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News for 23 August 2020

All the news for Sunday 23 August 2020


Hockey players begin training, focus on skill development: Reid

Currently, 33 male and 24 female players are in Bengaluru for the camp. The light intensity national camp is expected to continue till September 30.


Indian men's team head coach Graham Reid and captain Manpreet Singh.   -  HOCKEY INDIA

The Indian men’s hockey core group will focus on skill development in the next few weeks after restarting the national camp with basic training, head coach Graham Reid said on Saturday, trying to overcome from the jolt of six players contracting COVID-19.

Captain Manpreet Singh, Surender Kumar, Jaskaran Singh, Varun Kumar, Krishan Bahadur Pathak and Mandeep Singh tested positive for the virus between August 10 and 12 and were admitted to a hospital in Bengaluru.

Five players have recovered since then but Surender was readmitted to the hospital on Thursday after developing swelling on his arm. The other five may have to serve some more time in isolation before they join their teammates.

The remaining players began basic sports activities from Wednesday with focus on aerobic exercise.

“We will be using these next few weeks to work on everyone’s development plan and focus on skill development while we can improve their aerobic base,” said Reid in a Hockey India release.

He said the their actions and decisions will determine how the players fare in Tokyo Olympics next year.

“I reminded the players that every action and decision we make will help us to either get closer to our Olympic goal or further away from it and told them of the importance of the next few months in this journey,” he said.

The 56-year-old Australian coach said during the mandatory two-week quaratine period after re-joining the national camp earlier this month, the players were tasked to reinvigorate their Olympic goal by learning the country’s Olympic history.

The players were given assignments to present to the group over video conference about their learnings from individual stories and how they can implement these learnings as a team going forward in their quest for Olympic success.

“During the last two weeks, we used the time to learn about India’s extraordinary Olympic history,” the head coach said.

“The players’ job was to study a number of the Olympic stories and present to the group their individual learnings and what can we use as a team going forward. Going through quarantine together is something we will be able to utilise during our journey over the next 12 months.”

Currently, 33 male and 24 female players are in Bengaluru for the camp. The light intensity national camp is expected to continue till September 30.

Sportstar



Indian hockey’s great survivor resigns – Decoding the David John era

By Subhashish Majumdar


David John (Source- Times of India)

A declaration that Sjoerd Marijne would keep his job as Chief Coach sent the bewildered Indian sports media into a tizzy in late April 2018 – this, after news had leaked that women’s team coach Harendra Singh would be taking over the Dutchman’s role in the men’s camp.

The statement in question which appeared to contradict the leak emanated from the man in the know – Hockey India’s High-Performance Director, David John himself.

The befuddled media houses questioned their respective sources with regard to the veracity of the explosive news story that an Indian coach would, indeed, be taking charge of the men’s team after nearly a decade – but, it was the May Day announcement that followed which proved David John’s prowess as a diplomat par excellence.

It was true that Harendra Singh was being entrusted with the grueling task of guiding the Indians through the Champions Trophy, Asian Games, and World Cup, all scheduled for the same calendar year.

It was equally true that Sjoerd Marijne had indeed kept his job as Chief Coach – the catch, of course, was that the Dutchman was asked to return to the women’s camp where he had begun his India stint in early 2017.

Time has proven that the decision to move Marijne back to the women’s team was indeed the right one with the Indian eves breaking into the top ten in the FIH rankings.

Harendra’s chargers too moved up the ladder to become the fifth best side in the world after a resounding show in the Champions Trophy where the team won a silver medal.

Harendra Singh may well have lost his job following the Odisha World Cup, but Indian hockey fans gave their beloved coach an emphatic thumbs up with social media campaigns being launched to re-instate the man who had guided the Indian juniors to World Cup glory.

Meanwhile, David John who played a key role during the coach swap – and, who was in the thick of things up until the 2018 Commonwealth Games (where the Indians failed to win a medal) faded away from the limelight ever so gradually.

So much so that the High-Performance Director did not have much of a role to play in the lead up to the Men’s World Cup according to well-informed insiders – only reappearing into the spotlight as the makeshift coach of the Indian men’s team in the 2019 Azlan Shah Cup after Harendra Singh was shown the door.

With the redoubtable Analytical Coach Chris Ciriello by his side, David John’s boys failed to get past the South Koreans in the final at Ipoh but the think tank, arguably, made a heroic move by sending in young Kishan Pathak for the big shootout in the finals ahead of seasoned custodian PR Sreejesh who was fit and ready.

It was just the kind of step that typified the Australian, who, along with Sjoerd Marijne, blooded in young rookies like Vivek Sagar Prasad and Dilpreet Singh at Gold Coast 2018 – and, who dared to dispatch a second-string side for the 2018 Azlan Shah Cup much like what champion teams like Australia and Germany did in the past.

The bravado cost Marijne his position in the men’s camp – but, the team selection for the Azlan Shah Cup and the Commonwealth Games were done with David John’s blessings without a shadow of doubt.

With emotions running high post Harendra Singh’s exit, many in the Indian hockey fraternity questioned why the High-Performance Director was allowed to continue while the Chief Coach was unceremoniously axed after the Odisha World Cup.

The fact that David John, supposedly, had a role to play in bringing about Sardar Singh’s downfall did little to enhance his popularity either – it was true, however, that the High-Performance Director who had served as Physio and Scientific Advisor for the Indians back in 2012 had a vision for the future that could not accommodate ageing legs for too long.

In the final of the 2017 Asia Cup in Dhaka, Fitri Saari beat Sardar Singh’s outstretched flat stick to advance menacingly before finding Ramdan Rosli who set up Muhammad Shahril’s goal which reduced the deficit for Malaysia.

With the score line reading 2-1 in favor of India and just over ten minutes to go, Sardar watched the proceedings from the side lines and played no further part in the match which the Indians went on to win.

The midfielder found no place in the team for the prestigious Hockey World League Finals of 2017 which followed and was also left out for the Commonwealth Games in early 2018 only to make a comeback into the side for the Champions Trophy.

The veteran who stated before the Champions Trophy, in June, that he was looking forward to playing the World Cup slated for December unexpectedly announced his retirement, in September 2018, after the Asian Games fiasco where the Indians lost the semifinal to Malaysia.

Through it all, David John came through unscathed – also, post the Commonwealth Games media tirade which was sparked by a minor rebellion amongst the players. The Australian High-Performance Director will be remembered as a tacit survivor who managed to tactfully negotiate through tricky terrain until he hit the final roadblock.

Incidentally, David John replaced Roelant Oltmans as High-Performance Director when the Dutchman was appointed Chief Coach of the men’s team in November 2016.

As per the announcement made by Hockey India back then, Oltmans was to continue as Chief Coach until the Tokyo 2020 Olympics but was sacked in late 2017.

Clearly, three years and eight months or so may well be considered a long time as far as Indian hockey is concerned.  It has been a period that has seen a fair share of tumult but also been one in which the overall graph of Indian hockey has moved staunchly and unwaveringly northwards.

Whether a hitherto silent Hockey India decides to credit David John for the new-found ascendancy – or chooses to dismiss the uptrend as incidental remains to be seen.

David John’s resignation, coming as it does less than 12 months before the Tokyo Olympics – and which, ostensibly, has little to do with on-field performances of either the men’s or women’s teams does raise eyebrows, but pales out when compared to the seemingly irrational and horrendous incidents which were the hallmark of the erstwhile Indian Hockey Federation.

After all, Gerhard Rach was appointed coach days before the Athens Olympics while Cedric D’Souza was sacked while the 2002 Kuala Lumpur World Cup was still on.

Hockey India, in comparison, has set its house in order to a substantially higher degree which is evident from the recent performances of the Indian men’s and women’s teams.

On the face of it, David John’s departure is unlikely to have a telling impact on either the men’s or the women’s teams given the fact that a solid structure is now in place.

For the sake of Indian hockey, however, one hopes that his successor, when appointed, will coalesce seamlessly with the current coaching staff as the ramifications of that not happening is not something that either the players or the ardent fans deserve ahead of Tokyo 2021.

The Bridge



MHC confirm delay in naming new women's coach

By Jugjet Singh


MHC deputy president Datuk S. Shamala. NSTP FILE PIC

KUALA LUMPUR: The Malaysian Hockey Confederation (MHC) disclosed that there will be a slight delay in naming the new women's national coach.

The confederation have shortlisted two foreign and two local coaches for the job.

"We initially wanted to name the new coach by early September. However, there will be a slight delay as we want to conduct online interviews with the candidates first.

"We will, however, be naming a new coach later in September," said MHC deputy president Datuk S. Shamala.

The MHC have combined both the women's national senior and junior teams.

"We want an eight-year plan in place for the women's team.

"The candidates need to present their long-term programmes during the interviews."

Lailin Abu Hassan, who is currently coaching the combined women's team, will be retained as an assistant to the new head coach.

The hunt for a new women's coach started in January when K. Dharmaraj decided not to re-apply for his position.

Dharmaraj is now coaching a women's team in Indonesia.

New Straits Times



English domestic hockey in line for September opening

By Cassie Worth


From Surbiton down to grass roots, our campaign is aimed at all clubs PIC: Simon Parker

Women’s outdoor champions Surbiton will play national indoor champions Buckingham, while East Grinstead men open up against newcomers Oxted in a tasty local derby when the Premier Division opening weekend gets under way in under 30 days’ time.

Pre-season matches have been taking place and there now remains a “judgement call” by England Hockey for Step 5 to commence and a full return to competitive league action after a six-month hiatus. Further down the chain, school and leisure centre closes pose a considerable problem for matches to resume.

With government also allowing spectators back to watch sporting action in some capacity this will hopefully not curtail our #watchyour1s campaign to begin a second season given our agenda.

England Hockey recently announced a ‘split league’ structure in the Men’s and Women’s Premier Divisions – which is set to start without a main sponsor across both leagues following Investec’s decision to end its deal.

The Premier Division, with 11 teams, will see every side play each other once before Christmas in Phase 1, before splitting into two pools made up of the top six and lower five teams.

After Christmas, Phase 2 will see teams in the lower five play each other twice, while teams in the top six face the other teams in the group once.

England Hockey says that this structure “will support more ‘best vs best hockey’; provide a structure where ‘every game matters’; optimise Euro Hockey League/European Club Championships preparation and support international players’ immersion in the England Hockey League.”

The Premier Division will start on Sep 19/20 and Division One/Conferences beginning the following week.

“This will all continue to be led by the Return to Play Roadmap,” added England Hockey.

Due to the pandemic, The Hockey Paper has yet to finalise its plans for a return to print. We will be previewing the landscape of English domestic hockey in the coming weeks, including our bid to get the public watching domestic hockey.

Please help keep independent journalism alive in these uncertain times. With the media industry affected by advertising, we are continuing to offer our coverage free until we return in print.

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The Hockey Paper

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