ULSAN — South Korean club Ulsan Hyundai cruised to its first Asian Champions League title as it outclassed Al-Ahli of Saudi Arabia 3-0 in the final Saturday to qualify for the FIFA Club World Cup. Captain Kwak Tae-hwi opened the scoring in the 13th minute with Brazilian forward Rafinha (68th) and midfielder Kim Seung-yong (75th) adding second half goals as the Koreans dominated the final they hosted in Ulsan after a draw by organizers. The 3-0 win was Ulsan's ninth consecutive victory in Asia's premier club tournament, which it went through unbeaten, as a South Korean team lifted the trophy for the third time in four years. Ulsan collected the $1.5 million winner's check and trophy from AFC acting president Zhang Jilong. It will now represent Asia in the Club World Cup next month in Japan where it will take on Mexican side Monterrey in the quarterfinals. “I am so happy for the players,” Ulsan coach Kim Ho-gon told reporters. “They wanted to play in the FIFA Club World Cup and it is the same for me. This is the happiest day in my coaching career. “Ulsan have had to wait for a long time to come to the final so I told the players we must win the game. The players created a lot of pressure in the first half and all of the players played their part.” The victory in the south-eastern city never looked in doubt once Ulsan took the lead thanks to its big central defender Kwak Tae-hwi, who glanced a header from Kim Seung-yong's free kick into the corner of Ahli goal. Ulsan strikers Rafinha and Kim Shin-wook caused the visitors numerous problems as the home side played in a surprisingly direct style in contrast to the more possession-conscious play that had helped it reach the final for the first time. But while the Koreans routinely pinned Ahli back in its own half with a pressing high defensive line, it struggled to test the Saudi goalkeeper Abdullah Mayyof. The visitors' best chance came in the 40th minute when Moataz Al-Musa expertly controlled a ball into the box but his strong right foot shot was well blocked before his teammate Victor saw his rebound cleared by a scrambling Ulsan defense. Brazilian Victor had a couple of further half chances after the break before Kwak missed a great chance to double the advantage on the hour mark, but he wasted a free header after another pinpoint free kick from deep by Kim Seung-yong. Ulsan did grab a second seven minutes later when another long ball into the box was headed across goal by the towering Kim Shin-wook and Rafinha was on hand to bundle the ball in from close range, celebrating with a ‘Gangnam style' dance. Ahli, playing its first match outside of the Middle East in this year's tournament, looked beaten and its heads dropped as Kim Seung-yong added some shine to the victory with a third seven minutes later. The dead-ball specialist neatly controlled a cross to the back post on his chest before rifling home a powerful right foot shot to the joy of the home crowd. Kim Shin-wook twice came close to adding a fourth in the dying stages as Ahli lost its discipline playing in the cool temperatures in Korea. “I was planning to make some changes in the second half, but I was surprised when Ulsan scored and after that I thought our players lost their concentration and didn't focus well on the match,” Ahli coach Karel Jarolim told reporters. “Maybe we are expecting a lot from the players and it's true they didn't perform well, but it's not because they didn't want to but because Ulsan are a strong team and they played well.” Brazilian player wants to end Ittihad contract Brazilian player Diego Souza has fallen out with his club Al-Ittihad and is trying end his contract. Diego Souza has contacted Brazil's Sports Ministry requesting assistance because he has been unable to end his contract. The playmaker transferred from Vasco da Gama in July. — Agencies