Hong Myung-Bo
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Hong Myung-Bo | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Date of birth | February 12, 1969 (age 38) | |
Place of birth | Seoul, Republic of Korea | |
Height | 1.82 m (5'10") | |
Nickname | Libero of Asia | |
Playing position | Assistant Manager/(former Defender) | |
Club information | ||
Current club | Korea Republic | |
Youth clubs | ||
1987-1991 | Korea University | |
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1992-1997 1997-1998 1999-2002 2002 2003-2004 |
Pohang Steelers Bellmare Hiratsuka Kashiwa Reysol Pohang Steelers Los Angeles Galaxy |
|
National team2 | ||
1990-2002 | Korea Republic | 135 (9) |
Teams managed | ||
2005- present | Korea Republic
(Assistant Manager) |
|
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Hong Myung-Bo | |
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Hangul: |
홍명보
|
Hanja: |
洪明甫
|
Revised Romanization: | Hong Myeong-bo |
McCune-Reischauer: | Hong Myŏng-bo |
Hong Myung-Bo (born February 12, 1969 in Seoul) is a South Korean football legend. Hong was a key member of the Korean national team in four World Cups, and was the first Asian player to play in four consecutive World Cup finals tournaments. He retired from playing following the end of the 2004 Major League Soccer season, having finished his career with the Los Angeles Galaxy. He is among the "FIFA 100", a FIFA's selection of the 125 greatest living footballers in the world.
Contents |
[edit] National team
[edit] 1994 World Cup
Hong's individual talent was most notably showcased during the 1994 World Cup group stage. With Korea trailing 2-0 against Spain with only 5 minutes to go, Hong made the score 2-1 and shortly after he created the second for winger Seo Jung-Won to equalize the memorable match.
Two weeks later, Korea found themselves trailing 3-0 at half time against Germany – the defending World Champions at the time, which included the likes of Jürgen Klinsmann, Jürgen Kohler, Matthias Sammer, Rudi Völler and Lothar Matthäus. Hong created the first Korean goal for striker Hwang Sun Hong to put into the net, then scored the second himself, but the Koreans failed to achieve the comeback.
[edit] 2002 World Cup
Hong captained the Korean national team to a historic fourth place finish in the 2002 World Cup, himself winning the Bronze Ball award as the third best player in the tournament. He ended his international career after the 2002 World Cup as the all-time leader in appearances for the South Korean national team, with 135 caps.
[edit] Post-playing career
In September 26, 2005, after retirement as a player, Hong has returned to the national team as an assistant coach. Helping the manager Dick Advocaat, he took part in the 2006 FIFA World Cup, and now works with the new manager Pim Verbeek.
[edit] Honors
Individual honors
- Selected to FIFA 100: 2004
- 2002 FIFA World Cup Bronze Ball Award Winner : 2002
- 2002 FIFA World Cup All-Star Team : 2002
- Asian Cup Best Eleven: 2000
- Asian Footballer of the Year: 1997
- J-League MVP: 2000
- J-League Best Eleven: 2000
- K-League Best Eleven: 1996, 1995, 1994, 1992
Hong was named by Pelé as one of the top 125 greatest living footballers in March 2004.
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South Korea squad - 1990 FIFA World Cup | ![]() |
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1 Kim Poong‑Joo | 2 Park Kyung‑Hoon | 3 Choi Kang‑Hee | 4 Yoon Deuk‑Yeo | 5 Chung Yong‑Hwan | 6 Lee Tae‑Ho | 7 Noh Soo‑Jin | 8 Chung Hae‑Won | 9 Hwang Bo‑Kwan | 10 Lee Sang‑Yoon | 11 Byun Byung‑Joo | 12 Lee Heung‑Sil | 13 Chung Jong‑Soo | 14 Choi Soon‑Ho | 15 Cho Min‑Kook | 16 Kim Joo‑Sung | 17 Gu Sang‑Bum | 18 Hwang Sun‑Hong | 19 Jeong Gi‑Dong | 20 Hong Myung‑Bo | 21 Choi In‑Young | 22 Lee Young‑Jin | Coach: Lee Hoi‑Taek |
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South Korea squad - 1994 FIFA World Cup | ![]() |
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1 Choi In‑Young | 2 Chung Jong‑Son | 3 Lee Jong‑Hwa | 4 Kim Pan‑Keun | 5 Park Jung‑Bae | 6 Lee Young‑Jin | 7 Shin Hong‑Gi | 8 Noh Jung‑Yoon | 9 Kim Joo‑Sung | 10 Ko Jeong‑Woon | 11 Seo Jung‑Won | 12 Choi Yong‑Il | 13 An Ik‑Soo | 14 Choi Dae‑Shik | 15 Cho Jin‑Ho | 16 Ha Seok‑Ju | 17 Gu Sang‑Bum | 18 Hwang Sun‑Hong | 19 Choi Moon‑Sik | 20 Hong Myung‑Bo | 21 Park Chul‑Woo | 22 Lee Woon‑Jae | Coach: Kim Ho |
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South Korea squad - 1998 FIFA World Cup | ![]() |
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1 Kim Byung‑Ji | 2 Choi Sung‑Yong | 3 Lee Lim‑Saeng | 4 Choi Yong‑Il | 5 Lee Min‑Sung | 6 Yoo Sang‑Chul | 7 Kim Do‑Keun | 8 Noh Jung‑Yoon | 9 Kim Do‑Hoon | 10 Choi Yong‑Soo | 11 Seo Jung‑Won | 12 Lee Sang‑Hun | 13 Kim Tae‑Young | 14 Ko Jong‑Soo | 15 Lee Sang‑Yoon | 16 Jang Hyung‑Seok | 17 Ha Seok‑Ju | 18 Hwang Sun‑Hong | 19 Jang Dae‑Il | 20 Hong Myung‑Bo | 21 Lee Dong‑Gook | 22 Seo Dong‑Myung | Coach: Cha Bum‑Kun |
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South Korea squad - 2002 FIFA World Cup Fourth Place | ![]() |
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1 Lee Woon‑Jae | 2 Hyun Young‑Min | 3 Choi Sung‑Yong | 4 Choi Jin‑Cheul | 5 Kim Nam‑Il | 6 Yoo Sang‑Chul | 7 Kim Tae‑Young | 8 Choi Tae‑Uk | 9 Seol Ki‑Hyeon | 10 Lee Young‑Pyo | 11 Choi Yong‑Soo | 12 Kim Byung‑Ji | 13 Lee Eul‑Yong | 14 Lee Chun‑Soo | 15 Lee Min‑Sung | 16 Cha Du‑Ri | 17 Yoon Jung‑Hwan | 18 Hwang Sun‑Hong | 19 Ahn Jung‑Hwan | 20 Hong Myung‑Bo | 21 Park Ji‑Sung | 22 Song Chong‑Gug | 23 Choi Eun‑Sung | Coach: Hiddink |
Persondata | |
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NAME | Hong Myung-Bo |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Professional football player |
DATE OF BIRTH | February 12, 1969 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Seoul, South Korea |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |
Categories: Articles lacking sources from January 2007 | All articles lacking sources | 1969 births | Living people | FIFA 100 | Football (soccer) central defenders | Los Angeles Galaxy players | South Korean footballers | Kashiwa Reysol players | Shonan Bellmare players | Non-Japanese footballers in Japan | FIFA World Cup 1990 players | FIFA World Cup 1994 players | FIFA World Cup 1998 players | FIFA World Cup 2002 players | Footballers with 100 or more caps