PSG's Lee Kang-in Scores Twice in South Korea’s 3-1 Win against Bahrain in Asian Cup

 South Korea's midfielder #18 Lee Kang-in celebrates with teammates after scoring his team's third goal during the Qatar 2023 AFC Asian Cup Group E football match between South Korea and Bahrain at the Jassim bin Hamad Stadium in Doha on January 15, 2024. (AFP)
South Korea's midfielder #18 Lee Kang-in celebrates with teammates after scoring his team's third goal during the Qatar 2023 AFC Asian Cup Group E football match between South Korea and Bahrain at the Jassim bin Hamad Stadium in Doha on January 15, 2024. (AFP)
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PSG's Lee Kang-in Scores Twice in South Korea’s 3-1 Win against Bahrain in Asian Cup

 South Korea's midfielder #18 Lee Kang-in celebrates with teammates after scoring his team's third goal during the Qatar 2023 AFC Asian Cup Group E football match between South Korea and Bahrain at the Jassim bin Hamad Stadium in Doha on January 15, 2024. (AFP)
South Korea's midfielder #18 Lee Kang-in celebrates with teammates after scoring his team's third goal during the Qatar 2023 AFC Asian Cup Group E football match between South Korea and Bahrain at the Jassim bin Hamad Stadium in Doha on January 15, 2024. (AFP)

Paris Saint-Germain winger Lee Kang-in is used to being overshadowed by Kylian Mbappe at club level. Son Heung-min remains the icon for his national team South Korea.

But with two moments of individual brilliance against Bahrain on Monday, Lee took center stage at the Asian Cup. Not that he seemed comfortable under the spotlight after scoring twice in the second half to inspire South Korea to a 3-1 win in the Group E match.

“It's not just about my two goals. All the goals we score are very important for the team. I would just like to say and highlight that it is not about individual performance,” a modest Lee said afterward.

His coach Jurgen Klinsmann was also restrained in his praise of the forward.

“If you score two in the opening game of the Asian Cup for us you deserve to be man of match and (it was) a very good performance. But I have to keep him on the ground every day,” he said with a smile.

It feels like there is no danger of success going to Lee's head. And as members of the media crowded around after the post-match news conference, he was likely happy to see it was Klinsmann, the World Cup-winning former Germany striker, who was being mobbed with requests for selfies.

Lee was just trying to get back to the locker room at Jassim Bin Hamad Stadium.

Earlier he had scored two picture perfect goals to get South Korea off to a winning start in the competition the country hasn't won since back-to-back titles in 1956 and 60.

The game was tied at 1-1 when he took control, giving South Korea a 2-1 lead in the 56th-minute with a left-footed shot from around 30 yards (meters).

He was equally clinical as he scored his second goal 12 minutes later when showing sharp footwork and curling the ball into the bottom corner.

Hwang In-beom had given South Korea a first half lead with a goal in the 38th, but Bahrain equalized six minutes after the break through Abdullah Al Hashash.

“We knew it was not going to be easy to play Bahrain today and it turned out to be scrappy,” Klinsmann said. “We are very pleased to start with three points in the tournament, that is what really matters.”

Two-time champion South Korea hadn’t conceded a goal in its last six Asian Cup group games, spanning the past two tournaments. But that record was put under threat early on when an unmarked Mohamed Marhoon headed over from close range.

It was the first of a number of missed chances for both teams until Hwang’s opener.

South Korea’s Cho Gue-sung fired over with only the goalkeeper to beat and Lee Jae-sung also missed the target at the far post.

Bahrain’s Ali Madan shot wide after bursting into the box.

It was Hwang who finally delivered a precise finish as South Korea went ahead — sweeping a shot past Lutfallah after Lee's cross.

Bahrain continued to create openings in the second half and Komail Al Aswad forced a save from Kim Seung-gyu before Al Hashash struck with a side-footed finish from inside the box.



Sudanese Olympic Backstroker Ziyad Saleem of California Looks to Leave His Mark on Paris Games

 Ziyad Saleem poses in Berkeley, Calif., Tuesday, May 28, 2024. (AP)
Ziyad Saleem poses in Berkeley, Calif., Tuesday, May 28, 2024. (AP)
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Sudanese Olympic Backstroker Ziyad Saleem of California Looks to Leave His Mark on Paris Games

 Ziyad Saleem poses in Berkeley, Calif., Tuesday, May 28, 2024. (AP)
Ziyad Saleem poses in Berkeley, Calif., Tuesday, May 28, 2024. (AP)

As a boy in Milwaukee, Ziyad Saleem would walk through the house pretending to swim backstroke — arm circling backward along the right ear and over his shoulder, then the other arm doing the same on the left side.

Some days he would also propel both arms forward as if doing butterfly. His father saw some real potential then, even out of the water.

"I was always, ‘Hey, what are you doing?’" Mohamed Saleem recalled. "It was range of motion or trying to master how he pulls under water. I knew he was attached to it."

The swimming bug had hit hard, and Saleem began dreaming big.

Little did Dad know this might actually lead to something that would mean so much to the family: The University of California swimmer is headed to the Paris Olympics to compete for Sudan, his parents’ home country and a place most of his relatives have now fled because of war and a massive humanitarian crisis.

"It’s hard to describe the feeling," Mohamed Saleem said of his son representing Sudan.

Not many think about swimming and Sudan in the same breath — but it is athletes such as Saleem who are helping put the sport on the map for the country in northern Africa that has a long coastline on the Red Sea.

When Saleem won a medal five years ago in Tunisia for one of his country's big successes in an international meet, he received royal treatment afterward.

So imagine the triumph in May when Saleem captured Sudan's first swimming gold medal at an African Championships with victory in the 200-meter backstroke. Saleem treasured his moment atop the podium as the national anthem played — then he got to do it again after winning the 100 back.

"It’s super cool being one of the first ones to medal and really be at the top of the sport in Sudan," Saleem said. "For me, it’s more about teaching the stuff I’ve learned in the US and all the training and high-level swimming I’m able to do here and kind of take it back to Sudan."

"I try helping out coaches at these world championships, giving them some of the tips I learned here in the US, and I think that’s just the biggest thing, extending what I’ve learned in the US over to Sudan and hopefully those kids can learn and become better swimmers."

A world away from Sudan’s turmoil, Saleem relishes his new life in the diverse Bay Area swimming next to decorated US Olympian Ryan Murphy in the Cal pool day after day, hour after hour, set after set.

Once in a while, Saleem can surprise Murphy and beat him during their backstroke warmups. And that’s always fun to give the gold medalist a run for his money, even if it’s just in practice and not under competition pressure.

"Sometimes, when he’s going easy in warmups, he’ll wait for the new set and really destroy me," Saleem said with a smile.

It’s hard for Saleem to believe he’s in the water alongside a former world-record holder like Murphy. This isn’t how it was supposed to go for Saleem. He committed to Iowa only to have the Hawkeyes program get cut because of COVID-19, suddenly leaving his college career path uncertain.

"So I was left without anything, nowhere to go," he recalled.

But when Saleem started dropping a couple of seconds in each of his events early on as a high school senior, Cal took notice. He committed without a visit or even talking to anybody on the team.

The program’s reputation and coaching told him all he needed to know. Not to mention the chance to share a pool with Murphy and so many other international greats.

"I knew it would be a place I’d really enjoy just having the world-class athletes here, a person like Murph," Saleem said. "I learn from him so much in and out of the water, what to do, his pointers. He’s a great person to have help you. When I first got here it was really surreal just seeing him in the water. But now since I’ve grown a relationship with him it’s not faded but I still admire him a lot. He’s a big reason why I chose to come to Cal just to have a world-record holder to train with every day."

Murphy loves swimming with Saleem, too.

"Ziyad is awesome, one of the nicest guys I’ve trained with at Cal," Murphy said. "He’s a happy person and hard worker."

Saleem was born in Milwaukee but holds dual citizenship, allowing him to compete for his parents’ homeland in the Olympics. Mohamed Saleem cherishes every chance to see his son compete for Sudan.

"We have a decent community here in Milwaukee. They’re very proud of him, so multiply that by 50,000 times being the father," Mohamed Saleem said. "When you say you don’t think of Sudan when it comes to swimming, they didn’t think of it either, that’s why it was a big surprise when he actually went the first time and won medals for the country. ... It brought a lot of attention to swimming and the potential."

Saleem will be a first-time Olympian, having gained experience on the big stage at multiple world championships.

He has secured Olympic berths in the 100 and 200 back — his best event — through each country’s one free entry, exempting him from qualifying minimums.

"I’m just trying to get faster and (reach) semifinals, that’s the goal," he said in the lead up to the Paris Games.

Saleem has been to Sudan several times and met some of his Sudanese teammates just through attending meets with them. They keep in touch despite training in various parts of the world, but it’s the Americans at Cal he knows best.

Most of his family is gone from Sudan.

"With the war, they’ve all emigrated toward Egypt. They were all in Sudan in like (last) June and now they all went to Egypt with what’s going on there (in Sudan)," he said. "There’s some in the Middle East. There’s maybe one or two still in Sudan but everybody else left."

His father immigrated to the United States in the 1990s and his mother in the early 2000s.

They can't wait to see him compete in Paris alongside Murphy and all of the other stars.

Might Saleem have taught Murphy a thing or two during all their training battles and hours together in the pool?

"I don’t know if much," Saleem said, "but I try to push my (backstroke) as much as I can and try to be a good person in and out of the water with him."