- Kim Ho
Infobox Football biography
playername = Kim Ho
fullname = Kim Ho
nickname =
dateofbirth = birth date and age|1944|11|24
cityofbirth =Tongyeong
countryofbirth = Korea
height = height|m=1.77
currentclub =Daejeon Citizen
clubnumber =
position =Manager
youthyears =
youthclubs =
years = 1964-1968
clubs =Jeil Industries "(amateur)"
caps(goals) =
nationalyears = 1965-1973
nationalteam = Korea Republic
nationalcaps(goals) =
manageryears = 1983-1987
1988-1991
1992-1994
1995-2003
2007-present
managerclubs =Hanil Bank FC
Hyundai Horang-i
Korea RepublicSuwon Samsung Bluewings Daejeon Citizen
pcupdate =21 August 2007
ntupdate =21 August 2007 Infobox Korean name
title=Korean name
tablewidth=309
color=#b0c4de
hangul=김호
hanja=金皓
rr=Gim Ho
mr=Kim HoKim Ho (born
November 23 ,1944 ) began his association football playing career with the amateur Jeil Fabric team, where he played from 1964—1968. In 1965 he made his debut for the Korean national team before ending his playing career in 1973.Into coaching
Ho took his first steps into coaching with an amateur side as well as a national youth team coaching position, before taking over as coach of the
Hanil Bank FC team in 1983, leading them into theK-League for their two seasons as league members, before departing in 1987 to return to the professional league as manager of struggling Hyundai Horang-i.He led Horang-i from 1988 to 1990. He rejuvenated the side in his first season, leading them to a 2nd place finish in 1988. The club however couldn't sustain such form and slipped down to bottom in 1989 and 2nd bottom in 1990, and Kim Ho left prior to the 1991 season.
Leading the national team
Ho was back in management in July 1992 when he took over the reins of the Korean national team and led them to the 1994 World Cup in the U.S.. His team put up some credible performances, drawing their opener against Spain 2-2, before picking up their second point with a 0-0 draw against Bolivia. Despite giving World Cup holders Germany a huge scare by coming back to 3-2 after being 3-0 down, his side couldn't find the extra goals they would have needed to progress and exited at the group stage.
Building the Bluewings
After stepping down as national team coach, Ho was contacted by
Suwon Samsung Bluewings to become the first ever coach of the new side, to lead them into the K-League in 1996. Ho accepted, and embarked on a reign that made him arguably the K-League's most successful manager.With the Bluewings, he lifted two K-League championships, three
Adidas Cup s, one League Cup, one FA Cup, twoKorean Super Cup s, two Asian Champions Cups and twoAsian Super Cup s in the space of eight seasons, before announcing his retirement at the end of 2003.ee also
*
List of Korea-related topics
*List of Koreans
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