South Korea: Global Briefing
The Mechanics of the Taegeuk Machine
/ How do the Taegeuk Warriors behave when they aren't in possession?
They retreat into a 5-4-1 mid-block that acts like a well-oiled garage door: it stays down until it’s time to let the car out. By inviting the opposition to pass harmlessly around the periphery, they wait for a specific trigger — a heavy touch or a weak square ball — to snap into a collective press. It is defensive architecture designed to turn an opponent's boredom into a Korean breakaway.
/ What is the most dangerous weapon in the Korean arsenal?
The transition is their theatre, and Son Heung-min is the lead actor. His diagonal darts from the left flank into the central corridor are the team's primary offensive heartbeat, usually serviced by Lee Kang-in’s left foot, which can find a gap in a picket fence. When it works, it’s less of a build-up and more of a sudden, vertical surge that leaves defenders checking their pockets for their keys.