Son, Kim and Lee tasting success in Europe despite South Korea’s soccer struggles

Son, Kim and Lee tasting success in Europe despite South Korea’s soccer struggles
South Korean national soccer team players Kim Min-jae (right) of German giant Bayern Munich and Son Heung-min (left) of Tottenham. (X/@OneFootball)
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Updated 13 May 2025

Son, Kim and Lee tasting success in Europe despite South Korea’s soccer struggles

Son, Kim and Lee tasting success in Europe despite South Korea’s soccer struggles
  • Kim Min-jae helped German giant Bayern Munich lift the Bundesliga title
  • “I think this will be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, something I may never have again,” Son said

SEOUL: South Korea’s national soccer team may be stumbling toward 2026 World Cup qualification and its clubs may have struggled in the Asian Champions League, but three of its biggest stars have been finding success in Europe.

Kim Min-jae helped German giant Bayern Munich lift the Bundesliga title, the 28-year-old defender’s second major prize in Europe after winning the Italian championship with Napoli two years earlier.

While Kim has two European trophies, the biggest star in Korean soccer is Son Heung-min and the 32-year-old forward is yet to win a major title. That could change next week with the Tottenham captain preparing to lead the London-based Spurs in the Europa League final against Premier League rival Manchester United.

“To complete the puzzle, you need every piece. Ultimately, I think, the most important final piece is still missing,” Son, who joined Tottenham in 2015, told South Korea media in London on Monday.

“I think I’ve been chasing that piece for 10 years. I’d love to finish that puzzle this time.”

Son was part of the Tottenham team that lost the 2019 UEFA Champions League final to Liverpool. Now, as the senior player, he’s determined to end what has been a difficult season for club — Tottenham are currently 17th out of 20 teams in the Premier League — and country, on a high.

“I think this will be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, something I may never have again,” Son said. “I hope I won’t have regrets afterward. When I return to Korea after the season, I’d like to give my Korean fans and our Tottenham supporters the biggest smile I can bring.”

Son returned to action last weekend after an absence through injury but is set to start against Manchester United. The same is not automatically the case for Lee Kang-in.

The 24-year-old Lee, an attacking midfielder has been struggling for playing time of late for Paris Saint-Germain. He has appeared in 11 UEFA Champions League games this season but was on the bench as the French club beat Arsenal in the semifinals to book a final against Inter Milan on May 31 in Munich.

That game will marks the end of the European season and the start of transfer speculation. Lee has been linked with clubs elsewhere in Europe. So has Kim, whose season at Munich has been affected by injuries.

“I want to keep playing for Munich,” Kim said last month. “There’s no reason why I should leave this team. I like playing for Munich. I want to continue playing for this team next season. It’s one thing that’s important to me right now.”

It remains to be seen where the three biggest stars in Korean football are in August but the focus is currently on winning three prizes in European club football and bringing some good news for fans at home.


Potter picks injured Isak in his first Sweden squad, Gyokeres out

Updated 8 sec ago

Potter picks injured Isak in his first Sweden squad, Gyokeres out

Potter picks injured Isak in his first Sweden squad, Gyokeres out
Former West Ham United manager Potter took over as Sweden boss last month
“Alex can hopefully play a bit this weekend and will be in Spain on Monday,” he said

STOCKHOLM: New Sweden boss Graham Potter called up injured Liverpool forward Alexander Isak on Wednesday for their upcoming World Cup qualifiers this month, but Arsenal striker Viktor Gyokeres was left out due to injury.
Former West Ham United manager Potter took over as Sweden boss last month, with the 50-year-old tasked with salvaging their flailing 2026 World Cup qualifying campaign.
Sweden are bottom of Group B with one point after four games and although they cannot qualify directly, they have a slim chance of securing a playoff berth if results go their way.
Isak, who made a 125 million pound ($167.76 million) switch to Liverpool in September, has not played since a 5-1 win over Eintracht Frankfurt, missing the club’s last four games in all competitions due to a groin injury.
Lucas Bergvall was also a doubt after the Tottenham Hotspur midfielder suffered a concussion, but Potter said both were available.
“As things stand right now, they are available. Lucas has had a concussion, but hopefully he can be there when it’s time for us to play,” Potter said.
“Alex can hopefully play a bit this weekend and will be in Spain on Monday.”
The squad will gather in Marbella, Spain, before traveling to Switzerland for the first game against the group leaders on November 15 before they play Slovenia three days later.
Gyokeres, meanwhile, is not available after Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta said he had muscular issues which forced the 27-year-old to miss Tuesday’s Champions League victory over Slavia Prague.

SWEDEN SQUAD FOR WORLD CUP QUALIFIERS
Goalkeepers: Viktor Johansson, Kristoffer Nordfeldt, Noel Törnqvist, Jacob Widell Zetterstrom
Defenders: Gabriel Gudmundsson, Isak Hien, Emil Holm, Gustaf Lagerbielke, Victor Lindelof, Ken Sema, Carl Starfelt, Daniel Svensson
Midfielders and forward: Taha Ali, Yasin Ayari, Roony Bardghji, Lucas Bergvall, Alexander Bernhardsson, Anthony Elanga, Alexander Isak, Jesper Karlstrom, Hugo Larsson, Isac Lidberg, Gustav Lundgren, Benjamin Nygren, Mattias Svanberg, Besfort Zeneli.