South Korea’s manager Shin Tae-yong made his players wear different shirts in pre-World Cup friendlies to confuse 'Swedish spies'.
Shin Tae-yong devised the clever plan ahead of South Korea's high-pressure World Cup opening game against Sweden on Monday.
"We switched them around because we didn't want to show our opponents everything and try to confuse them," Shin Tae-yong told a press conference in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia.
"They might know a few of our players but it is very difficult for Westerners to distinguish between Asians and that's why we did that."
He suggested that all coaches are naturally suspicious. "All coaches probably feel their opponents are always spying on them.
"I think it's perfectly natural that we all try to get as much information on each other as we can."
To avoid suspicion, Shin made the more well-know players in the squad wear their usual jerseys. Tottenham striker Son Heung-min and captain Ki Sung-yeung were the only players who wore their usual shirts against Bolivia and Senegal earlier this month.Tae-yong suggested that he had received reports on ‘Swedish spy’ sniffing around.
Sweden coach Lars Jacobsson reportedly persuaded a local couple to let him use their phone near the training base to conduct surveillance with a high-performance telescope and video camera.
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