Hindustan Times (Delhi)

India roar back, beat Australia in shootout

- Sandip Sikdar sandip.sikdar@htlive,com

nBHUBANESW­AR:TEN minutes before pushback, India’s rested players Akashdeep Singh, Mandeep Singh and SV Sunil were in the stands, watching Australia warm up. “It was a narrow loss yesterday. We could have pushed them to the shootouts. But we will beat them today,” Mandeep said as he keenly observed the Australian­s.

The seasoned forward sounded determined. The hosts were disappoint­ed after losing the first match to the defending Pro League champions 3-4 despite pulling back two goals in the final quarter.

But India carried forward that late momentum into the second game at the Kalinga Stadium on Saturday to beat the world No. 2 outfit 2-2 (3-1) via the shootouts, earning their first victory over Australia since November 2016.

India matched Australia for pace, equally shared possession (50%), and made 28 circle penetratio­ns to Australia’s 27. More importantl­y, goalkeeper­s PR Sreejesh and Krishan Pathak, who are changed every quarter, saved all nine penalty corners and a penalty stroke.

Sreejesh came to the rescue again, keeping out three of four Australian attempts in the shootouts—only Daniel Beale scored— while Harmanpree­t Singh, Vivek Sagar Prasad and Lalit Upadhyay all converted. The visitors earned their first penalty corner 31 seconds into the match, which a flying Sreejesh saved with his right hand. Australia forced three more penalty corners in the first quarter but the Amit Rohidas-led defence rushed into drag-flicker Jeremy Hayward each time to thwart the attempts.

Soon, Australia converted a penalty corner but an appeal for obstructio­n on Sreejesh was upheld, ruling out the goal. In the 17th minute, an unmarked Jarmanpree­t Singh missed, his slap going just wide of the left post.

Australia who broke the deadlock when Trent Mitton (23rd min) converted from the narrowest of margins. Pathak was beaten at his near post despite not leaving much space, but Mitton still squeezed in the hit.

India counteratt­acked to earn three back-to-back penalty corners, Rupinder Pal Singh (25th) converting the first to bring India on level terms. His low flick through the legs of Australia goalkeeper Tyler Lovell was Rupinder’s fifth goal of the tournament. India missed their second PC as Harmanpree­t’s flick was saved by Lovell, but earned another and the vice-captain scored his first goal of the tournament, to put India in the lead.

It looked like India might finally beat Australia, after a clean slate in the third quarter. But Australia pulled level within a minute into the fourth quarter when an unmarked Aran Zalewski (46th) in the circle slapped in the ball. Australia were also awarded a stroke in the 33rd minute, but Tim Brand missed it, sending it into the right post. India kept pressing in the final quarter but Vivek Prasad and Nilakanta Sharma missed multiple chances before Australia’s final PC—11 seconds from the hooter—was saved.

 ?? HOCKEY INDIA ?? India celebrate a goal against Australia on Saturday. n
HOCKEY INDIA India celebrate a goal against Australia on Saturday. n

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India