South Korea’s players had no idea their surreal FIFA World Cup qualifier in Pyongyang on Tuesday would be played in an empty stadium — a match Tottenham Hotspur star Son Heung-min described as “very aggressive” and one official likened to warfare.
The contest against North Korea ended 0-0, with FIFA president Gianni Infantino one of just a handful of spectators at a match almost completely blocked off from the outside world.
It was the first-ever competitive encounter between the men’s sides hosted by the North, a historic face-off between two countries still technically at war, but took place with no live broadcast and no foreign media in attendance.
The debacle raises doubts over the prospects for further North-South sporting cooperation, once a driver of nuclear diplomacy.
Until the very last minute, the South’s team had no idea that even North Korean spectators would be absent.
“We expected 50,000 people to come pouring in once the door opened, but they didn’t come,” Korea Football Association vice president Choi Young-il said as the team arrived back at Incheon International Airport early yesterday.
“The gates never opened. I was really surprised. The players and coach were surprised too,” he said.
Choi said that he had asked about the absence of local fans and a North Korean official told him: “Maybe they didn’t want to see it.”
Son, who captained South Korea’s team, was taken aback by the Northerners’ rough tactics.
“The match was very aggressive to a degree that I think it’s a huge achievement just to return safely without being injured,” Son said. “There was a lot of severe swearing.”
Choi added that he had never seen such aggression on the pitch before.
“It was like war,” he said.
Tuesday’s match came in the wake of a series of North Korean missile tests that raised tensions in the region and after the breakdown of talks with the US over Pyongyang’s weapons programs.
Since the collapse in February of a summit in Hanoi between North Koren leader Kim Jong-un and US President Donald Trump, Pyongyang has regularly excoriated Seoul, ruling out prospects of inter-Korean dialogue.
It is a far cry from the cross-border warmth of last year, when South Korean President Moon Jae-in seized on the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics to broker the Pyongyang-Washington discussion process.
At the time, Moon and Kim discussed and agreed on further sports exchanges, including a joint bid to host the 2032 Olympics.
However, the North’s official Korean Central News Agency issued only a two-line dispatch on Tuesday’s match, saying: “The game of attacks and counterattacks ended in a draw.”
In a commentary yesterday, the South’s Korea JoongAng Daily said: “We may just have to thank North Korea for sending our football team back home safely.”
“How can South Korea think of cohosting the Olympics with such a treacherous counterpart?” it added.
Infantino said that he was “disappointed” after attending the event and “surprised” by the absence of fans, along with other issues.
Infantino has previously proposed the idea of the two Koreas jointly hosting the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup.
However, outraged South Korean fans, who had to settle for basic updates provided by FIFA throughout the match that were limited to yellow cards and substitutions, said that they were fed up with sporting exchanges with the North.
“How can a country that blocks spectators and bans live broadcasts host the World Cup?” one person asked online.
“Don’t ever talk about joint teams with North Korea or cohosting anything,” another added.
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