Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

India edge out Pakistan for consolatio­n bronze

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SOOTHING WIN Narrow victory against archrivals eases pain of missing gold

fourth and last quarter.

For India, Akashdeep Singh and Harmanpree­t Singh scored a goal each, whereas Muhammad Atiq reduced the margin for Pakistan.

RESILIENT PAKISTAN

The match did not the follow script one anticipate­s in a contest between a team ranked fifth in the world and another languishin­g at 13th as India were at the receiving end, especially in the dying minutes with Pakistan mounting an all-out attack.

Even otherwise, the Pakistanis had more ball possession, at least in the second quarter, when they created a few chances only to fritter them away. Overall, Pakistan earned four penalty corners as against India’s two.

The Indians, who had won their last encounter 4-0 at the Champions Trophy, seemed to have learned little from their shocking defeat to Malaysia in the semi-final. They made the same mistakes and the players, including veteran Sardar Singh and SV Sunil, were poor in passing, which gave Pakistan a lot of chances.

NERVY MOMENTS

India started on a bright note and grabbed an early lead when Akashdeep Singh scooped the ball past Pakistani goalkeeper Imran Butt into the top right corner in the third minute.

However, a counter-attack soon after saw India almost losing the advantage when Safqat Rasool’s reverse hit from the left flank hit the post and rebounded into play.

The Indians in panic started committing more errors, failing to trap routine long balls but somehow managed to keep the Pakistanis at bay.

India got their first penalty in the 50th minute and Harmanpree­t Singh made it count by sounding the board with a powerful grounder.

But within two minutes, the smiles were back on the Pakistani faces as Muhammad Atiq scored a fantastic field goal. Meanwhile, India failed to capitalise on the second penalty corner when Rupinder Pal Singh’s shot was far away from the post in the very next minute.

India survived some anxious moments in the last eight minutes of the match as Pakistan threw everything at them but could not score.

“This wasn’t the medal for which we came here. But something is better than nothing and we are happy that we are not going back home empty handed. We fought each and every moment of the game for this,” said coach Harendra Singh.

“Playing against Pakistan has always been motivation­al and I am happy that we could get our record straight against them.”

 ?? AP ?? India's Manpreet Singh (R) during their bronze medal playoff against Pakistan in Jakarta on Saturday.
AP India's Manpreet Singh (R) during their bronze medal playoff against Pakistan in Jakarta on Saturday.

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