Russia vs South Korea: Live Stream, TV Channel, Date, Time, Where to Watch Sbornaya, Taegeuk Warriors Match

Russia and South Korea will face off on Tuesday, June 17 in a World Cup 2014 Group H match.
Russia vs South Korea: Live Stream, TV Channel, Date, Time, Where to Watch Sbornaya, Taegeuk Warriors Match
Dmitry Kombarov heads the ball during the Russian national soccer team's training session in Itu, Brazil, on Saturday, June 14, 2014. Russia will play in group H of the 2014 soccer World Cup. (AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev)
6/17/2014
Updated:
6/16/2014

Russia and South Korea will face off on Tuesday, June 17 in a World Cup 2014 Group H match.

Kick-off time is 6:00 p.m. EDT at Arena Pantanal, Cuiabá.

The game will be broadcast on Channel One Russia in Russia, and SBS ESPN Korea, MBC Korea, and SBS Korea in Korea.

The game will also air on TalkSport Radio, BBC One UK, BBC iPlayer, BBC Radio 5 Live in the United Kingdom.

In the United States, the game will be shown on Univision Deportes USA, Univision USA, Univision Deportes En Vivo, SiriusXM FC, ESPN, and ESPN Radio.

Live stream is available on Watch ESPN.

Here is an AP preview of the match.

Russia, South Korea Ready to Go at World Cup

CUIABA, Brazil (AP) — In his fourth and final World Cup as a player, Hong Myung-bo led South Korea on that famous run to the semifinals in 2002.

Twelve years on, and now national team coach, it'll be some achievement if he gets the side beyond the group stage.

A stuttering qualifying campaign may have dented South Korean confidence ahead into their opening Group H match against Fabio Capello’s Russia on Tuesday, but they’ve got a wealth of World Cup experience.

“We have a good memory from the last World Cup because we qualified through the group stage. So we also want to qualify in this one as well,” South Korea midfielder Ki Sung-yeung said. “But it’s not easy — it’s going to be tough. We will suffer from every single game.”

At first glance, it appears the Koreans and Russians will be in a race for second spot in the group behind a young and vibrant Belgium team whose golden generation has bloomed just in time for Brazil. Algeria is the other team in the group.

Much, therefore, hinges on the outcome in Cuiaba.

Capello endured a miserable first World Cup as coach with England in 2010, the team limping into the knockout stage before a heavy defeat to Germany in the last 16. And the build-up to the 2014 tournament has hardly been smooth for the Italian manager, losing Roman Shirokov — his captain and fulcrum of the midfield — to a back injury days before the big kickoff.

Capello has already said this tournament is a “rehearsal” for the 2018 World Cup hosted by Russia, so the pressure is off his players somewhat. Given the weak nature of Group H, though, failure to advance would be a disappointment.

“The experience of games at the World Cup helps,” Capello said. “Four years ago, I was at the tournament with the England team but it’s important to remember which players you’re coaching and what their mentality is.

“Experience helps you to fix mistakes you made in the past.”

In Shirokov’s absence, Capello has spent the pre-tournament friendlies trying to get the Russians to attack down the flanks instead, relying on the likes Dmitri Kombarov and Yuri Zhirkov. He has yet to name a new captain from squad of players who all play their club football in Russia.

Young striker Alexander Kokorin is likely to start up front ahead of Alexander Kerzhakov.

South Korea lost 2-1 to Russia in a friendly at Dubai in November and is coming off a 4-0 hammering by Ghana in Miami, which highlighted the team’s defensive problems as well as limitations in attack.

Hong, brought in as coach in July last year as a replacement for Choi Kang-hee following the lacklustre qualifying campaign, must choose between out-of-form striker Park Chu-young, selected for a third World Cup, or a taller targetman in Kim Shin-wook.

Kim’s form in the domestic K-League has been impressive over the past year but Park has experience on his side.

The match completes the opening round of fixtures at the World Cup.

Larry Ong is a New York-based journalist with Epoch Times. He writes about China and Hong Kong. He is also a graduate of the National University of Singapore, where he read history.