Two evenly-matched sides make the Day-1 nightcap the trickier Fantakick puzzle. With no budget and the one-from-each-team rule in force, you'll field a Korean and a Czech whether you like it or not. Where the points hide: Souček's set-piece threat, Kim Min-jae's clean-sheet upside, and a WILD slot that can double up on Son.
Same shape as every Fantakick match: GK, DEF, MID, FW, a WILD that takes any role, one captain at 1.5x, locked at kickoff. With no prices, the only constraint is the one-from-each-team rule — and in a tight game between well-matched sides, that's a feature, because you genuinely want exposure to both ends.
Czechia's spine is the value. Tomáš Souček scores goals from midfield off set pieces — and a goal is a flat 15 in Fantakick no matter the position — while his aerials and blocks (0.75 each) tick over all night; Coufal offers the same defensive accrual from full-back. If you fancy a low-scoring game, Kim Min-jae behind a Korean clean sheet pairs a defender's 3-point shutout with the tackles and clearances he racks up against Schick.
Up the other end, Son Heung-min is the engine: he shoots, dribbles and creates, and in Fantakick all three pay (shot on target 1.5, dribble 1.5, key pass 0.75) before he even scores. He is the obvious WILD if you want him alongside a striker in the FW slot. Lee Kang-in is the set-piece and assist route in.
Even games are where the one-from-each-team rule earns its keep — you're forced to own both ends, and both ends pay.
Settle the armband in Son or Schick, read why Souček and Castrop are the names to know in the key-players guide, and compare the build with the opener's lineup guide. Lock it in on Matchday; the scoring lives on the rules page.
Sources: ESPN — South Korea squad · Olympics.com — Czechia squad.