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South Korea national football team results; Senior matches; 1948–1959; 1960–1969; 1970–1979; 1980–1989; ... 5 June 2022 FIFA World Cup (Qualification) South ...
For the combined qualification matches for the 2018 FIFA World Cup and the 2019 AFC Asian Cup, South Korea won all seven matches without conceding a goal in the second round but following a series of poor results in the third round of qualifiers, including losses to China and Qatar, the former manager Uli Stielike was sacked and was replaced by ...
1954 FIFA World Cup: 4 20 June 1954 Turkey: 0–7 1954 FIFA World Cup: 5 12 October 1964 Czechoslovakia: 1–6 1964 Summer Olympics: 1 June 2016 Spain: Friendly: 20 June 1998 Netherlands: 0–5 1998 FIFA World Cup: 30 May 2001 France: 2001 FIFA Confederations Cup: 15 August 2001 Czech Republic: Friendly: 10 16 December 1996 Iran: 2–6 1996 AFC ...
Most matches managed 78, Huh Jung-moo Most matches managed (unofficial) [2] 126, Kim Jung-nam Most matches won 54, Ham Heung-chul Most matches won in an appointment 35, Paulo Bento Longest career in an appointment 4 years and 106 days, Paulo Bento, from 22 August 2018 to 6 December 2022 Most appointments 5, Kim Yong-sik, Min Byung-dae and Park ...
Prior to this match, the teams had met once before, being South Korea's 1–0 group stage victory in the 2002 FIFA World Cup (which they co-hosted with Japan). A rotated Portugal side took the lead in the opening five minutes, when Ricardo Horta scored on his World Cup debut with a first-time shot.
The FIFA Men's World Ranking is a ranking system for men's national teams in association football, led by Argentina as of December 2024. [1] The men's teams of the member nations of FIFA, football's world governing body, are ranked based on their game results with the most successful teams being ranked highest.
The team won every game to become the joint most successful side in the tournament's history.
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.