Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · May 21
North Korea Beats South Korea 2-1 in First Women’s Club Match on Southern Soil in 8 Years
Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · May 21

North Korea Beats South Korea 2-1 in First Women’s Club Match on Southern Soil in 8 Years

10 articles · Updated · The Washington Post · May 21
  • Naegohyang, North Korea’s women’s club team, beat South Korea’s Suwon FC Women 2-1 on Wednesday in Suwon, ending a rare inter-Korean match with smiles after a notably cold visit.
  • The game marked the first time North Korean athletes had competed in South Korea since 2018 and the first women’s club soccer match ever between the two Koreas.
  • 27 players and 12 staff arrived via Beijing because no direct inter-Korean travel exists, and the team kept its distance throughout the trip, ignoring airport greeters and asking that the South Korean team stay at a different hotel.
  • About 7,000 seats sold out within a day, though heavy rain cut attendance; thousands still came, including civic groups and families divided by war hoping the match might revive the spirit of past sports diplomacy.
  • That hope ran up against the worst inter-Korean relations in years, with Pyongyang now calling the South an enemy state and treating the visit as a strictly competitive obligation tied to the AFC semifinal.
After an eight-year freeze, is one soccer game enough to signal a real thaw in inter-Korean relations?
What does North Korea’s calculated coldness during this rare exchange reveal about its long-term global strategy?