Otago Daily Times

Format hailed by Otago pathways manager

- ADRIAN SECONI

OTAGO pathways manager Hymie Gill is thrilled with plans to revert to an associatio­nbased national tournament stucture next year.

Hockey New Zealand is dismantlin­g the regional model which has underpinne­d the National Hockey League and the premier under21 and under18 national tournament­s.

An associatio­nbased competitio­n will replace it. What shape it takes and what role the various associatio­ns will play in that is unclear.

But the Otago Hockey Associatio­n is wellplaced to flourish in the new environmen­t with Gill on board.

The 46yearold returned to Dunedin earlier this year after 20 years away.

A former New Zealand hockey representa­tive, he played 79 matches for his country and has been a profession­al coach for the past 18 years.

Gill has seen a few changes in his time and is very much looking forward to the next one.

Before the advent of the

National Hockey League in

1999, the tournament was an associatio­nbased tournament.

It was a threetiere­d competitio­n with six teams in each grade and promotionr­elegation matches to allow for movement between the tiers.

The top six men’s teams in 1998 were Northland, Auckland, Wellington, Blenheim, Canterbury and Otago.

‘‘This is why I think it is great — Blenheim were in the top division,’’ he said.

‘‘It was pretty awesome that a small associatio­n had the chance to play in the top tier and I think that is what has been missing in the National Hockey League.

‘‘The incision of the regional competitio­n meant the little associatio­ns have gone awry. The Horowhenua­s, the Whanganuis, the Manawatus and the Hawke’s Bays have all gone.

‘‘That has meant good club hockey players have not had the pathway to play in front of national selectors. They used to go along to see who was doing well in all three tournament­s.’’

Gill, for example, was selected for New Zealand in 1998 after a strong performanc­e for Waikato in the secondtier­ed tournament.

The centralisa­tion of talent has acted as a disincenti­ve for players and it also drew resources away from the regions, Gill said.

‘‘It will now be a game played by New Zealand rather than just a game played in the big centres,’’ he said.

‘‘Across the board I think it is going to make the associatio­ns stronger. And the thing about this is there is now going to be lots of associatio­ns who will need to have fulltime coaches helping develop their players.’’

 ??  ?? Hymie Gill
Hymie Gill

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