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Jun 29, 2026

South Korea: President Apologizes and Orders Probe After Soccer Team’s World Cup Failure

South Korea: President Apologizes and Orders Probe After Soccer Team’s World Cup Failure

South Korea's Son Heung-min (7) reacts at the end of the World Cup Group A soccer mat
AP Photo/Moises Castillo
Frances Martel29 Jun 2026

President Lee Jae-myung of South Korea issued a statement on Sunday apologizing to the public after the nation’s soccer team failed to qualify for the knockout rounds of the FIFA World Cup.

Lee, of the far-left Democratic Party, described feeling “bewilderment” at the team’s poor performance.

“I am sorry to the people for letting them down with such a preposterous turn of events,” Lee wrote in a message published on social media, stating he felt “not just confusion but utter bewilderment at this unexpected outcome.”

The president took direct aim at the team’s now-former head coach, Hong Myung-bo, who has become so unpopular in the country that various small businesses have placed signs on their doors explicitly banning him from entry.

“When you put an incompetent person in charge by prioritizing any personal connections over their abilities, then it’s easy to predict how things will play out,” Lee wrote. “Such a nonsensical personnel decision that puts personal interests ahead of the common good only happens because it’s impossible, or at least difficult, to keep the person responsible for these decisions in check.”

He concluded with a call for the government to get involved, investigate how such a failure occurred, and take unspecified action to improve the soccer team.

“Since participating in a World Cup requires a lot of taxpayers’ money and other national resources, I would like to ask the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism to identify and analyze the cause of the problem and prepare measures to prevent recurrences,” the president asserted.

“We will swiftly push forward with reforms to sports administration to ensure such a thing never happens again,” he promised.

President Lee was far from the only politician to capitalize on the widespread public outrage against the soccer team to stand with the people. Both Democrats and members of the conservative People Power Party (PPP) condemned the Korea Football Association (KFA) for hiring Hong — notably omitting criticism of the players, who many sports experts view as among the best in South Korea’s history — and suggested corruption was behind his hiring.

“The KFA is the biggest enemy for Korean football,” Democratic Party lawmaker Song Young-gil railed. “This outcome has been in the making since the 2014 World Cup (when Hong was also head coach). The hiring process wasn’t fair in the first place. What Korean football needs the most right now isn’t just bringing in a new head coach, but reforming the KFA.”

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