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This is an archive article published on June 29, 2002

Is it a 3rd grade match? No, says Korea

There will be no letting up by feisty World Cup hosts South Korea as they battle Turkey on Saturday for third place and bragging rights as t...

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There will be no letting up by feisty World Cup hosts South Korea as they battle Turkey on Saturday for third place and bragging rights as the most successful outsiders at a tournament full of surprises.

With millions of Red Devil supporters expected to fill the streets one last time, coach Guus Hiddink’s side hope to cap their historic run with a win over a Turkey side armed with similar speed and grit.

Turkey knocked out co-hosts Japan 1-0 in the second round, offering further incentive for South Korea, who have emerged as Asia’s best side in history. South Korea ended a 48-year winless streak that lasted through five previous finals to beat Poland, Portugal, Italy and Spain with pacy, physical football.

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Hiddink’s former Netherlands team were lacklustre in a 2-1 loss to Croatia in the third place match at the finals in 1998 but he said South Korea would not disappoint.

“I take this third place very seriously…it will be a very tough game but I think there’s a lot of prestige for third place,” he told reporters after a training session on Thursday. The only coach to take two teams to the penultimate World Cup match, Hiddink said South Korea owed it to their ardent Red Devil supporters.

They are up against a Turkish team that has made the most of their first finals appearance in 48 years.

Turkey emerged from the group stage with just one win but added two more against Japan and Senegal, the team that stunned reigning champions France 1-0 in the tournament’s opening match.

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“I’m not going to change the style of the Korean team which (has) made it famous in the world,” Hiddink said.

“It will be a 50-50 game because they (Turkey) have the same style, they like to attack as well, they have technically skilled players.” Hiddink is expected to start Ahn Jung-Hwan ahead of veteran striker Hwang Sun-Hong who is nursing an injured thigh.

Ahn has scored twice in the finals including heading home a golden goal to dispatch three-time champions Italy. A shuffle in defence is also possible if Choi Jin-Cheul cannot shake off an ankle injury from Tuesday’s 1-0 loss to Germany, with versatile midfielder Song Chong-Gug a possible replacement.

Turkey striker Ilhan Mansiz said the two sides know each other well after sharing to a scoreless draw in March. “It will be a fun match. We drew with them in a one-off (friendly) game so we know their strengths and weaknesses,” he said.

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