Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
Sport

North Korean football club takes Asian women’s title

Naegohyang FC players celebrate after winning the Asian Women’s Champions League final with coach Ri Yu-il, at the Suwon Sports Complex in Suwon, South Korea on May 23, 2026. (Photo: Reuters)

SUWON, South Korea - ⁠Naegohyang of North Korea won ​the Asian Women’s Champions League with a 1-0 victory over Tokyo Verdy Beleza of Japan ​in the final on Saturday, with ‌forward Kim Kyong-Yong netting the only goal of the match.

Naegohyang, who arrived in Suwon last Sunday and beat the hometown team 2-1 in the semi-finals on Wednesday, are the first North Korean athletes to visit the South in eight years.

The ​rare visit comes as North ⁠Korea has in recent years labelled the South its “most hostile state” and ruled out reuniting the nation split by the 1950-53 Korean War.

In Saturday’s final, Tokyo Verdy struggled to ‌deal with their opponents’ pace and intensity throughout the contest at the Suwon Sports Complex and were repeatedly carved open by counter-attacks, one of which led to Naegohyang’s goal.

Naegohyang scored on the cusp of ⁠halftime after attacker Jong Kum surged forward and outmuscled Tokyo Verdy defender Yuna Aoki on the left wing before sending in a cross for Kim, who netted with a deft finish in the 44th minute.

Tokyo Verdy desperately chased an equaliser in the second half, but the Japanese side were unable to ​break down a disciplined Naegohyang defence and failed to record a single shot on target. (Story continues below)

Shino Matsuda of Tokyo Verdy 1969 and Kim Kyong-Yong of Naegohyang FC vie for the ball during the Asian Women’s Champions League final in Suwon. (Photo: Reuters)

$1-million prize

The Asian Women’s Champions League, which had its inaugural season in ​2024-25, offers ‌prize money of $1 million to champions. Naegohyang captain Kim, who finished the tournament with joint-top four goals, was named the player of the tournament.

“I’m very ​honoured ⁠to win the MVP. However, this result does not belong to me alone. It belongs to the team and the coaching staff. ⁠We just kept pushing ourselves until the end,” Kim said.

The victory also means that Naegohyang have qualified for next year’s Fifa Women’s Champions Cup as well as the inaugural Women’s Club World Cup in 2028, with both ⁠tournaments featuring teams from around the world.

Naegohyang are the first women’s ​club team from North Korea to compete at the continental level. North Korea have long been a dominant force in women’s football and won three Women’s Asian Cup titles in the 2000s.

They were banned from the ‌2015 World Cup after ⁠five players tested positive for prohibited substances ​at the 2011 edition of the tournament.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.