The Korea Herald

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S. Korea plays to 1-1 draw with N. Korea in historic women’s soccer showdown in Pyongyang

By Korea Herald

Published : April 7, 2017 - 20:02

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PYONGYANG (Joint Press Corps) -- South Korea and North Korea played to a 1-1 draw Friday in their historic women’s soccer showdown north of the border.

South Korean Jang Seul-gi scored the equalizer in the 75th minute after Sung Hyang-sim gave the host the lead in the first half at Kim Il-sung Stadium in Pyongyang, as the most anticipated contest at the Asian Football Confederation Women’s Asian Cup Group B qualifying tournament ended in a stalemate.

Both Koreas picked up their first draw at the Asian Cup qualifying competition following their victorious starts. South Korea trounced India 10-0 in their opener on Monday, while North Korea previously routed India 8-0 and beat Hong Kong 5-0.

South Korea's Cho So-hyun (left) and North Korea's Sung Hyang-sim (center) run after the ball during their AFC Women's Asian Cup Jordan 2018 qualifying match at the Kim Il Sung Stadium on Friday in Pyongyang, North Korea. (AP) South Korea's Cho So-hyun (left) and North Korea's Sung Hyang-sim (center) run after the ball during their AFC Women's Asian Cup Jordan 2018 qualifying match at the Kim Il Sung Stadium on Friday in Pyongyang, North Korea. (AP)

This was the first time the two Koreas have met in a competitive soccer match in the North’s capital for either the men’s or women’s team. Including a friendly, South Korea last played in Pyongyang in 1990, when the men’s national team suffered a 2-1 loss.

It was also the most important match for both Koreas in their bid to clinch a spot at the Asian Cup. They have been regarded as the top two contenders vying for the No. 1 position in Group B that also features India, Hong Kong and Uzbekistan.

Only the top finisher in the group will make it to the 2018 AFC Women’s Asian Cup in Jordan. The eight-team competition also doubles as the qualifying tournament for the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup in France, meaning any team except the winner in Pyongyang is automatically out for the women’s showpiece event as well.

With the latest result, the fate of the two Koreas is likely to come down to goal difference or goals scored in Group B since neither the South nor the North is likely to lose to low-ranked competitors in their remaining matches and should each finish the qualifying tournament with three wins and a draw.

North Korea, three-time Asian Cup champion at No. 10 in the latest FIFA rankings, will play its final match with No. 42 Uzbekistan on Sunday. South Korea, 17th in FIFA rankings, is scheduled to face No. 65 Hong Kong on Sunday before meeting Uzbekistan two days later.

This was only South Korea’s third draw against North Korea in 18 meetings, with one win and 14 losses. The South’s only victory against the North came in 2005.

The soccer match, meanwhile, followed an all-Korean women showdown in hockey at the world championships south of the border.

On Thursday, the South beat the North 3-0 at the International Ice Hockey Federation Women’s World Championship Division II Group A event at Gangneung Hockey Center in Gangwon Province.

It remains to be seen if these games on both sides of the border can ease strained inter-Korean relations, but the Seoul government has said the games are merely part of sports exchanges and no other form of meaningful dialogue is possible given current tensions. (Yonhap)