Appreciating Hong Myung-bo – as a Player

Do people here recall South Korea vs. Spain in the 1994 World Cup? It is arguably South Korea’s finest showing against a European powerhouse prior to the storied 2002 run.

While the match ended in a 2-2 draw, my vivid recollection is that Korea completely outplayed Spain for long stretches but failed to convert a multitude of absolute “gimme” chances. (The eternal, tragic story of South Korean football, I know.)

I don’t know if a full tape of the game exists online, but this excellent highlight package randomly popped up in my YouTube feed today, showcasing the absolute chaos of those final minutes:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3X0ZnOz3Cbc

Beyond the team performance, this game was a masterclass from Hong Myung-bo at his absolute zenith. To me, it serves as a vindication against all the retroactive criticism he faced for winning the Bronze Ball in 2002, or for Pelé naming him to the “FIFA 100” list of the greatest living footballers. While his older, slower 2002 form might not have fully justified those lofty accolades, his prime 1994 self absolutely did.

In fact, by 2002, Hong was so far past his athletic prime that Guus Hiddink initially dropped him from the squad entirely and didn’t want him back. Hiddink was skeptical of Hong’s value due to Hong’s severely diminished pace and stamina.

But if you want to know why he received those all-time accolades in the first place, you have to look at 1994. Unlike the stationary, conservative ball-stopper we saw in 2002, the 1994 version of Hong was a force of nature. He was constantly, irrepressibly driving forward from his sweeper position, acting as one of the finest passing center-backs I have ever seen at any level of the game.

Look no further than the conclusion of that Spain match. Down 2-0 late in the second half, Hong took the game into his own hands. He struck a brilliant free-kick in the 85th minute to pull one back, and then, in the 90th minute, he drove forward and delivered a through-ball assist to Seo Jung-won to secure the historic equalizer. He nearly scored another goal himself earlier in the game and should have notched another assist on a beautiful sequence that a misfiring teammate completely botched.

I am convinced that this version of Hong Myung-bo would have starred for virtually any elite European club. The interest was certainly real; right after that 1994 masterclass, Johan Cruyff’s Barcelona explicitly inquired about signing him, as did many Italian clubs.

The only reason he never made the jump to Europe was because the domestic powers-that-be essentially ran a protection racket, making it functionally impossible to pry world-class players out of the domestic league for a long time after Cha Bum-kun’s departure.

In terms of pure, unadulterated peak footballing ability, I believe 1994 Hong Myung-bo was the greatest South Korean footballer in history—surpassing even Son Heung-min and Cha Bum-kun.

Of course, recognizing his genius as a player does absolutely nothing to excuse his utter incompetence as a manager today. Both things can be true.

submitted by /u/Epaminondas73
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