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Son Heung-min gets opportunity to earn military service exemption with Asiad selection

By Yonhap

Published : July 16, 2018 - 15:53

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Tottenham Hotspur forward Son Heung-min has received his last opportunity to earn a military service exemption to extend his career in Europe after he was named to South Korea's football squad for the 2018 Asian Games.

Son made the 20-man roster Monday for the men's football tournament at the Jakarta-Palembang Asian Games as one of the three "wild-card" members. The men's football competition at the Asian Games is open to the players who are aged 23 or under, but teams can field three players who exceed the age limit. Son turned 26 on July 8.

For players like Son, the Asian Games is an important tournament because they can earn military service exemption by winning a gold medal. 

All healthy men between 18 and 35 must serve about two years in the armed forces. But athletes who either win an Asian Games gold medal or an Olympic medal of any color receive exemptions. They only have to undergo four weeks of basic training.


South Korean football player Son Heung-min enters Incheon International Airport, west of Seoul, to take a flight for London on July 16. (Yonhap) South Korean football player Son Heung-min enters Incheon International Airport, west of Seoul, to take a flight for London on July 16. (Yonhap)

Son was not on the South Korean team that won a bronze medal at the 2012 London Olympics and a gold medal at the 2014 Asian Games. He represented South Korea at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics, but South Korea suffered a quarterfinals exit.

To extend his impressive career in Europe without interruption, grabbing the gold at the 2018 Asian Games has become the most important mission for Son. He is currently contracted with Spurs through June 2020.

If Son fails to win a gold medal, his stint with the English Premier League club will have come to an end unless he actually wants to serve the military service like every other man in the country. Should he return home from the Asian Games without the gold, Son's next step would probably be looking for ways to join military football clubs in South Korea.

South Korean footballers can complete their national duty by playing for Sangju Sangmu, the club run by the Korea Armed Forces Athletic Corps., or Asan Mugungwha, the club run by the national police. Sangmu are currently in the top-flight K League 1, while Mugunghwa are in the second-tier K League 2.

To join these two clubs, however, a footballer must play in the South Korean league in the previous season before making a debut for Sangmu or Mugungwha, and he needs to submit an application no later than age 27. 

If Son wants to join Sangmu or Mugungwha, he needs to return home next year to fulfill application requirements. This makes the 2018 Asian Games as the last promising opportunity for him to earn a military service exemption since winning medals at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics would be much more difficult.

Son was previously classified as "grade four" under the military conscription law, which makes him available for social service personnel. Football players who receive this grade can play in the K3 League, the de facto fourth division in the South Korean football league system, while commuting from their home. However, the competitiveness of the league will be a problem for a player like Son.

Son, who has 23 goals in 70 matches for South Korea, has yet to comment on his Asian Games selection. He left for London on Monday to prepare for the new season with Spurs. (Yonhap)