Minchol Son | Following his dream

Minchol Son, the first North Korean footballer to play here, is hoping the Indian I-League will get him noticed

It’s not often that you end up talking to a North Korean in India, more so a professional footballer plying his trade for faraway Shillong Lajong FC (football club) in the I-League. Minchol Son, a former North Korea under-23 international player, was signed up by Shillong Lajong in June 2012 in a short-term deal, before his performance earned him a contract with the club. Today, the 27-year-old, 5ft, 10 inches central defender is leading Lajong in the I-League and hopes that his performance will lead him to his dream—representing North Korea’s senior team in international football.
Given that Son, who has been living in Japan, primarily played in that country’s regional leagues, the lure of a top national-level league (division one in the pyramid) in India was too much to resist. And Lajong, with its fanatical fan base, proved an ideal fit. “When my agent (Libero Sports) approached me with an offer to join Lajong, I decided to take it up,” says Son. The I-League may not be the strongest in Asia, but it offers someone with international ambitions a chance to get noticed purely by playing week in and week out, something Son missed out on in Japan.
In the Group C matches in the ongoing Federation Cup, Lajong beat Salgaocar Football Club 4-0 in their opener and were thrashed 6-0 by Mohun Bagan Athletic Club in their second game. Son played in the midfield during Bagan’s thrashing of Lajong on 18 January.
The desire to represent North Korea is rather interesting, especially when you look at Son’s origins—he wasn’t born in North Korea and lived practically all his life in Japan before signing up for Lajong. Given that North Korea and Japan do not have diplomatic relations, the case gets curiouser. Son is a Zainichi Chosenjin (a Japan-born North Korean). His grandfather moved to Kyoto, Japan, during World War II and met his grandmother, who was from Osaka; he settled in his adopted homeland. Born in Kyoto, Son attended the Chongryon-established (the de facto North Korean embassy in Japan) Korea University in Tokyo. “I began playing football at a very young age in Japan. It was very popular there and I thought I could do well in the sport,” says Son. He played for FC Ryukyu in the third tier of the Japanese Football League before moving to Tokyo-based FC Korea—a club closely associated with his university’s sports programme and the Chongryon, until Lajong came calling. Interestingly, Son’s girlfriend is a Zainichi Kankokujin (a Japan-born South Korean).
Son never considered playing in North Korea’s Highest Class Football League, which he describes as an “amateur” league without foreign players. “In Japan, there are many foreign players from Spain and Italy who come and play there. But in Korea, the situation is different. The league is good, but competition is limited,” he says.
This is probably why some of North Korea’s better footballers have of late benefited from playing abroad. Son’s ex-roommate from Korea University, Jong Tae-Se, is nothing short of a legend in and around Pyongyang, North Korea. As the player who gave the assist for the goal that helped North Korea temporarily lead Brazil in the 2010 World Cup, Tae-Se has been an ambassador for North Korean football. Son says: “He is one of the best players we have in Korea.”
Son has been to Pyongyang at least six times in his career; the last of these trips was seven years ago, when he was a part of the North Korean under-23 Olympic probables. He has trained and played in the Kim Il-Sung stadium in Pyongyang, and fondly remembers the time he trained and later played in a friendly in front of the “Dear Leader”, Kim Jong-Il.

Back to Indian football and Lajong. Son says he’s enjoying every bit of his stint here so far: “It’s been fantastic. Our fans are great, we have a fantastic stadium, a very good coach, and currently, we’re fourth in the table. I am hoping for a top 3 finish. That would be a fantastic achievement.” Brimming with optimism, he adds, “Maybe next year, we can win the league.”