Location | Asia (AFC) East Asia (EAFF) |
---|---|
Teams | Japan South Korea |
First meeting | 7 March 1954[1] 1954 FIFA World Cup qualification Japan 1–5 South Korea |
Latest meeting | 27 July 2022 2022 EAFF Championship Japan 3–0 South Korea |
Statistics | |
Meetings total | 81[α] |
Top scorer | Kunishige Kamamoto (7) |
All-time series | Japan: 16[α] South Korea: 42[α] Draw: 23 |
Largest victory | South Korea 5–1 Japan 7 March 1954 1954 FIFA World Cup qualification |
The Japan–South Korea football rivalry is a rivalry between the Japan national football team and South Korea national football team, and is one of the Japan–South Korea sports rivalries. The two have played each other officially since 1954. These matches are known as Nikkansen (Japanese: 日韓戦) or Haniljeon (Korean: 한일전) in their respective languages.
The historical and regional conflicts between Japan and South Korea, including Japanese occupation of Korea until 1945, have greatly influenced the football rivalry between the two countries.[5] Their first encounter in football was a two-legged qualifier for the 1954 FIFA World Cup. Both matches were held in Japan, with the South Korean government banning the Japan national team from entering their country at the time. South Korea qualified for the 1954 World Cup after defeating Japan 7–3 on aggregate.[6] The two countries also met in the two-legged final of the 1986 FIFA World Cup qualification, and South Korea once again advanced to the World Cup by winning 3–1 on aggregate.
Japan conceded the World Cup berth to South Korea one more time despite a 1–0 derby win in 1994. Japan claimed the top spot before the last match in Asia's round-robin tournament, but was overtaken by Saudi Arabia and South Korea after drawing 2–2 with Iraq in that match. The draw between Japan and Iraq was called the "Agony of Doha" in Japan and the "Miracle of Doha" in South Korea.[5]
The "Japan–South Korea Regular Match" was held 15 times from 1972 to 1991, and South Korea led the event with 10 wins, 2 draws and 3 losses.[7] Its revival was steadily expected by the press,[8][9][10] but on the contrary, there were no "A" team matches between the two countries for ten years between 2011 and 2021, apart from the games at the EAFF Championship. Some of the causes were scheduling conflicts and poor diplomatic relations.[11]
South Korea overwhelmingly led the first 50 matches with 32 wins, 11 draws and 7 losses, but the rivalry has become a very close contest since the early 1990s following the establishment of the J.League.[7] From 2021 to 2023, South Korea suffered five consecutive defeats against Japan at all age levels of men's football, all by the same scoreline of 3–0, including the "A" team friendly on 25 March 2021.[note 1] In 2023, JoongAng Ilbo surveyed 30 executives in the Korea Football Association, mostly K League club administrators, and 80% agreed that Japan overtook South Korea ten years ago.[24][25][26][27]
The highest level of matches which the two nations could contest are the FIFA World Cup, FIFA World Cup qualification and the AFC Asian Cup. As of 2024, their last meeting at these levels dates back to the 1998 FIFA World Cup qualifiers and the 2011 AFC Asian Cup. They have never met at the FIFA World Cup.
In the EAFF Championships, both countries field mostly players from their domestic leagues rather than their best players based in Europe.[28] The difference in levels between their first-team squad and their domestic league squad depends on the number of players playing in Europe. Japan has had a boom of Europe-based players since the 2010s, hence their domestic league squad is described as the third[29][30] or fourth[31] national squad. On the other hand, as of the mid-2020s, South Korea's first team does not consist of many players from Europe, hence their domestic-league squad in EAFF is described as 1.5 or "slightly below 1.5" squad.[32][33][34] However, Japanese and Korean fans and media still take much pride in their EAFF rivalry. Japan's coach Vahid Halilhodžić played with his third squad and lost to South Korea 4–1 in Tokyo at the 2017 EAFF E-1 Football Championship,[30] leading to heavy domestic criticism and contributing to him being sacked just before the 2018 FIFA World Cup.
Venue | Japan wins[α] | South Korea wins[α] | Draws | Japan goals | South Korea goals |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
At Japan home | 8 | 16 | 8 | 38 | 48 |
At South Korea home | 5 | 15 | 3 | 17 | 35 |
Neutral venue | 3 | 11 | 12 | 21 | 41 |
Total | 16 | 42 | 23 | 76 | 124 |
Venue | Japan wins | South Korea wins | Draws |
---|---|---|---|
At Japan home | 8 | 0 | 3 |
At South Korea home | 4 | 1 | 5 |
Neutral venue | 7 | 3 | 3 |
Total | 19 | 4 | 11 |
FIFA recognises only matches played within the FIFA World Cup (including preliminary competitions), continental competitions (including qualifiers), friendly matches between senior national teams and Olympic final and qualifying matches played up to and including 1948 (with certain exceptions) as "A" international matches.
하지만 사실상의 일본 3군을 상대로 결과와 내용을 모두 놓쳤다.
일본 현지 언론은 이번 대표팀을 사실상 '3군'이라고 표현했다. 해외파 선수들은 물론이며, 우라와 레즈 소속 선수 5명도 제외됐기 때문이다. 실제로 그라운드 위에서 개개인의 실력 차가 도드라지긴 했다. 하지만 더 큰 차이는 한일전을 맞는 양 팀 감독의 태도였다.
Japan were not particularly impressive, but let's not pretend that this was anything other than Japan's third or fourth string eleven.
이번 대회는 해외파와 일부 K리거들이 빠진 가운데 진행됐다. 사실상 1.5군 이하 정도로 볼 수 있는 멤버였는데
냉정히 말해 1.5군에도 미치지 않는 전력을 꾸린 대표팀에 많은 관심을 기대하는 것은 곤란하다. 더욱이 올해 대회는 일본과 중국이 자국리그의 어린 선수들을 대거 출전시켜 훨씬 시들해졌다.
남자 축구 한일전 경기가 한국의 '1.5군'과 일본의 'U-23' 간 자존심 싸움이 된 모양새다.