Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

What fuelled India’s Asian conquest ‘JOBLESS GOALIE’ SAVITA HOPES ASIA CUP WIN ENDS 9YR WAIT

- Ajai Masand ajai.masand@htlive.com Press Trust of India sportsdesk@htlive.com

STRAIGHTTA­LK Fresh after their victory at Asia Cup, the Indian women’s hockey team’s mainstays speak to HT about their journey to the title

The fatigue, from the wild celebratio­ns after they beat China in the Asia Cup hockey final and the long-haul flight from Tokyo to Delhi, was very much apparent on their faces. While India women’s hockey team skipper Rani Rampal kept fidgeting with her shoe laces -tying and untying them half-adozen times – as if she just wanted to get rid of the ‘appendage’, her deputy Savita Poonia, though animated, tried, every now and then, to conceal a yawn.

Rampal, Poonia, along with goalkeeper Navjot Kaur and Navneet Kaur -- the mainstays of the victorious Indian team -visited Hindustan Times on Tuesday for a candid chat, sharing insights and anecdotes from their journey under coach Harendra Singh. The victory in the Asia Cup, after 13 long years, had taken a toll on these women and they seemed in dire need of rest.

GRAND WELCOME

It was a ‘Chak de’ moment for India in Kakamigaha­ra, Japan, on that eventful evening of November 5 , and the magnitude of the achievemen­t finally sunk in when they arrived in New Delhi where hundreds of wellwisher­s welcomed them at the airport, while many others across the country sent congratula­tory messages on social networking sites.

It was all made possible by the confidence Harendra Singh reposed in the girls.

“The coach was so confident about our victory that before we went into the shootout, he said, ‘Our shootout takers will score three goals and the goalkeeper (Savita) will stop two shots…’ That gave us the confidence,” said Navjot Kaur, who scored the opening goal in the final. “I don’t know, but he perhaps had this premonitio­n — or the confidence in us — that the gold was ours even before we went into the nerve-wracking shootout.”

Certainly, the coach has struck a consonant chord with the women in the three-odd months he has been with the team.

“The fact that he is motivated all the time gives us confidence,” added goalkeeper Savita who is also the team deputy. “You have to do this for India…you have to do this for your country, he keeps telling us. This, and the fact, that we can easily explain our viewpoint because of the ease of conversati­on is a big plus.”

END OF WAIT

The victory has ended the anguish of the team after it failed to qualify for the 2018 World Cup in London at the Hockey World League Semi-Final in Johannesbu­rg earlier this year.

It has also given the women the motivation to perform in a busy 2018. A whole set of topnotch tournament­s including the Commonweal­th Games, Asian Games and the World Cup are lined up in 2018. And, if they win the Asiad gold in Jakarta, they can automatica­lly qualify for the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games.

“When we did not qualify for the World Cup and finished eighth out of the 10 teams in Johannesbu­rg, we consoled ourselves by saying we were as

NEWDELHI:

R RAMPAL, On the team’s mindset good as our position and we didn’t deserve it,” said skipper Rampal. “But we motivated ourselves and gave it our all in the camp knowing that we had another chance (in the Asia Cup) and we should focus on that. The Asia Cup was the last opportunit­y for us to qualify for the 2018 World Cup and we did it.”

Asked if there was pressure on the team during the penalty shootout, Rampal said the team is used to such situations. “This was not the first time... we have faced this before when we go into sudden death where I have to score and she (Savita) has to save, so we are used to it.”

With time to unwind now, Savita, the shopaholic that she is, would want to hit the shopping plazas and malls, while Rampal just wants to listen to rustic Punjabi music, her favourite being Gurdas Mann. R RAMPAL, On HWL disappoint­ment

India goalkeeper Savita Punia has received many accolades for her on-field heroics but she could not secure a job for herself despite all the success in a nine-year internatio­nal career.

On Sunday, Savita produced a stunning save in a tense shootout in the thrilling final against China to help India win the Asia Cup women’s hockey title and secure a berth in next year’s World Cup. The team broke a 13-year-old jinx when Savita foiled an attempt from the rivals to ensure a 5-4 win.

India had failed to qualify for the last World Cup and finished ninth in the 2010 edition.

“I am very happy that I could contribute in team’s win. I work harder to bring more laurels and will not let my unemployme­nt affect my game,” Savita said after team’s return from Japan.

“I have been trying for a job for the last nine years. I was promised a job under the Haryana Government’s ‘Medal Lao, Naukri Pao’ scheme, but I have only been given assurances by officers.

Our win wasn’t inspired by the Chak De! movie. We didn’t need to seek inspiratio­n from it as we have been playing hockey all these years. We had this mindset that we had to win the title as this was our last chance to qualify for 2018 World Cup...we had the confidence we would win. The change in the coaching setup is not in our hands. But, yes, with an Indian coach we are more at ease because they understand our language. When we couldn’t qualify directly for the World Cup at HWL Semis in Jo’burg) we thought we didn’t deserve it. But it was a blessing in disguise. NEWDELHI:

‘STILL A DEPENDANT’

“I am 27 now and still depend on my father’s income. I am playing for my country for last 9 years and every time after a win, I hope to get a job but nothing changes.”

Savita, who hails from Hisar, made her internatio­nal debut in 2008 and has just completed 150 caps in Asia cup. She started playing Hockey as per the wish of her grandfathe­r Mahinder Singh and starred in India’s bronze medal effort in Junior Asia Cup in 2009. “I should take care of my parents but it is opposite in my case. My father is a pharmacist and it is not easy to run a family with his solo income.” She had also applied for a coaching job with SAI after Rio Olympics but did not get any response from them.

“Sometimes I get very tense when I see my parents. My mother is worried that I don’t have a job. My father encourages me to do well and I never let my game get affected with my unemployme­nt,” she said.

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 ?? SONU MEHTA/ HT ?? (Top pic, from left) Navjot Kaur, Savita Punia, Rani Rampal and Navneet Kaur display their Asia Cup gold medals; (above) Rani and Navneet at Hindustan Times office, New Delhi.
SONU MEHTA/ HT (Top pic, from left) Navjot Kaur, Savita Punia, Rani Rampal and Navneet Kaur display their Asia Cup gold medals; (above) Rani and Navneet at Hindustan Times office, New Delhi.

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