Times of India: Indian eves pound Singapore in Asi

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BANGKOK: Jasjeet Kaur led the onslaught with three goals as a ruthless India steamrolled novice Singapore 13-0 to open their Women’s Asia Cup hockey campaign in style at the Queen Sikrit Sports Centre on Thursday.

Jasjeet struck thrice in the 39th, 53rd and 59th minutes while Saba Anjum, Mamta Kharab, Deepika Thakur, Surinder Kaur and Rani Ramphal chipped in with two goals each as India blanked their hapless opponents with consummate ease.

Earlier, top contenders Japan and Korea routed Kazakhstan and Sri Lanka 10-0 and 17-0 respectively. Malaysia also collected full points with a 3-0 win over hosts Thailand.

Winger Saba Anjum connected Jasjeet Kaur’s drag flick to open the scoring in the second minute off India’s second penalty corner and captain Surinder Kaur stretched the lead two minutes later from the next penalty corner.

Stung by the reverse, Singapore tightened their defence, giving no leeway to strikers Jasjeet, Saba Anjum and Surinder Kaur, even though they conceded 15 penalty corners in the first session alone.

The Indians, however, soon brought down the rival citadel with Rani Ramphal (19th minute) and Mamta (23rd min) sounding the board and Deepika scoring at the stroke of lemon break to give India a 5-0 cushion at breather.

Indian forwards made amends in the second half, attacking with renewed vigour and it started raining goals.

Jasjeet connected a cross from right for India’s sixth goal while lanky Rani Ramphal unleashed a deft flick from close range to make it 7-0 in the 41st minute. Next minute, Saba came from the wing to connect a pass from the midfield to find the cage.

Realising the match has slipped through the fingers, Singapore virtually gave in and India pumped in five more goals to complete the rout.

“We were a bit lazy in the first half but the second half went off well. When a team defends in full strength in your area, this happens,” India’s chief coach MK Kaushik said.

India, in all, got a whopping 24 penalty corners today and converted seven.
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“Not a bad record, as we did not want to exhaust all the variations we have for the fear of exposure,” Kaushik said.

Captain Surinder Kaur also felt the team could have done even better.

“I feel, we did not play well in the first half, especially the forwards, who were in a hurry. Once we adopted to one-touch pass in the second half, we got the rewards,” Surinder said.