Shanghai Daily

Host S. Korea tipped for East Asian Championsh­ip

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HOST South Korea goes into this week’s East Asian Championsh­ip as the favorite after coach Paulo Bento selected a strong squad ahead of meetings with Japan, China and China’s Hong Kong in Busan.

With the competitio­n being played outside the windows set aside for internatio­nal competitio­n, none of the nations involved have called up their Europe-based players but Bento has still been able to pick a squad packed with quality.

The Portuguese coach’s lineup leans heavily on the Jeonbuk Motors side that won the K-League title last weekend and is bolstered by leading talent from around the region.

World Cup goalkeeper Jo Hyeon-woo has been included and two-time AFC Champions League winner Kim Young-gwan is expected to captain the team, while Kim Jin-su, Park Johoo and Kim Bo-kyung all boast significan­t experience of playing in Europe.

The Koreans kick off their campaign tomorrow against Hong Kong, which qualified for the finals by seeing off the

Democratic People’s Republic of Korea in the preliminar­y rounds.

That clash comes 24 hours after Japan and China face off in the tournament opener today with neither nation selecting a squad that, on paper at least, should be able to compete with the Koreans.

Without a coach following Marcello Lippi’s resignatio­n last month, China has sent a reserve squad under the care of former Everton midfielder Li Tie, who led Wuhan Zall to sixth place in the Chinese Super

League in the just-completed season.

Li has selected a squad that features a smattering of senior internatio­nals, several of whom had been overlooked in the latter stages of Lippi’s reign.

Guangzhou Evergrande striker Wei Shihao impressed in this competitio­n two years ago and returns to the squad, while the likes of Yu Dabao, Jiang Zhipeng and Zhang Xizhe bolster an otherwise inexperien­ced team.

Japanese coach Hajime Moriyasu has chosen a squad made up entirely of domestic-based players with one eye on next year’s Olympic Games in Tokyo.

(Reuters)

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Li Tie

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