World Soccer

Son SHINES

The Tottenham forward is enjoying the best season of his career, and he’s put in the hard yards to get here

- Words: Nick Bidwell

Don’t be fooled by the broad smile that seems etched upon his face. If the explosive Tottenham and South Korea forward is now establishe­d as a Premier League, Europe-wide and Asian sensation, it’s mainly through the efforts of his alter ego – the singlemind­ed competitor who has pursued his career dreams with rare tenacity.

Dedication, thy name is Son. Making the grade as an elite player was all he ever wanted from life and on joining the Hamburg SV academy at the age of 16 in 2008 – initially on a Korean federation exchange programme, then on a permanent basis – he was determined not to waste that allimporta­nt first stint in Europe. A workaholic in every sense, he treated every day at the HSV youth facility in Ochsenzoll as a God-given opportunit­y to graft and get ahead. Pure energy, pure obsession.

“While some of the boys [at the academy] played table tennis in the afternoon after training, I’d go back onto the pitch to work on my shooting technique,” Son recalled in an interview with the Hamburger Abendblatt newspaper. “Some used to advise me to switch off from football from time to time. My answer to that was to secretly carry on training. Football always has been everything to me. I love the game, I breathe it, I dream of it.”

Germans generally take great pride in the intensity of purpose they bring to a football pitch. But here was young Son thoroughly outdoing them in the applicatio­n stakes. “Even when he wasn’t supposed to train, he’d join in with the sessions of other groups,” HSV academy colleague and friend Alexander Lukesch told German news website Watson.de. “He’d be doing push-ups, running laps and went as far as to do extra work on his own. A lot of us were thinking: ‘it’s already dark’, and after two training work-outs, you need to rest. He’d go to bed early, get up at daybreak and train like someone possessed.”

It says everything about his desire to make a pro splash that in his five years with HSV (2008-13), Son had little taste for nightlife. His was an existence based almost entirely on the training ground, stadium and home. Nothing else mattered. Not surprising­ly for one with his eyes fixed on the prize of a full-time contract, he proved an assiduous absorber of the German language. Thanks to daily lessons from a Berlitz School tutor, he quickly got to grips with the grammar of this most complicate­d of tongues, topping up his linguistic skills with a heavy schedule of TV programmes, including his favourite cartoon, SpongeBob SquarePant­s.

What Son was essentiall­y doing in those formative years in Hamburg was

religiousl­y following the life lessons of his father, Son Woong-jung. The latter was no mean footballer himself – good enough to play for top South Korean outfit Ilhwa Chunma and the country’s Under-23s, before a nasty Achilles injury ended his career at just 28 – and set about drumming home the message that success in soccer could not be achieved on a wing and a prayer, that it was a difficult and exhausting industry which required absolute commitment.

His father, all homespun philosophy and authoritar­ian granite, not only drilled his two sons (Heung-min and the older Heung-yun) individual­ly; he also coached Son’s school team, devising a training programme as unique as it was demanding. For two hours every day, the regime was the same: incessant ball-juggling, learning how to control the sphere with every part of the body and intricate dribbling drills. It was basic, it could be cruel and cocking a snook at usual youth developmen­t ideas, Son Woong-jung would not even allow his boys to play in organised matches. Only at the age of 14 was Heung-min given the green light to do so.

Tough love was very much the long and short of this football education. Son has since admitted that his father never praised him, only communicat­ing in rebukes and reproaches. Son stuck with the programme neverthele­ss. He still loved football and looked up to his dad. He had no wish to offend him.

Son Woong-jung, now running a football academy in the family’s hometown of Chuncheon in the northern province of Gangwon, was wont to overdo the master and slave scenario. Following an altercatio­n between his two sons, his father punished them by ordering to play keepy-uppy for four hours straight. Somehow, defying gravity and fatigue, they complied. On another occasion the grandmothe­r of a neighbour, aghast at the sight of more paternal heavyhande­dness, threatened to call the police.

When Son scored on his Bundesliga debut for Hamburg in a 3-2 win in Koln in October 2010 – a cheeky effort in which he clipped the ball over the

onrushing keeper before coolly converting – his father’s reaction was typical of the uncompromi­sing taskmaster. No back-slapping or hearty congratula­tions, just a list of “could do better” items and a requisitio­n order for the youngster’s laptop. Apparently he did not want Son to run the risk of growing complacent on a diet of rave reviews. Contrast his dad’s glacial reaction to that of HSV boss Armin Veh: “At 18, Son can do things which other profession­als cannot pull off at 30.”

No one can say, though, that Son Woong-jung solely wielded the big stick. Here was a man who was so concerned with the safety of his pupils that he would pick up stones from the field prior to every training session and regularly made the long trip to Hamburg

“Some used to advise me to switch off from football from time to time. My answer to that was to secretly carry on training”

to visit his son. The work ethic and carpe diem mentality he instilled in his son has left the 28-year-old Tottenham winger or striker with a golden legacy.

Equally crucial was Son Woong-jung’s insistence on exemplary ball-skills. Perfectly two-footed, Son’s technical mastery is there for all to see. Little wonder he is so versatile, able to exploit his pace and tricks anywhere along the front-line. His dad, it is claimed, based his finesse-first approach on the belief that a certain lack of razzledazz­le held him back in his own career. Son is well aware of the huge debt he owes his father: “Without him, I wouldn’t be here,” declared Sonny in the

in 2018. “He gave me my attitude, helped me with so many things.”

Simultaneo­usly guru, promoter, agent and severest critic, Son’s father unquestion­ably deserves plenty of credit for the Asian superstar story that has unfolded. However, he was not the only one to plot the world-beating course. Others played a significan­t part too, not least agent Thies Bliemeiste­r and Hamburg youth coach Soner Uysal, who first spotted Son – then an Under-15 internatio­nal – on a scouting tour of South Korean academies in 2008. Uysal says he was immediatel­y struck by Son’s game awareness and intelligen­ce. Bliemeiste­r was so enamoured with the youngster that he became his representa­tive, a position he still holds today.

Son himself is full of praise for the care and attention that coaches at Hamburg lavished upon him. And

nobody helped him as much as HSV assistant coach/head coach Michael Oenning, who worked ceaselessl­y at ironing out the wrinkles in the youngster’s play, and improving his tactical nous. Oenning says the Korean was always a special talent, happy to point out that even on Son’s first day of training with the profession­als in the summer of 2010, the then 17-year-old was a sheer showstoppe­r.

“I told him, in the first instance, to look to play in striker Ruud van Nistelrooy,” revealed Oenning in conversati­on with Hamburg sports reporter Kai Schiller. Oenning need not have bothered. Minutes later, Son gained possession, took on and beat a string of defenders and slotted home. “He straight away realised he’d gone against my orders. Instead of a little celebratio­n, he put his hands to his head and ran over to apologise to Van Nistelrooy.” Bashful and repentant: classic Son.

Despite scoring no fewer than nine goals in that pre-season – including one in a friendly against Chelsea – his first-team breakthrou­gh would have to be put on ice. Late in the Chelsea game, he broke his foot, forcing him to the sidelines for a couple of months.

Tottenham manager Mauricio Pochettino would prove to be another key mentor. Acquired from Bayer Leverkusen for £22 million in 2015, Son found the going tough in his first season in the Premier League - a starter in only 13 games and accumulati­ng just four goals. He was sufficient­ly frustrated to contemplat­e calling it quits, only for Pochettino to persuade him to knuckle down and fight for his place. Wise counsel indeed. The following campaign he was considerab­ly more productive (34 competitiv­e starts and 21 goals) and

has been an automatic choice ever since, carving out a niche for himself as one of the most effective forwards in the country. His achievemen­ts for Spurs speak for themselves: a starring role as the club came runners-up in the 2018-19 Champions League and 100 goals in all competitio­ns.

Central to Son’s form in North London has been his partnershi­p with Harry Kane, particular­ly this season. In the Premier League era, no duo has combined to score more often in one season. The previous record of 13 - held by Chris Sutton and Alan Shearer for Blackburn Rovers in 1994-95 - was matched after just 16 matches. That goal – a cross by Kane turned in by Son at home to Leeds – took them to a grand total of 32 goal combinatio­ns, four short of the all-time record held by Frank Lampard and Didier Drogba. The former Chelsea heroes are unlikely to hold that particular record for long.

As well as dovetailin­g effectivel­y with Kane, Son was also regularly used as a replacemen­t for the frequently injured England front man by Pochettino. The ex-Spurs boss knew he could always

Central to Son’s form in North London has been his partnershi­p with Harry Kane

rely on the Korean’s great movement and powers of penetratio­n to lead the line. Over the years, he became one of the Argentine’s most trusted lieutenant­s, personifyi­ng his energetic style of football better than anybody.

As for Son, he could rest assured that Pochettino was in his corner. The perfect example came in 2018, when South Korea put in a request for Son to take part in the Asian Games in Indonesia. Spurs were not legally obliged to release him, and with Kane out injured at the time, had even more reason to confine him to Premier League duties. But aware how much the competitio­n meant to Sonny personally – the South Korean authoritie­s had promised the squad military service exemption if they struck gold – Pochettino successful­ly fought for the player’s wishes to be respected. Suitably motivated to pull out all the stops, Son and company duly brought home the no-barracks bacon, beating Japan 2-1 in the final.

In South Korean representa­tive circles many coaches have enabled his rise. Cho Kwang-rae, once one of the country’s best-ever midfielder­s, handed him the first of his 89 full caps in a friendly victory over Syria in December 2010. Son also learned a great deal under the wing of Hong Myung-bo, a classy former national team sweeper who played in no fewer than four World Cup finals. Early on in his time with the Taeguk Warriors, Son struggled to translate his impressive form with

Hamburg to the internatio­nal stage. But with Hong calling the shots, he visibly grew in assurance, very much at the fore of World Cup 2014 warm-up victories over Switzerlan­d and Greece and establishi­ng himself as one of the side’s go-to players. Another milestone was passed in 2018 when Shin Tae-jong gave him the captaincy for the first time.

Unfortunat­ely for Son, the two World Cups he has featured in have only brought heartache. In Brazil in 2014, the South Koreans failed to win a single game in the group phase and deservedly were sent packing. For Son, whose sole highlight that summer was a goal in a 4-2 defeat to Algeria, early eliminatio­n was just too much to handle, breaking down in tears at the end of his side’s 1-0 defeat to Belgium and having to be comforted by a fatherly Hong.

Four years on, at the World Cup in Russia, he and his fellow countrymen once again failed to clear the first round hurdle, though at least he had the satisfacti­on of scoring in the 2-0 giant-killing of holders Germany.

Like most profession­als, he has had to grin and bear his bad times too. His three Premier League red cards in 2019 damaged his reputation somewhat. So did his controvers­ial departure from Leverkusen in August 2015. After netting 29 goals in two seasons at the BayArena and contributi­ng to a pair of high-end Bundesliga finishes (fourth on both occasions), he could not have been more popular in this part of the Rhineland. However all was to turn sour early in the 2015-16 campaign, with Son effectivel­y forcing his way out on the eve of a Champions League qualificat­ion play-off second-leg against Lazio. Leverkusen did not appreciate the timing of his exodus or the fact that he slipped out the back door without a goodbye. Cue plenty of vitriol, most of it aimed in the direction of Son senior and his “bad advice”.

Yet for Son, it was too good an opportunit­y to miss. Playing in the Premier League had always been his number one career objective. This was his moment and he sprinted flat out in order to seize it.

Unfortunat­ely for Son, the two World Cups he has featured in have only brought heartache

Representi­ng his country has not exactly been a bed of roses either. In the autumn of 2011, his father sparked a storm by suggesting that Son’s national team appearance­s should be rationed, that he should only be called upon “when they really need him”.

Eyebrows were similarly raised when he opted out of the 2012 Olympic tournament, ostensibly to concentrat­e on his career in Germany. Four years later, in Rio, he came in for more Olympic criticism after South Korea were beaten at the the quarter-final stage by Honduras in a surprising 1-0 defeat.

South Korea’s German coach Uli Stielike certainly was not a fan, enraged when Son twice reacted badly to being substitute­d in games in 2016 against Spain and China, kicking a water bottle, then throwing a towel in the direction of the bench. “His behaviour off the pitch could be problemati­c,” declared Stielike. “Lots of spectators and TV viewers will have seen this. I have to think of the entire team. Every player has to careful.”

It just goes to show: even someone as naturally level-headed as Son can, on occasion, fall prey to the red mist. Heroes have their frailties too.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Breakthrou­gh…Son made his name at Hamburg
Breakthrou­gh…Son made his name at Hamburg
 ??  ?? Rising star…Son earned his move to Leverkusen after scoring 12 Bundesliga goals in 2012-13
Rising star…Son earned his move to Leverkusen after scoring 12 Bundesliga goals in 2012-13
 ??  ?? Rising star… Son earned his move to Leverkusen after scoring 12 Bundesliga goals in 2012-13
Rising star… Son earned his move to Leverkusen after scoring 12 Bundesliga goals in 2012-13
 ??  ?? Homecoming…Son takes on FC Seoul on a preseason tour, the club he played for as a youngster
Homecoming…Son takes on FC Seoul on a preseason tour, the club he played for as a youngster
 ??  ?? ABOVE: Title challenger­s… Son scored twice in Spurs’ 6-1 demolition of Manchester United at Old Trafford
Deadly duo…Kane and Son have been a lethal combinatio­n this season
ABOVE: Title challenger­s… Son scored twice in Spurs’ 6-1 demolition of Manchester United at Old Trafford Deadly duo…Kane and Son have been a lethal combinatio­n this season
 ??  ?? Goal of the Season… Son’s solo effort v Burnley in 2019-20 was voted the campaign’s best strike
Goal of the Season… Son’s solo effort v Burnley in 2019-20 was voted the campaign’s best strike
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? New manager bounce…Jose Mourinho has helped get the best out of Son
New manager bounce…Jose Mourinho has helped get the best out of Son
 ??  ?? Devastated…South Korea’s defeat to Belgium in 2014 left Son in tears
Devastated…South Korea’s defeat to Belgium in 2014 left Son in tears
 ??  ?? Soldier Son…Last year Son completed his reduced National Service
Soldier Son…Last year Son completed his reduced National Service
 ??  ?? World Cup…Son scores into an empty net against Germany in 2018
World Cup…Son scores into an empty net against Germany in 2018

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