Son Heung-min – South Korea Forward | 2026 World Cup Performance Analysis
Fire, precision, and an insatiable hunger for goals—Son Heung-min brings it all to South Korea's 2026 World Cup frontline.
At Tottenham Hotspur, Son Heung-min has cemented himself as one of the most dominant forwards in world football this campaign. With 50 international goals and 22 assists across 130 caps, his 8.5/10 KickOracle rating tells only part of the story. At 33, he brings irreplaceable veteran wisdom—the kind of composure that steadies an entire squad under World Cup pressure.
Son Heung-min enters the 2026 World Cup in peak physical condition—fully fit, razor-sharp, and ready to deliver from matchday one. South Korea's medical staff have confirmed he is primed for the grueling demands of tournament football across North America.
On pitches stretching from Toronto to Guadalajara, Son Heung-min will carry South Korea's goal-scoring burden—and his Key Stats suggest he is more than ready to deliver under the brightest lights.
See for yourself: dive into Son Heung-min's live Key Stats, Performance Analysis radar, and tactical comparison tools below. Data-driven insight for every South Korea 2026 World Cup decision.
World Cup 2026 Outlook
This is almost certainly Son Heung-min's last World Cup — at 33, with another Premier League season demanded of him at Tottenham, the timing is unforgiving. South Korea's structure under Hong Myung-bo continues to channel everything through Son: he plays as a left-sided forward but is given freedom to drift centrally whenever Lee Kang-in moves out wide. That asymmetric setup is what nearly produced an upset of Brazil in the 2022 round of 16 and what built South Korea's surprise Asian Cup semi-final run in 2024. The realistic expectation for 2026 is a group stage in which Son must be the player South Korea hide their tactical limitations behind — and a knockout-round path that almost certainly includes one of the tournament favorites. The single biggest tactical question is whether Son still has the explosive first five yards he had at 28. The honest answer from his 2024-25 Premier League minutes is: mostly yes, but he is now the player who finishes moves rather than starts them. The comparable tournament is 2022 in Qatar, where Son played the tournament wearing a protective mask after orbital surgery and still produced the assist that put South Korea into the knockout stage. The 2026 version is asked for less heroics and more leadership — and the surprise is how comfortably he has slid into the senior captain role. The signature moment is his 2022 mask-assist against Portugal. The deeper number is that he is the all-time Asian goal-scorer in Premier League history.
Signature stat
Premier League goals (all-time, Asian players): 120+ — by far the most
Key 2026 matchups
- Group stage: a tactically disciplined CONCACAF or African side
- Round of 16: any side willing to defend a low block
- Bracket end: a top-eight European or South American team
