NEW COACH FOR SLUMPING K LEAGUE CLUB DETERMINED TO SHAKE OFF PERSONAL DISAPPOINTMENT

New coach for slumping K League club determined to shake off personal disappointment

New coach for slumping K League club determined to shake off personal disappointment

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Hwang Sun-hong, new head coach for Daejeon Hana Citizen, speaks at a press conference at Daejeon World Cup Stadium, Wednesday. Yonhap

As the new head coach of the struggling K League 1 club Daejeon Hana Citizen, Hwang Sun-hong said


Wednesday he will try to move past his own personal disappointment to put his team back on track.


Hwang, 55, was appointed as Daejeon's new bench boss Monday, with the club mired in 11th place among


12 clubs in the top South Korean league with 14 points from 16 matches.


It was viewed as a controversial hiring in many quarters, since Hwang was only a few weeks removed from


a spectacular failure as head coach of Korea's under-23 men's national team.


With Hwang running the show, Korea failed to qualify for the Paris Olympics, after losing to Indonesia on


penalties in the quarterfinals of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) U-23 Asian Cup in Qatar. Korea


had played at every Olympic men's football tournament since 1988, but the streak ended unceremoniously


with a loss to underdogs.


With wounds still fresh at his introductory presser as a Daejeon boss Wednesday, Hwang said he was


determined to get back on his feet.


"The important question is, are you going to stay down, or are you going to get back up?" Hwang said at


Daejeon World Cup Stadium in Daejeon, some 140 kilometers south of Seoul. "At this point, it was


important for me to trust myself and take on a new challenge. Between fighting again and giving up, I


chose the former. I will keep on fighting."


Hwang said he still felt terrible about letting fans down and added he was sorry to players who will not get


to experience the Olympics.


Prior to taking over the U-23 program in September 2021, Hwang had coached Daejeon in 2020 while


they were still in the second-tier K League 2. His first spell didn't even last a season, as he stepped down


midway through the 2020 season with the club in third place -- despite preseason expectations that they


would contend for the league 추천 title.


"I'd like to thank the club for giving me another opportunity," Hwang said. "I will try my best to put this


club back on the right track. As coaches, there is no stopping for us. We have to keep trying to win, and I


think taking this job is part of that process for me."


Hwang said he wouldn't have returned to the K League if it hadn't been with Daejeon.


"During my first stint here, there are so many things I could have done better," Hwang said. "And I


decided to come back here because I wanted to push the club over the hump. I think we have an


opportunity to lay the foundation to become a contending club in the future. But the most pressing issue is


we have to get out of the relegation zone."


From the K League 1, the 12th-place club at the end of the season will suffer direct relegation to the K


League 2. The 11th- and 10th-place teams must survive promotion-relegation playoffs against K League 2


opponents to stay in the top division for the following season.


Daejeon earned a promotion to the top league after the 2022 season and finished in eighth place among


the big boys in 2023. In Year 2, however, they are in danger of falling back to the K League 2.


Daejeon have netted just 15 goals in 16 matches so far this year, tied for the second-fewest total, and they


have the second-worst goal difference at -7.


Hwang, a premier striker during his playing days, said he'd like Daejeon to become more assertive.


"Philosophically, I want us to dominate and seize control in matches," he said. "Modern football is all


about battling for space. And without precision, you will be wasting a lot of energy. I believe we have to


play more direct football that can utilize space."


The new coach also acknowledged that instilling a new system on the fly in midseason may be easier said


than done, especially considering the lack of offensive talent for Daejeon.


"I understand we can't be perfect in every aspect all at once. Still, offense is the most important thing at


the moment," Hwang said. "I think we need a devastating attacker. It may not be easy to acquire someone


in the middle of the season, but I will be talking with our management."


Hwang has a strong track record in the K League. In 2013 with Pohang Steelers, he pulled off a domestic


double by winning the K League 1 and the FA Cup titles. Hwang added another K League 1 title with FC


Seoul in 2016. He was voted the K League 1's Coach of the Year in 2013 and 2016.


 

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