2012년 5월 4일 금요일

South Korea wins U-17 Women's World Cup

Article Date
09-26-2010 09:56
Scrap Date
09-30-2010 16:33
Title
South Korea wins U-17 Women's World Cup
Topic
South Korea won U-17 Women's world Cup for the first time by beating Japan in a 5-4 penalty shootout at Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, Sunday.
Text
South Korea captured the U-17 Women’s World Cup for the first time by beating Japan in a 5-4 penalty shootout at Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, Sunday.
 
The match was *neck-and-neck and went to a shootout after a 3-3 score line after extra time. It also *enthralled the nation as it was the first time South Korea emerged victorious in a FIFA-sponsored tournament for either men or women.
 
South Korean forward Yeo Min-ji’s eight goals saw her claim the Golden Ball and Golden Boot awards, as the best player and top scorer, becoming the first South Korean player to receive both prizes at an international tournament.
 
"Though I was in very poor condition today, I did my best," she said after the match. She expressed her hope to become a greater player in the future by making up her weaknesses.
 
No one at Hasely Crawford Stadium was sure who the champion would be until defender Jang Sel-gi sent the ball past the Japanese goalkeeper for South Korea’s victory in the shootout.
 
It was South Korea that *nudged home the opening goal in the sixth minute with the first shot of the match. Midfielder Lee Jung-eun received a short pass and *rifled a 25-yard shot into the top corner past goalkeeper Eri Hirao.
 
With both teams in their first-ever final of a FIFA competition, the Japanese youngsters showed they were worthy of their place. They quickly picked themselves up and leveled the game in the 11th minute, and then took the lead six minutes later. The Korean defense managed to clear the ball from a packed penalty box but midfielder Hikaru Naomoto was first to the ball. She rounded an opponent and slammed home an *equalizer from about 30 yards with her left foot. Yoko Tanaka then scored from close range in the 17th.
As Japan continued to threaten the South Korean net, South Korea found an equalizer to end the first period 2-2. Captain Kim Ar-eum stepped up in a set-piece on the stroke of halftime and arrowed a 40 yard free kick into the net that saw the two teams start from scratch in the second half.
 
Japan re-took the lead in the 57th and South Korea responded in the 79th, before the two teams were forced into extra time tied at 3-3.
Striker Kumi Yokoyama penetrated from the left, looking to add to her tournament *tally of six goals. Kim Min-ah *deflected the 17-year-old Japanese striker’s effort, but forward Chika Kato put the ball into the net from the edge of the box.
 
*Substitute Lee So-dam sent the proceedings into overtime, as she *squared the match with a stunning shot from outside the penalty area.
The Asian finalists took the match into a penalty shootout, as the *squads remained scoreless in extra time, with neither team seriously threatening their opponent’s goal.
 
The ladies as well as the fans in the stadium held their breath for every moment of the penalty shootout. South Korean midfielder Lee Jung-eun, the first penalty-taker, could have been made to regret missing the nation’s chance at a historic win as her shot was saved by the Japanese keeper. Defender Naoko Wada then missed Japan’s second penalty.
 
The South Koreans claimed their first world title in any category of age or gender as Jang Sel-gi converted the team’s fifth attempt while Japanese defender Tomoko Muramatsu’s attempt hit the crossbar.
 
Meanwhile, North Korea lost 1-0 to Spain in the third-place match held at the same stadium. The Spaniard maintained their lead after scoring their winning goal in the 56th minute through striker Raquel Pinel to prevent the Asian squads from sweeping the top
three places.
My Opinion
At last, young ladies got to the summit in Trinidad and Tobago without outfits. Their one step was such a moment of adventure. It was so pitiful that girls of the same age bumped into global players with fragile bodies. However, the reliance and self-sacrifice of 23 young tigers were enough to overcome it, and the fruition was born in the final match.
Like Korea-Japan match, the game was so severe. It was no less than man's football game that many ladies got tangles for one ball. Sometimes the process of scoring a goal was so beautiful. The goal was scored in such a passing attack of FC Barcelona or a middle-distance shot. But Korea tied Japan three to three and took the match into a penalty shootout. Finally, Nike gave the World Cup to Korean ladies.
Yeo Min-ji is absolutely a hero of U-17 Women's World Cup. Her nickname is turtle. She's slow in everything. One is not true. She is a dragon on the field. Golden Boot and Golden Ball demonstrated her ability.
Tae-kuk mark got a star. This is self-esteem but shouldn't be self-conceit. With this burden on the chest, young ladies will prepare next World Cup.
Vocabulary
*neck-and-neck : 막상막하의
*enthrall : vt. ~의 마음을 사로잡다
*nudge : vt. 슬쩍 찌르다
*rifle : vt. (공을) 굉장한 속도로 날리다
*equalizer : n. 동점이 되는 득점
*tally : n. (경기의) 득점
*deflect : vt. 빗나가게 하다
*substitute : n. 보결 선수
*square : vt.(시합을) 동점으로 만들다
*squad : n. 팀
Important sentence structure
None
reference materials
Members of the South Korean team celebrate with the cup after winning the FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup against Japan at Hasely Crawford Stadium in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, Sunday. The win marks South Korea’s first championship title ever in a FIFA-sponsored tournament in both men’s and women's football. / AFP-Yonhap

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