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Old 16th July 2009, 11:15   #1 (permalink)
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Live from Korea

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A tale of two Uniteds

Asia is accustomed to hosting teams from Europe. Every summer sees big clubs from the west heading east to play exhibition games in attempts to win new fans and conquer new markets.
The likes of Real Madrid, Liverpool, Manchester United, Chelsea, Bayern Munich, Roma and Juventus have all paid visits to the world's largest continent in recent years. After all, over half of the planet's soccer fans call Asia home.
There is something slightly special happening this month, however, with two teams from Manchester visiting the Land of the Morning Calm. One is English champion, European Champions League runner-up, FIFA Club World Cup winner and all-round general behemoth, Manchester United. The other is a fan-led team just four years old, and is in England's seventh tier.

The English champions have won 18 domestic and three continental titles and are one of the biggest, if not the biggest, clubs in the world. They also boast one of Korea's favorite sporting stars, Park Ji-sung.

United are in action on July 24 against K-League club FC Seoul at Seoul World Cup Stadium in a game that is a 64,000 seat sell-out.

Six days before that however, a team from England's seventh tier is in action against one from Korea's third division. FC United of Manchester faces Bucheon 1995. FC United was formed in 2005 by disillusioned fans of Manchester United. These followers took action after the club was taken over by American businessman Malcolm Glazer in 2005, another stage in what was, according to these supporters, a move away from the club's Manchester roots and fan-base.

FC United is run "by the fans for the fans." Starting all the way down in England's tenth tier, the club has climbed up to the seventh rung of the ladder and is regularly watched by 3,000 fans. Ahead of next season, the club announced on its website recently that each fan could choose what they paid for the season ticket that will grant entry to all home games. The same home page could also hardly contain its excitement at the all-expenses-paid trip to Korea. "This is an amazing opportunity for FC United and we're honored to be able to feature in a game against a fans-owned club with similar founding principles to our own," it said.

As the site says, Bucheon 1995 was also set up by fans whose club was literally taken away. SK Bucheon FC was a K-league team that had been struggling in the lower reaches for some years. Those fans woke up one morning in February 2006, a month before the start of the new season, to find that owners SK Energy, an arm of the giant SK conglomerate, had decided to move the club to the southern island of Jeju. This new team, Jeju United, was to utilize the last of the vacant stadiums built for the 2002 World Cup. It hasn't exactly been a successful move, and the island incantation of the team has fared little better in terms of points collected and fans attracted.

But the fans left behind channeled their anger into setting up their own club. It wasn't an easy process but it has been handled skillfully and professionally. The club is in Korea's K-3 League and has sponsorship deals and media exposure that most of its rivals can only dream of, with deals with media portal Daum and SK Telecom.

The match with FC United, which takes place at Bucheon Sports Complex Stadium on July 18, is an interesting one. As of July 12, 15,000 tickets had been sold and between 20-25,000 are expected on the night.

At the very least, it will be a fun night for all involved and a great opportunity for lower league English players to play a match in East Asia. And if it raises profiles as well as questions as to how the beautiful game operates in the respective countries, so much the better.
http://www.koreaherald.co.kr/NEWKHSI...0907140057.asp


http://www.fcumradio.co.uk/2009/07/1...ve-from-korea/
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Old 16th July 2009, 14:25   #2 (permalink)
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Some more pics on here

http://photo.sports.media.daum.net/s...newsid=1423133
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Old 16th July 2009, 15:11   #3 (permalink)
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Part one of the trip on youtube

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PUBR8CtHvPU
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Old 16th July 2009, 18:40   #4 (permalink)
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Also a story in The Guardian:

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Now 'the other United' target Asia
The supporters-run FC United of Manchester are playing in South Korea in the same week as the Premier League champions



FC United of Manchester players and fans, celebrating winning the North West Counties League, now have something else to celebrate - playing in Asia. Photograph: Christopher Thomond

In the huge Homeplus supermarket inside Seoul's World Cup stadium, a middle-aged woman pays for her shopping with a Manchester United credit card, one of 1.2m such pieces of plastic in South Korea. The woman is one of an estimated six million Red Devils in the Land of the Morning Calm which is why, on 24 July, the Premier League champions will be in action just a few dozen feet away against FC Seoul in the third of four matches of their 2009 Asian tour.

It is a 64,000 sell-out with 20,000 tickets being snapped up inside the first hour. This is United's fifth such tour in the past decade. For Asian fans, seeing the team these days is not unusual. But on 18 July, another Manchester team has a friendly in South Korea. FC United of Manchester are playing the third division club Bucheon 1995. The prospect is an intriguing one.

For FC United, formed in 2005 after the Malcolm Glazer takeover by disaffected Manchester United fans and now playing in the seventh-tier mouthful that is the Northern Premier League Premier Division, pre-season Asian exhibitions are the kinds of things that Glazer would approve of. But FC United deny that the match with fellow fan-operated team Bucheon 1995 is like "Big United's" tour.

"I think the reasons for our respective trips are a little different," the FC United spokesman, Julian Spencer, said. "Most clubs visit the far east to 'promote the brand', they are trips exclusively designed to make money. We want to show that this 'model' of how to structure a football club has worldwide merit. Also we want to give our players an opportunity of a lifetime to play overseas in front of what we hope will be a large, noisy, passionate local support."

It should be that, as long as Korea's rainy season, currently in full flow, doesn't put a dampener on proceedings. Bucheon, with players named Park Ji-sung and Kaka, look good on paper and the 20-25,000 fans should certainly sound good. And while it may not be broadcast on primetime network television like the other match, it has been widely promoted and FC United's match will be shown live on one of the country's biggest sports cable networks and on outdoor screens in nearby Seoul.

The Red Rebels have come a long way from setting up their club amid the feeling that Manchester United were being taken away from their traditional fanbase. It was not just a feeling among Bucheon supporters – it was a cold, hard fact. The Koreans woke up one morning in February 2006 to find that their club had been relocated overnight. Then, top-flight SK Bucheon FC were preparing for another season when SK Energy, the oil-arm of SK, one of South Korea's largest conglomerates and one of a number of businesses to own Korean teams, suddenly moved the team 300 miles south to the island of Jeju to occupy the last vacant 2002 World Cup stadium.

"When SK did that, we felt that our family had abandoned us. We couldn't believe it," said Bucheon 1995's unpaid marketing manager, Shin Dong-min. In response, Bucheon fans formed their own team and are now in South Korea's third tier – the K3 league. It has taken money to do so, much of which came from a sponsorship deal with SK Telecom. The same company is also footing the bill for this friendly, although Bucheon had to compete against other parties for the opportunity.

As part of a nationwide marketing campaign roughly translated as "make your dreams come true", people were invited to ask SK to do just that. The female high school students who wanted a famous boy band to become their teachers for a day were disappointed as these corporate Jimmy Savilles plumped for Bucheon's idea. Originally AFC Wimbledon were the desired opposition. The Londoners were busy, leaving, in the words of Shin, just "one other club that fit the bill".

"At first, we thought it was a joke," said FC United's general manager, Andy Walsh, at a pre-match press conference in Seoul today attended by more than 40 reporters and several television crews. "We heard about it from AFC Wimbledon but Ivor Heller [commercial director] there has a reputation for practical jokes so we phoned someone else there to find out if it was true. The board then discussed with the manager to see if it was something he wanted to do as part of a pre-season training. He was very positive and we are very honoured to be here."

Bucheon are also honoured. They are also too excited to dwell on where the money that is funding the game comes from. "I admit that it is strange that after what happened in 2006, SK are paying but there are many arms of SK," Shin said. "The company that managed and moved Bucheon SK was SK Energy. SK Telecom is a different company and these days are keen to help grassroots football. It doesn't matter what level we play at, we just want our own club to cheer. If the devil offered money, we would take it."
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Old 17th July 2009, 13:40   #5 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by mickthered View Post
Part one of the trip on youtube

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PUBR8CtHvPU
Part two

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hn9-ulXMKm0
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Old 17th July 2009, 14:20   #6 (permalink)
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Part 3

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vktjZqzzhlc
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Old 17th July 2009, 16:42   #7 (permalink)
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Part 4 (Not that much on this one)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QX8D1c64v5c
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Old 18th July 2009, 19:01   #8 (permalink)
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That must have been great Mick.
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Old 18th July 2009, 19:27   #9 (permalink)
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That must have been great Mick.
Would have been even better had i been there
Must have been great for the players and some experience

When are we going to see you back at a game
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Old 20th July 2009, 07:12   #10 (permalink)
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How irony.
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