South Korea national rugby sevens team

Summary

The South Korea national rugby sevens team is a minor national sevens side. They sometimes take part in the Rugby World Cup Sevens, and have competed in the Hong Kong Sevens since the 1980s.[1]

South Korea
UnionKorea Rugby Union
Coach(es)Charles Louw
Captain(s)Wanyong Park
Team kit
World Cup Sevens
Appearances4 (First in 1993)
Best result5th (1997)

South Korea made their Olympic debut at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, they had qualified the previous year after defeating Hong Kong at the 2019 Asia Rugby Sevens Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Incheon.[2][3]

Tournament history edit

Summer Olympics edit

Olympic Games record
Year Round Position Pld W L D
  2016 Did not qualify
  2020 9–12th Place Playoff 12th 5 0 5 0
Total 0 Titles 1/2 5 0 5 0

Rugby World Cup Sevens edit

World Cup record
Year Round Position Pld W L D
  1993 Group stage 11th 6 3 3 0
  1997 Cup Quarter-finals 5th 5 1 3 1
  2001 Plate Quarter-finals 13th 6 2 3 1
  2005 Bowl Quarter-finals 21st 6 1 5 0
  2009 Did not qualify
  2013
  2018
  2022 Bowl Quarter-finals 21st 4 2 2 0
Total 0 Titles 5/8 27 9 16 2

Asian Games edit

Asian Games record
Year Round Position Pld W L D
  1998 Winners 1st 5 5 0 0
  2002 Winners 1st 5 5 0 0
  2006 Runner-up 2nd 4 3 1 0
  2010 Semi-finalist 3rd 6 4 2 0
  2014 Semi-finalist 3rd 6 5 1 0
  2018 Semi-finalist 3rd 6 5 1 0
Total 2 Titles 6/6 32 27 5 0

Hong Kong Sevens results edit

Year Venue Cup Plate
Winner Final Score Runner-up Winner Runner-up
1982
Details
Government Stadium  
Australia
18-14  
Scottish Border Club
 
South Korea
 
Japan
1983
Details
Government Stadium  
Australia
14-4  
Fiji
 
South Korea
 
Canada
1991
Details
Government Stadium  
Fiji
18-14  
New Zealand
 
Argentina
 
South Korea 1994 Details
Hong Kong Stadium  
New Zealand
32-20  
Australia
 
South Korea
 
Hong Kong
1998
Details
Hong Kong Stadium  
Fiji
28-19  
Western Samoa
 
South Korea
 
Morocco

Sri Lanka Sevens edit

Year Cup Plate Bowl
1999   South Korea   Malaysia   India
2000   Chinese Taipei   Japan   Thailand
2001   Chinese Taipei   Denmark   Czech Republic
2002   Portugal   South Korea   Hong Kong
2003   Kenya   Sri Lanka  Arabian Gulf
2004   Japan   Sri Lanka   Kazakhstan
2005   Japan   Sri Lanka  Arabian Gulf
2006   South Korea   Thailand   Malaysia
2007   Hong Kong   China   India
2008   Malaysia   Chinese Taipei   Singapore

Players edit

Current squad edit

Squad to the 2021 Olympics in Tokyo:[4]

Head coach: Charles Louw

No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Events Points
1 FW Han Kun-kyu (c) (1987-01-22)22 January 1987 (aged 34) 4 20
2 FW Kim Hyun-soo (1988-11-08)8 November 1988 (aged 32) 4 25
3 FW Andre Jin Coquillard (1991-01-15)15 January 1991 (aged 30) 2 10
4 BK Chang Yong-heung (1993-11-12)12 November 1993 (aged 27) 0 0
5 BK Lee Seong-bae (1990-04-07)7 April 1990 (aged 31) 3 13
6 BK Kim Nam-uk (1990-02-05)5 February 1990 (aged 31) 2 0
7 BK Jang Jeong-min (1994-11-10)10 November 1994 (aged 26) 2 27
8 FW Jang Seong-min (1992-08-22)22 August 1992 (aged 28) 2 5
9 BK Park Wan-yong (c) (1984-06-02)2 June 1984 (aged 37) 5 25
10 FW Lee Jin-kyu (1994-07-04)4 July 1994 (aged 27) 1 0
11 FW Choi Seong-deok (1999-05-31)31 May 1999 (aged 22) 0 0
12 BK Jeong Yeon-sik (1993-05-08)8 May 1993 (aged 28) 1 0
13 BK Kim Gwong-min (1988-04-02)2 April 1988 (aged 33) 0 0

References edit

  • McLaren, Bill A Visit to Hong Kong in Starmer-Smith, Nigel & Robertson, Ian (eds) The Whitbread Rugby World '90 (Lennard Books, 1989),
  1. ^ McLaren, p70
  2. ^ "Rugby sevens underdogs hope for an Olympic miracle". koreajoongangdaily.joins.com. Retrieved 2021-10-19.
  3. ^ "South Korea earn Tokyo 2020 spot by winning Asian men's rugby sevens qualifier". www.insidethegames.biz. 2019-11-24. Retrieved 2021-10-19.
  4. ^ "Japan and Korea introduce their men's 7s squads – Planet Sevens". Retrieved 2021-10-19.