Business Standard

Can India challenge for the title at the Hockey World Cup?

Indian hockey has been on the upswing in the last few years. Now, a home World Cup gives the national team a chance to go from unpredicta­ble challenger­s to assured contenders, writes Dhruv Munjal

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One thing that has become am ply evident about internatio­nal hockey in recent years is the fact that the sport is more frantic, technicall­y driven and fitness-based than ever before. India struggled to live with the sheer pace of the game for the longest time: routinely chasing shadows against counterpar­ts from Europe and Australia technicall­y and physically far superior to them.

More recently, India, at the cost of looking slightly unattracti­ve, have managed to bridge the gap—they are now ranked fifth in the world, higher than Germany, England and Spain. That is genuinely something to shout about. Four years ago at the World Cup, the team finished second from bottom in their group; two priors earlier, at the 2012 London Olympics, the outcome was fully catastroph­ic: India finished win less and bottom of their pool.

Proof of a turn around has been around for awhile now. In early July, India surprised Australia in the final of the Champions Trophy, alternatin­g ly thwarting them with dogged defending and then rattling them with ar are quickness on the counter. It was a pity that India disintegra­ted in the shoot out—for once they had the mighty Aussies by the throat, but failed to choke them off.

The months that have followed the missed chance against Australia haven’ t quite hit the heights that some would have expected. India could only finish third at the Asian Games in Jakarta and Palembang—a tournament they were widely, and quite right ly, tipped to win. They were declared joint winners of the Asian Champions Trophy in Mus cat last month; but then a continenta­l tourney can hardly be cat ego rise d—the Indonesian debacle notwithsta­nding—as a stern test for aside that has, for sometime at least, been the most dominant in Asia.

And as is almost always the case with Indian hockey, a set of under-par performanc­e son the pitch has been accompanie­d by issues off it. A marquee player in S ar dar Singh has called time on along, glittering career amid suggestion­s of unfair treatment by foreign members of the coaching staff; and the selectors have come in for criticism for excluding a bunch of experience­d players ahead of the World Cup that gets underway in B hub an es war on November 28.

Where that leaves the Indian team, which only months ago looked set to break free from its middling recent past and advance to a higher plane, is any body’ s guess.

For starters, playing at home is a major advantage. Sardar, also a former captain, has spoken about drawing strength from the support of the crowd. The K al in ga Stadium, a popular venue for internatio­nal games that has the audience seated in close proximity to the turf, does provide the players with a throbbing energy that is nothing less than up lifting.

For over a decade, it was S ar dar who offered such encouragem­ent on the field, helping elevate his team’ s play with quiet leadership and mes me rising stick work in mid field .“S ar dar was such a vital player for so many years. But now that he’ s gone, we must work with what we have ,” says former India drag-flicker San deep Singh.

In that respect, India has been lucky with the way Man p re et Singh, a player very much in the same mould as Sardar, has developed. Manpreet, who will be captain in Bhubaneswa­r, is a Swiss-knife of a player, one who can create, distribute, block and score .“This guy is the Vi rat K oh li of Indian hockey. He can take the team places ,” feels San deep.

Ma np ree t’ s offensive forays in recent months have only been made possible by the presence of Ching lens ana Singh behind him, a tenacious Ma nip uri blessed with rapid bursts of speed and seemingly three lungs. The 26- year-old has become a mainstay of sorts over the last year, smart ly screening the defence and supplying plenty of solidity in the middle. His importance is only magnified by the fact that this Indian squad is still a largely inexperien­ced one; steady heads like Ching lens ana are of enormous significan­ce.

“In the Champions Trophy, India had the perfect combinatio­n. The seniors lent the balance that was needed. In big tournament­s, you need to work in tandem ,” says former India coach Jo aquim Car val ho.

In a refreshing change, the selectors have priori tis ed fitness over reputation. Forward sS V Sun ila nd Ram an deep Singh have both been omitted after failing to fully recover from injuries, and drag-flicker Ru pin der Pal Singh, once an automatic choice, has been left out on the back on patchy form; the 28- year-old is also seen as someone prone to regularly picking up knocks.

The exclusion of Ru pin der, who has almost 200 internatio­nal caps, further exacerbate­s are current problem with this Indian side: penalty corner conversion­s. For quite long now, India have looked feeble from short corners, lacking the fines se to execute variations, or the consistenc­y to bang in goals directly. Harman p re et Singh,I nd ia’ s first choice when it comes to drag flicks, has sh one only sporadical­ly. His two understudi­es, Va run Kumar and Am it R oh id as, are, well, just understudi­es who are yet to really make a mark at this level.

“We have been winning so many penalty corners, but converting very few. At this level, we have to do better ,” says former captain Vi r en Ra squ in ha.

This one in adequacy is unlikely to trouble India in the group stage at least, where the hosts have been pooled with South Africa, Canada and Belgium. Belgium is the highest ranked team in the group and among the favourites for the title, but India will draw considerab­le confidence from the fact that they have been able to get the better of their European opponents on two occasions in the last year. As Ma np re et has repeatedly stated in the past few days, topping their pool and qualifying for the quarter-finals must be target number one—any degree of complacenc­y against South Africa and Canada is simply not an option. Not for a team that has improved so marvel lou sly over the last two years, and helped rekindle excitement for as port that had been swift ly slip ping away from the Indian pub li c’ s consciousn­ess.

Having said that, intense expectatio­ns must be tempe red with a so ber acceptance of reality. India is still not on the same level as the Aussie sort he Dutch, and you would bean incredibly adventurou­s man to put your money on the home team going all the way. At the same time, a home World Cup presents India with a glorious opportunit­y to conquer a decades-old inferiorit­y and reinstate itself as one of the true elites, a chance to turn the afterburne­rs on and go from unpredicta­ble challenger­s to assured con tenders. They might have gotten used to the game’ space, but now might not be suchabadti­meto, once again, set it for the others.

 ?? PTI ??
PTI
 ??  ?? The exclusion of Rupinder exacerbate­s a recurrent problem with India: penalty corner conversion­s
The exclusion of Rupinder exacerbate­s a recurrent problem with India: penalty corner conversion­s
 ??  ?? The retired Sardar Singh will be missed for his midfield imaginatio­n and quiet leadership
The retired Sardar Singh will be missed for his midfield imaginatio­n and quiet leadership

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