Sunday Star-Times

Ghosts of past laid to rest in style

- IAN ANDERSON ON THE GOLD COAST

No more heartbreak.

That was the result of the New Zealand women’s hockey team deservedly grabbing Commonweal­th Games gold with a 4-1 win over Australia on the Gold Coast yesterday.

Shiloh Gloyn, Rose Keddell and Olivia Merry netted as the visitors dominated. Jodie Kenny pulled a goal back for Australia from a penalty corner with 11 minutes to play but New Zealand clinched it late – after Australia had removed their goalkeeper for an outfield player – when Anita McLaren’s penalty corner took a deflection on the way in.

The New Zealand women’s side had never won a Commonweal­th Games hockey gold medal before yesterday. Over the past five Games, the Black Sticks had

Everything worked from the get-go today. Olivia Merry

collected one silver (at Delhi in 2010) and two bronze after making the medal round each time.

‘‘It’s been a long time coming and I know I’ve been on the receiving end of some pretty terrible heartbreak­s,’’ Merry said.

Australian-born coach Mark Hager reiterated that feeling.

‘‘To get a reward after a lot of heartache we’ve had over the last 10 years – two Olympic fourths, Commonweal­th Games, World League finals – we haven’t quite been able to get over the line.

‘‘It’s just pleasing for the girls that we’ve finally done that.’’

In a nervy first quarter, the visitors could have led but Gloyn’s shot on the turn early didn’t find the net.

Gloyn made no mistake just before halftime though when she robbed a defender of the ball and fired her shot low, hard and to the left of Australian goalkeeper Rachael Lynch.

Keddell doubled the lead with a diving effort in the third quarter following a penalty corner and Merry put the Kiwis out of reach when she blasted in from another penalty corner with less than four minutes remaining in the period.

‘‘Incredible . . . indescriba­ble,’’ Merry said.

‘‘To not only beat them 1-0 but to beat them 4-1 – they’re a quality side. Everything worked from the get-go today.

‘‘I don’t know if it’s going to sink in for a wee while yet.’’

Hager said he was surprised by the margin and relative ease of victory after shootout goals from Sam Harrison and captain Stacey Michelsen and goalkeepin­g heroics from Grace O’Hanlon took New Zealand into the final courtesy of a dramatic win over England in their semifinal on Thursday.

‘‘I thought we started really well, we moved the ball around really well, we created some opportunit­ies early,’’ Hager said.

‘‘We spoke about relaxing inside the circle, particular­ly Shiloh, I felt she rushed the first couple of shots – and then she went out there and got us 1-0 up, which was brilliant.

‘‘Then I think the girls felt ‘yep, we’re confident, we can do this’.

‘‘It’s the monkey off the back.’’

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