Audio By Carbonatix
A couple of second-half goals gave the U.S. a 2-0 win over North Korea and a strong start to their Women's World Cup run. The eighth-ranked North Koreans have the youngest team in the tournament with an average age of 20. Still, their discipline and skill gave the U.S. a lot of trouble in the first half before controversial starter Lauren Cheney justified her selection by heading in the first goal in the 54th minute and defender Rachel Buehler scored a second in the 76th minute.
After the match, North Korea manager Kwang Min Kim shocked the congregated press by revealing that his side isn't just the youngest team, but it is also the only team in the tournament that's been struck by lightning.
"When we stayed in Pyongyang during training our players were hit by lightning, and more than five of them were hospitalised," said coach Kim.
"Some stayed in hospital and then came to Germany later than the rest of us. The goalkeeper and the four defenders were most affected, and some midfielders as well. The physicians said the players were not capable of participating in the tournament.
"But World Cup football is the most important and significant event for a footballer, so they don't want to think about anything but football.
"The fact that they played could be called abnormal, the result of very strong will." reported the BBC.
Given the secretive nature of the North Koreans, we may never know if this is true or not. The players aren't allowed to speak to the press, their training sessions are protected by security guards and closed to outsiders, and their public appearances regularly get canceled. Plus, it is curious that Kim only mentioned this freak occurrence after his team lost.
If it is true, a lightning strike that injured four defenders and disrupted their training could explain why their back line seemed to fall apart in the second half after holding the U.S. scoreless in the first. But even if it's not true, it's still a tremendous excuse that others might now try in everyday life.
Source: CNN
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Fuel ‘relief’ not from gov’t – COMAC CEO says fuel cuts are industry burden
17 minutes -
Back to books – Sweden’s schools give up digital learning
42 minutes -
From One Day to One Ring: Leo Woodall joins new The Lord of the Rings cast
53 minutes -
India to decide women’s quota bill as row over parliamentary seats intensifies
1 hour -
Australia’s richest person must share part of her mining fortunes, court rules
1 hour -
BBC to cut almost one in 10 staff to make £500m savings
1 hour -
Google to punish sites that trap people in with back button tricks
2 hours -
Booking.com customers warned of ‘reservation hijacking’ after hack
2 hours -
Mahama’s words can slow Parliament – Bishop Gyamfi worried over LGBTQ bill delay
2 hours -
LGBTQ Bill: We don’t want a repeat – Catholic Bishop warns Mahama could follow Akufo-Addo’s path
2 hours -
Congo to receive first group of deportees from US this week, sources say
3 hours -
Rabat launches UNESCO World Book Capital 2026 celebrations with major international book fair
4 hours -
Gabon reaffirms support for Morocco’s sovereignty over Sahara, welcomes UN Resolution 2797
4 hours -
São Tomé & Príncipe backs Morocco’s sovereignty over Sahara, endorses autonomy plan
5 hours -
Police grab two suspects in possession of 40 bundles of suspected stolen ECG cables
5 hours