreans. The pair were formerly teammates at Manchester United.
“I know him well, he’s my friend,” Tevez said about Park, who scored South Korea’s second goal in the win over Greece. “He is always alone and free to receive passes.”
‘SOURCE OF PRIDE’: Newspapers rushed out special editions and the government sent their congratulations as Shohei Ohtani became the first player to enter the 50-50 club Japan reacted with incredulity and pride yesterday after Shohei Ohtani became the first player in Major League Baseball to record 50 home runs and 50 stolen bases in a single season. The Los Angeles Dodgers star from Japan made history with a seventh-inning homer in a 20-4 victory over the Marlins in Miami. “We would like to congratulate him from the bottom of our heart,” top government spokesman Yoshimasa Hayashi told reporters in Tokyo. “We sincerely hope Mr Ohtani, who has already accomplished feat after feat and carved out a new era, will thrive further,” he added. The landmark achievement dominated Japanese morning news
When Wang Tao ran away from home aged 17 to become a professional wrestler, he knew it would be a hard slog to succeed in China’s passionate but underdeveloped scene. Years later, he has endured family disapproval, countless side gigs and thousands of hours of brutal training to become China’s “Belt and Road Champion” — but the struggle is far from over. Despite a promising potential domestic market, the Chinese pro wrestling community has been battling for recognition and financial stability for decades. “I have done all kinds of jobs [on the side]... Because in the end, it is very
No team in the CPBL can surpass the Taipei Dome attendance record set by the CTBC Brothers, except when the Brothers team up with Taiwanese rock band Mayday. A record-high 40,000 fans turned out at the indoor baseball venue on Saturday for Brothers veteran Chou Szu-chi’s first farewell game, which was followed by a mini post-game concert featuring Mayday. This broke the previous CPBL record of 34,506 set by the Brothers in early last month, when K-pop singer Hyuna performed after the game, and the dome’s overall record of 37,890 set in early March, which featured the Brothers and the
With a quivering finger, England Subbuteo veteran Rudi Peterschinigg conceded the free-kick that sent his country’s World Cup quarter-final into extra-time before smashing his plastic goalkeeper on the floor in frustration. In the genteel southern English town of Tunbridge Wells, 300 elite players have gathered to play the game they love. “I won’t say this is the best weekend I’ve ever had in my life, but it’s certainly in the top two,” said Hughie Best, 58, who flew in from Perth, Australia, to compete and commentate at the event. Tunbridge Wells is the “spiritual home” of Subbuteo, which was invented there in 1946