The Hindu: Women’s team seeks revival
Uthra Ganesan
Captain Rani determined to do well after a disappointing WC
On Saturday morning the Indian women’s hockey team sweated it out, the training session giving coach Sjoerd Marijne a chance to identify and work out the kinks. A day earlier, the men had strolled past Bangladesh under the watchful eyes of a satisfied coach Harendra Singh in a practice game that was low on intensity but high on strategising.
On Sunday, the women would take their first steps against host Indonesia as Indian hockey continues its quest for the elusive golden double in the Asian Games here. Ranked ninth in the world, the first game isn’t expected to stretch the women much, whose only real challenge in Pool B would be against defending champion Korea – the only nation to achieve the double, its men and women both claiming top spot twice – in 1986 and 1994. The other teams in India’s pool are Kazakhstan and Thailand.
The World Cup quarterfinal defeat to Ireland in shootouts was a bitter pill, more so for captain Rani Rampal, who had never missed a shootout till then in her career. “You will see a new, more determined and recharged team in competition here,” she asserted after Saturday’s session.
No concerns
A day later, the men would play the same opposition, a late addition to their schedule that saw Indonesia being moved to Pool A to accommodate Kazakhstan as the 12th team in the competition. Earlier scheduled to play its first game of the competition on August 22, the team isn’t too concerned with the last-minute change. “Gives us another match to fine-tune our game,” Harendra said.
It hasn’t taken away the defending champion’s focus from the big prize either – gold and a ticket to the Tokyo Olympics. As the highest-ranked Asian side and title favourite, the team is clubbed with Korea and Japan in Pool A, along with Sri Lanka and Hong Kong.
The only previous Asiad gold for Indian women came in 1982 but they have managed to return with a medal in every edition since then, including bronze in 2014. The men too have won a medal in every edition barring 2006. They last reached the finals together in 1998 but only the men returned with gold from Bangkok. In 1982, the women won the title but the men lost to Pakistan in the final. The 2018 edition may well be Indian hockey’s brightest chance to get third time lucky.