South Korea Hold the Overall Edge and Can Start with a Win
The match between South Korea and the Czech Republic looks like a battle of fine margins. Both teams are disciplined and tactically organized, but in terms of individual quality, South Korea appear to have the stronger key players.
Son Heung-min and Lee Kang-in remain South Korea’s two most important attacking weapons. Son provides vertical runs, finishing and direct threat, while Lee is responsible for creativity, link-up play and chance creation. If these two can connect effectively in the final third, the Czech defense will be under constant pressure.
During Asian qualifying, South Korea showed stable attacking and defensive transition. In a World Cup opening match, they are unlikely to take unnecessary risks, but they have enough individual quality and tactical structure to decide the game.
A Low-Scoring Battle Looks Likely
The main theme of this match is unlikely to be open attacking football. It is more likely to become a defensive contest.
Under Hong Myung-bo, South Korea’s style is pragmatic. They focus on shape, balance and defensive stability. In the opening match of a World Cup group stage, teams usually avoid taking too many risks. Against a Czech side with strong physicality and decent counterattacking ability, South Korea will need to be careful with turnovers.
The Czech Republic are also not an easy team to break down. They are physically strong, defensively organized and dangerous from set pieces. Even if South Korea have a slight advantage on paper, it will not be easy for them to produce a big win.
As a result, this match could spend long periods in a tactical deadlock. Both sides will prioritize avoiding early mistakes, so the tempo may be slower, and the total number of goals should not be expected to be too high.
Son Heung-min Remains the Main Difference-Maker
South Korea’s biggest advantage is still Son Heung-min.
He has huge big-match experience and the ability to change a game with one moment of quality. Whether through sprinting into space on the counterattack, shooting from the edge of the box, or cutting inside from the left, Son is South Korea’s most dangerous attacking player.
For the Czech Republic, limiting Son’s space will be one of the keys to the match. If they allow him too many one-on-one situations, South Korea could easily find the decisive moment.
At the same time, Lee Kang-in’s passing and set-piece delivery will also be important sources of chance creation. Whenever South Korea win free kicks or corners in advanced areas, the Czech defense must stay alert.
A Narrow Win and Clean Sheet Are Worth Watching
Overall, South Korea look slightly stronger, but this will not be an easy match. The Czech Republic’s physicality, discipline and defensive resilience will make it difficult for South Korea to open the game up quickly.
The most realistic match picture is this: South Korea take more initiative, but their attacking efficiency may not be explosive; the Czech Republic look for opportunities through physical battles and set pieces, but may struggle to create many clear chances.
If South Korea score first, the game will move into a rhythm that suits them: keeping their shape, controlling risk, waiting for counterattacking space, and relying on the individual quality of Son Heung-min and Lee Kang-in to create further danger.
Therefore, the three key angles to watch are: South Korea avoiding defeat, a low-scoring match, and Son Heung-min being involved in a decisive goal. If South Korea win by one goal and keep a clean sheet, it would fit the tactical profile of both teams and the cautious atmosphere of a World Cup opening match.
