Football
Associated Press 7y

Son Heung-Min suspended for South Korea's World Cup qualifier with China

South Korea will be without in-form Tottenham Hotspur forward Son Heung-Min for their crucial 2018 World Cup qualifier in China later this month.

Son, who scored a hat trick on Sunday as Tottenham thrashed London rivals Millwall 6-0 to move into the FA Cup semifinals, is suspended for the March 23 game against China in Changsa.

With South Korea returning to Seoul to face Syria five days later, national team coach Uli Stielike has still included Son in his 24-man squad, which he announced on Monday.

The 2002 World Cup semifinalists beat China 3-2 last September and sit in second place in Group A in the third round of World Cup qualification with 10 points from five games, one point behind leaders Iran.

There are five games remaining and the top two teams from the group qualify automatically for the World Cup in Russia.

"We will do our best to get the win in China and start the second half of the round on a high note," Stielike told a news conference in Seoul.

China, who have only ever qualified once for the World Cup, are struggling with just two points, but are aiming for an upturn in results after appointing Marcello Lippi -- Italy's 2006 World Cup-winning coach -- in October.

To add extra tension to the match, it comes at a time when relations between the two countries off the field are at a low point after South Korea agreed to cooperate with the United States on a missile defence system.

China has argued that the system is a threat to its national security and has hit back with a string of economic measures that include instructing domestic tour companies not to sell tour packages to South Korea.

"Outside factors will not have a bearing on the game." Stielike, who selected four China-based players in his squad, said. "We are just focusing on preparing as well as we can."

Last week, China refused a request from the Korea Football Association (KFA) to charter a flight from Changsa to Seoul to allow its players more time to prepare for the subsequent game against Syria, forcing the KFA to make alternative plans.

"After China's decision, we asked a South Korean air carrier to reschedule the departure time of its flight, so our players can now return home quickly after playing the match on the road," KFA spokesperson Cho Jun-Heon said.

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