Historic match that no one got to watch
North Korea held South Korea to a goalless draw yesterday in a World Cup qualifying match played in an empty stadium in Pyongyang.
Specific details of the game weren’t immediately available. South Korean football officials were unable to watch television coverage of the historic game at Kim II Sung Stadium and South Korean spectators and media were denied entry.
Fifa president Gianni Infantino was in Pyongyang and attended the match.
“I was looking forward to seeing a full stadium for such a historic match but was disappointed to see there were no fans in the stands,” Infantino said in a statement. “We were surprised by this and by several issues related to its live broadcast and problems with visas and access for foreign journalists.”
The North had been expected to have a unique home advantage in the 50,000-capacity stadium devoid of South Korean fans. But the South Korean football association, the KFA, was surprised to find out there were apparently no home supporters, either.
“Photos sent by our employees show not a single person in the stands,” KFA official Park Jae-sung said. “We are not sure why the North is doing this.”
The KFA sent two staff members to the stadium, but ruled out live text updates on its website because of uncertainties in internet connection.
It recommended that fans watch the KFA’S social media accounts, where it posted game information that its employees emailed from Pyongyang.
It is understood North Korea yesterday agreed to provide a recording of the match to South Korean officials before they leave the North, which would allow South Korean networks to play the game on tape delay.
The game was the first competitive meetingbetweentheteamsinthenorth Korean capital, although the North hosted the South in a friendly in 1990.
North Korea in recent months has severed virtually all cooperation with the South amid a standstill in nuclear negotiations with the United States, and repeatedly ignored the South’s calls for discussions on media coverage issues and allowing South Korean supporters into yesterday’s game.
“There was no response from the North, and we find this regrettable and sad,” Unification Ministry spokesman Lee Sang-min had said on Monday.
While North Korea was clearly expressing its political displeasure with the South by shutting out rival reporters and fans, its decision to compete in an empty stadium at home was likely an effort to level the playing field and avoid any questions about fairness, according to Yang Moo-jin, a professor at Seoul’s University of North Korean Studies.
Choi Kang, vice president of Seoul’s Asan Institute for Policy Studies, said North Korea might have been concerned about the possibility of its national team losing to the South in front of a home crowd of 50,000, which would have been a humiliating development for leader Kim Jong Un.
South Korea’s two Group H matches against North Korea will be critical in qualifying for the World Cup. The second match between the Koreas is scheduled for 4 June in South Korea. Group H also includes Lebanon, Turkmenistan and Sri Lanka.
South Korea have a stronger team on paper, led by Tottenham Hotspur striker Son Heung-min, who started in yesterday’s game alongside Bordeaux forward Hwang Ui-jo.
Previously, the Koreas faced each other four times during qualifying for the 2010 World Cup. The games were initially scheduled as home and away, but North Korea rejected the idea of hoisting the South Korean flag and playing the South Korean anthem on its soil.
Following an intervention by Fifa, the Koreas eventually agreed to relocate North Korea’s home games to Shanghai. The matches resulted in three draws and one South Korea win before both countries qualified for the tournament in South Africa.
Thefateofthisgameinpyongyangwas uncertain until last month when Asian football’s governing body informed the KFA that the North decided it would host the qualifier as scheduled.
Sport often became an alternate political battlefield between the Koreas when relations were bad, with North Korean athletes and coaches rejecting handshakes with their South Korean counterparts.
During the Cold War, North Korea boycotted the 1986 Asian Games and the 1988 Olympics in Seoul. Relations significantly worsened on the eve of the Seoul Olympics with the bombing of a South Korean passenger jet that killed all 115 on board in 1987. South Korea concluded the bombing was a North Korean attack aimed at scaring off Olympic visitors.
Things were dramatically different when the Olympics came to South Korea for the second time last year. North Korean leader Kim sent hundreds of officials and athletes to the Pyeongchang Winter Games while initiating diplomacy with the South following years of tensions over its nuclear and missile tests. The Koreas marched together during the opening ceremony and fielded their first combined Olympic team in women’s ice hockey, which drew passionate crowds despite five defeats from five.
However, sports exchanges between the Koreas dried up in recent months amid revived tensions. North Korea has ignored South Korea’s calls to organise combined teams in hockey, basketball, judo and other sports for the qualifying rounds for the Tokyo Olympics. It also refused to send North Korean athletes to the world swimming championships in the South Korean city of Gwangju earlier this year.
“I was looking forward to seeing a full stadium for such a historic match but was disappointed to see there were no fans in the stands. We were surprised by this and by several issues related to its live broadcast”
FIFA PRESIDENT GIANNI INFANTINO