Without its best player, South Korea rallied to defeat Chinese Taipei at the Asian Olympic women's volleyball qualifying tournament on Saturday, moving within one win of clinching a spot at the 2020 Tokyo Summer Games.
South Korea reached the final of the Asian Olympic qualifying tournament with a 3-1 (18-25, 25-9, 25-15, 25-14) win over Chinese Taipei at Korat Chatchai Hall in Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand.
Having lost its captain and top attacker, Kim Yeon-koung, to an abdominal injury, world No. 9 South Korea bounced back from a lackluster first set to avoid an upset loss at the hands of the 32nd-ranked Chinese Taipei.
Without Kim, five South Koreans scored in double figures, led by Kim Hee-jin with 18 points.
In Sunday's final, South Korea will face world No. 14 Thailand, with a spot in the Tokyo Olympics at stake. South Korea has lost four of its past five matches against Thailand, a slide that began in the semifinals of the 2018 Asian Games.
South Korea is trying to make it to its third straight Olympics in women's volleyball. Thailand has never played in the Olympics.
Kim only played a few points in the first set in the final preliminary match on Thursday, and after getting some treatment at a local hospital on Friday, she sat out the entire semifinal on Saturday.