If you’ve ever watched South Korea at a World Cup and thought, “surely it can’t get more dramatic than this” — congratulations, you clearly haven’t been paying attention. Because on the very first day of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the Taeguk Warriors did what they always do: made us sweat through our shirts, broke our hearts for a minute, then somehow pulled off a comeback that had people screaming at their televisions across Asia and beyond.
Final score: South Korea 2-1 Czechia. And it was everything.
A Quiet Start That Promised a Storm

In Guadalajara — the second Group A match of an already historic opening day — South Korea and Czechia served up a tense, knotty first half that ended goalless but never felt dull. South Korea bossed the ball with 55% possession and created the better chances, but Czech goalkeeper Matěj Kovář wasn’t having a quiet evening. In the first half alone he pulled off a stunning double save — first diving low to stop a Hwang In-beom shot, then scrambling off the ground to claw away the follow-up from Lee Jae-sung. The kind of save that makes strikers go home and stare at the ceiling.
South Korea were clearly the more dangerous side. They just couldn’t find the net. Yet.
Czechia Strike First — And the Ground Shifts

Then came the gut punch. In the 59th minute, Czechia took the lead through a set-piece header — Ladislav Krejčí using his physical advantage to power the ball home cleanly, silencing the Korean end of the stadium in an instant.

It was Czechia’s first World Cup in 20 years, and for a brief moment, they looked like they belonged here.
But South Korea had other ideas.
Hwang In-beom — The Man of the Moment

If there’s one name from this match you need to remember, it’s Hwang In-beom. The midfielder was everywhere — tenacious, creative, and absolutely ice-cold when it mattered most.

In the 67th minute, Lee Kang-in threaded a perfect pass into his path, and Hwang did something that took everyone’s breath away: he stopped dead on a dime, completely fooling both his marker and the goalkeeper, then calmly chipped the ball into the corner of the net. The technique. The audacity. The nerve. 1-1.

Then, with the match on a knife’s edge, Czechia thought they’d stolen it — Tomáš Souček headed in what looked like a go-ahead goal from a free kick in the 77th minute. The Czech bench erupted. But VAR stepped in, ruled Souček offside, and chaos turned back to tension.
Oh Hyeon-gyu Seals It — Off the Bench, Into History

Three minutes later, South Korea broke Czech hearts for good. Substitute Oh Hyeon-gyu — who came on for Son — timed his run to perfection to meet a whipped cross from Hwang In-beom and tapped home from close range. 2-1. Bedlam.

Hwang In-beom had a goal and an assist — only the third South Korean player ever to achieve that in a single World Cup match, following Choi Soon-ho against Italy in 1986 and the current coach, Hong Myung-bo, against Spain in 1994.
History. Running through this team’s veins like electricity.
Kim Seung-gyu: Last Line of Glory

But it wasn’t over. Deep into stoppage time, Czechia launched one final, desperate attack — and only a full-stretch, diving save from goalkeeper Kim Seung-gyu kept South Korea’s lead intact. The stadium erupted. Players embraced. The Taeguk Warriors had done it again.

South Korea sit with three points at the top of Group A alongside Mexico. Next up for them: Mexico on June 18 in Guadalajara — the match the whole group has been building toward since the draw was made.
Man of the Match

If this opening day is any kind of preview, that game is going to be absolutely unmissable.











