New Straits Times

Korean refuses to celebrate gold

-

SOUTH KOREAN archer Kim Woojin refused to celebrate bagging a gold medal at the Asian Games after his second-placed compatriot missed a final chance to win an exemption from military service.

Kim, 26, brushed off a strong challenge from Lee Woo-seok in the men’s individual recurve on Tuesday, where top spot would have exempted the 21-year-old from South Korea’s mandatory near two-year military service.

But Kim — the reigning Olympic champion in the recurve men’s team — diplomatic­ally claimed Lee’s military predicamen­t wasn’t on his mind as he declined to wave the national flag in celebratio­n.

“Whether it was the military situation or anything else not related to the competitio­n, I wasn’t thinking about that,” Kim said,

according to South Korea’s Yonhap news agency.

“It was just tough to beat someone that I know so well after months of training together.”

Lee’s situation mirrors that of South Korea’s Son Heung-min, the Tottenham Hotspur forward who is gunning for gold in football to gain a military service exemption.

Lee, who has already completed part of his service and is scheduled to be discharged next year, said he was disappoint­ed but “the military isn’t all bad“, according to Yonhap.

“I’ll go back and serve the country the best I can,” he added.

Nearly every able-bodied South Korean male is required to enrol by age 28 in the military, although a rare reprieve is gifted to elite sportsmen such as Olympic Games medallists or Asian Games champions.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia