Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Brazil Toils to Crack North Korean Mystery


So you're North Korea. You test nukes. You take journalists and wayward hikers into custody. You blow up the occasional ship belonging to your archenemy to the south and don't give a hoot what anyone says about it.

You don't exactly play by the rules.

So when your soccer team is ranked 84th and pitted against the top-ranked team in the world, you just decide you're not going to play.

Oh, the North Koreans took the field Tuesday night, and kicked the ball around in suddenly frigid Johannesburg. They even managed to score a goal while giving up only two.

But on the whole their behavior didn't much resemble that of the 31 other nations that have played thus far.

On defense, where most teams place four players, North Korea stationed between six and eight who hung back, barely bothering to challenge the Brazilians as they walked the ball two-thirds of the way up the field. If you're not a soccer person, imagine letting an opponent in football march to the red zone on every possession before you think about tackling.

North Korea attempted shots from 45 and 50 yards. On one free kick from Brazil, they set up a 10-man wall. Typical is a five- or six-man wall. The North Korean goalkeeper punted the ball all the way down the field to Julio Cesar, the Brazilian goalkeeper.

Midway through the second half, central defender Pak Chol Jin got taken off on a stretcher. When he reached the sideline, he stepped off the stretcher and asked the referee if he could return to the match.

The contrarian strategy almost worked. Playing the team that taught the world bicycle kicks and other offensive tricks, the North Koreans kept Brazil scoreless for nearly an hour. Then Brazil's Maicon took a perfect feed from Elano on the right wing in the 55th minute, dribbled to the end line and bent a shot off the outside of his right foot, beating Ri Myong Guk on the near side. Seventeen minutes later, Elano connected for a goal of his own off a perfect through-ball from Robinho.

"When we come across an adversary that plays very defensively, it's very difficult to come up with an attack strategy," said Dunga, the Brazilian coach, relieved to escape with a win.

Even if nobody else does, the North Koreans know who they are. Coach Kim Jong Hun promised a defensive effort, and his players delivered just that, flinging their bodies across the field in front of rockets from the Brazilians, resisting the temptation to try hard to score and leave themselves open to Brazil's lethally fast counter-attack. Midfielder Mun In Guk could often be seen waving his players back from the midfield line.

"For the first half, I think our players really carried out our plan," Mr. Kim said. "Our team defended very strongly, nevertheless we were trying to find a goal opportunity and we were able to find one goal."

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