Kim Do-Hoon - International Goals

International Goals

Results list South Korea's goal tally first.
Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
September 13, 1994 Seoul Ukraine 1 goal 2-0 Friendly match
June 5, 1995 Suwon Costa Rica 1 goal 1-0 1995 Korea Cup
June 10, 1995 Seoul Zambia 1 goal 2-3 1995 Korea Cup
March 19, 1996 Dubai United Arab Emirates 1 goal 2-3 1996 Emarate Cup
April 30, 1996 Tel Aviv Israel 1 goal 5-4 Friendly match
August 5, 1996 Ho Chi Minh City Guam 1 goal 9-0 1996 AFC Asian Cup qualification
August 8, 1996 Ho Chi Minh City Chinese Taipei 1 goal 4-0 1996 AFC Asian Cup qualification
November 23, 1996 Suwon Colombia 1 goal 4-1 Friendly match
December 7, 1996 Abu Dhabi Indonesia 1 goal 4-2 1996 AFC Asian Cup
December 16, 1996 Dubai Iran 1 goal 2-6 1996 AFC Asian Cup
January 18, 1997 Melbourne Norway 1 goal 1-0 1997 Opus Tournament
August 24, 1997 Daegu Tajikistan 2 goals 4-1 Friendly match
October 18, 1997 Tashkent Uzbekistan 1 goal 5-1 1998 FIFA World Cup qualification
November 9, 1997 Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates 2 goals 3-1 1998 FIFA World Cup qualification
March 28, 1999 Seoul Brazil 1 goal 1-0 Friendly match
January 24, 2001 Hong Kong Norway 1 goal 2-3 2001 Carlsberg Cup
April 24, 2001 Cairo Iran 1 goal 1-0 2001 LG Cup
September 16, 2001 Busan Nigeria 1 goal 2-1 Friendly match
February 2, 2002 Pasadena Canada 1 goal 1-2 2002 CONCACAF Gold Cup
February 13, 2002 Montevideo Uruguay 1 goal 1-2 Friendly match
September 25, 2003 Incheon Vietnam 1 goal 5-0 2004 AFC Asian Cup qualification
September 29, 2003 Incheon Nepal 3 goals 16-0 2004 AFC Asian Cup qualification
October 24, 2003 Muscat Nepal 3 goals 7-0 2004 AFC Asian Cup qualification
December 4, 2003 Tokyo Hong Kong 1 goal 3-1 2003 East Asian Cup

Read more about this topic:  Kim Do-Hoon

Famous quotes containing the word goals:

    Whoever sincerely believes that elevated and distant goals are as little use to man as a cow, that “all of our problems” come from such goals, is left to eat, drink, sleep, or, when he gets sick of that, to run up to a chest and smash his forehead on its corner.
    Anton Pavlovich Chekhov (1860–1904)