Jurgen Klinsmann Qatar Germany Usa Jordan South Korea North Korea Football STARS MET reports gatherings recommendations cup Semi-final Jurgen Klinsmann Qatar Germany Usa Jordan South Korea North Korea

Jurgen Klinsmann faces sack by South Korea after Asian Cup semi-final exit

channelnewsasia.com

SEOUL: Jurgen Klinsmann looks set to be fired as coach after top South Korean football officials said on Thursday (Feb 15) that "a change of leadership is necessary" following their Asian Cup exit and in-fighting among star players.The Korea Football Association's national team committee met a week on from the 2-0 defeat to Jordan in the semi-finals and with Klinsmann under huge pressure.The committee is not a decision-making body but will make its recommendation to the KFA's executive board, which will make a final ruling on the 59-year-old German's fate.A smattering of protesters gathered outside KFA headquarters in Seoul, demanding Klinsmann's removal after just less than a year in the post."We've reached a consensus that Klinsmann cannot exercise his leadership as national team head coach for various reasons and that a change of leadership is necessary," Hwangbo Kwan of the committee said.After a three-hour meeting, Hwangbo said the committee had decided Klinsmann's "tactical preparation fell short" during the team's disappointing Asian Cup campaign in Qatar.He added: "Klinsmann said there was discord among squad members and it affected their performance (in the Jordan match)."Klinsmann attended the meeting on a video conference from his home in the United States, Yonhap news agency reported."There were opinions that Klinsmann failed to show his resolve to find new talent and that he failed to grasp internal conflict or mood among squad members in management," said Hwangbo."There were also reviews that he is appearing to ignore the Korean public for his short stays in South Korea and that he had lost trust from them," he added.Yonhap previously reported, citing unnamed sources, that the KFA would consider a temporary

Related News
The Scottish Cup quarter-final takes centre stage this weekend with eight teams dreaming of reaching Hampden.
Liverpool's Carabao Cup final victory over Chelsea was manager Jurgen Klopp’s "most special trophy" after they overcame more injury adversity to win 1-0 at Wembley after extra time.
Son Heung-min has said sorry after he had a fight with team-mate Lee Kang-in, which left him with a dislocated finger.
Son Heung-min apologised on Wednesday for his role in a bust-up with South Korea team-mate Lee Kang-in at the Asian Cup and urged fans to forgive the Paris Saint-Germain player. South Korea were beaten 2-0 by Jordan at the tournament earlier this month and it later emerged that skipper Son had dislocated a finger in an altercation with Lee on the eve of the semi-final. Both players released social media statements on Wednesday, with Tottenham's Son posting a picture of the pair together, smiling and with arms around each other's shoulders. The 23-year-old attacking midfielder Lee, who has been blamed by fans for the fracas and dumped by advertisers, said that he had travelled to London to apologise to Son in person. Addressing the controversy publicly for the first time, Son wrote in a statement on Instagram: "I am sincerely sorry for causing trouble and will work harder to make the national team grow further."
SEOUL : South Korea captain Son Heung-min has asked fans to forgive team mate Lee Kang-in after the midfielder apologised "sincerely" for his involvement in an altercation between the pair on the eve of their Asian Cup semi-final.
SEOUL: Son Heung-min apologised on Wednesday (Feb 21) for his role in a bust-up with South Korea teammate Lee Kang-in at the Asian Cup and urged fans to forgive the Paris Saint-Germain player.

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.