
South Korea Coach Resigns After World Cup Exit, President Orders Investigation
Hong Myung-bo stepped down and President Lee Jae-myung launched a rare public attack on the football leadership after the Taeguk Warriors were eliminated in the group stage.
South Korea’s World Cup campaign ended in abrupt failure when results on the final day of the group stage went against them, extinguishing hopes of squeezing into the knockout rounds as one of the eight best third-placed finishers. The team had opened with a 2-1 victory over the Czech Republic, but consecutive 1-0 defeats by Mexico and South Africa—the latter a shock loss in which captain Son Heung-min was controversially dropped to the bench—left them on three points and dependent on other groups. The decisive blow came when Congo’s 3-1 win over Uzbekistan mathematically sealed South Korea’s exit, sparking a furious reaction from fans and, unusually, the country’s head of state.
Within hours of the confirmation, head coach Hong Myung-bo announced his resignation at a press conference in Guadalajara, the team’s base camp. “I would like to sincerely apologise to the citizens who have loved Korean football,” he said, accepting full responsibility. The 57-year-old, a former national team captain and one of the country’s all-time greats as a player, was in his second stint in charge—his first having also ended in a group-stage exit in 2014. Hong’s appointment in July 2024 had itself been contentious, with the Korean press widely accusing the football association of favouritism and a lack of transparency in the selection process.
The sporting failure swiftly translated into a political matter. President Lee Jae-myung took to social media to deliver a blistering critique of the team’s leadership, declaring that he felt “not just surprise but deep bewilderment” at the outcome. He asserted that the appointment of “incompetent people” when “loyalty and factionalism are valued over competence” had made the result predictable. Lee confirmed he had requested the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism to conduct a thorough investigation into the circumstances of the elimination, given the public funds invested in the World Cup campaign. The presidential intervention, apologising to the nation for the “profound disappointment”, was an extraordinary escalation.
In South Korea, the public and media response was equally severe. The state broadcaster KBS blurred Hong’s face in a news bulletin, a visual treatment normally reserved for criminal suspects, prompting a mixture of mockery and debate. A parliamentary petition demanding his dismissal had already gathered the necessary signatures for review even before the official exit, while social media images of shop signs barring the coach’s entry went viral. The decision to bench Son Heung-min, the country’s 33-year-old talisman, for the must-not-lose match against South Africa drew particular ire that the gamble had backfired, leaving him to contemplate the end of his World Cup career.
Hong’s resignation marks the immediate consequence, but the political and administrative fallout looks set to extend further. The federation now faces the task of appointing a new coach and managing a transitional squad, with Son likely to retire from international football. President Lee’s pledge of swift reforms to sports administration signals that, viewed from Seoul, the early exit has become a matter of systemic failure rather than a simple upset on the pitch.
| Latin American press | −0.20 | neutral |
|---|---|---|
| Continental European press | 0.00 | neutral |
The South Korean president demands accountability for the failure, the coach resigns under the weight of responsibility.
The crisis is personalized in the figure of the president ordering an investigation, turning a sports event into a state affair.
The context of the team's performance or prior criticism is omitted.
South Korea's early elimination leads to the coach's resignation; the president launches an investigation to assess responsibilities.
A factual register is adopted, citing statistics and precedents, to normalize the event as part of the sports cycle.
The emotional dimension and internal political pressure are omitted.
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