Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Raising toast to French success in World Cup

- Saurabh Duggal saurabh.duggal@hindustant­imes.com

Till Thursday, nobody took them seriously. Ranked 20th, they are virtually at the bottom of the hockey hierarchy, and the two league matches before they clashed with Olympic champions Argentina, didn’t do their reputation any good. They lost to New Zealand and drew against Spain.

But Tuesday changed everyone’s perception about the 18-member squad, which is part of a very small hockey community in the land of football. France, playing in their third hockey World Cup after 1971, and 1990, defeated the No 2 side Argentina 5-3.

France-Argentina rivalry in football is a known fact. But the same rivalry on a hockey pitch evoked only sneers. Until Thursday, that it. They demolished Argentina to keep their hopes alive in the tournament.

“Before coming here, whenever we talked about the World Cup with friends in France, their first reaction used to be ‘are you talking about the football World Cup?’. For people back home, only one World Cup exists, and that was held in Russia this year. They have reasons to remember the 2018 World Cup; France won the title. So, you can well understand where hockey figures in France with barely a thousand people playing the sport,” said Fabienne van Straaten, the mother of twins, Pieter and Niels. Pieter is part of the French hockey team, while Niels is in the reserves. The Fabienne couple is in Bhubaneswa­r for the World Cup.

France will play China in the ‘crossover’ on December 10, for a berth in the quarter-finals.

French skipper Victor Charlet has 100 internatio­nal caps but had to struggle to tell people that hockey also exists in France. “When I tell friends I play hockey, they either steer away from conversati­on or make faces as if they are clueless. Sometimes they come up with weird queries like ‘Do you play with sticks and a

BHUBANESWA­R:

small ball? Why do you play with the small ball? What’s the ball made of? Is it a chicken ball?’ I hope with our performanc­e here, we can get some respect for our sport in the football-crazy country,” said Victor.

France’s journey to Bhubaneswa­r started in New Delhi in 2013, when they competed in the junior World Cup. It was the first time France won a hockey medal --- silver --- at the world level, losing to Germany.

“More than half-a-dozen players from the 2013 batch are part of the current team. That medal gave us confidence,” said Pieter, a member of the 2013 junior World Cup squad. “Our aim now is to be among the top-10 in the world and after that we are eyeing something big in the 2024 Paris Olympics. That would be the turning point for hockey in France,” said coach Jeroen Delmee.

France doesn’t have a profession­al hockey structure. There are a few clubs and most top players play club hockey in Belgium or Holland. The current bunch of 20 --- 18-member squad and two reserves --- has eight students pursuing degrees in medicine, law, music and gardening architectu­re, among others.

“You can’t depend on hockey for a livelihood in France. There are a couple of players making a living by playing club hockey in Belgium,” said Pieter.

Because of logistic issues and limited funding, France had two World Cup training camps running simultaneo­usly in Paris and Brussels. For three weeks, they trained at their respective venues and then in the fourth week converged at Lille on the northern tip of France bordering Belgium for a joint camp.

“About 12-13 players trained in Belgium and the rest in Paris. In the fourth week of every month, we travelled to Lille for combined training,” said Gaspard Baumgarten. “Lille has a special place in our hearts,” added Pieter.

 ??  ?? France caused a big upset beating Olympic champs Argentina.
France caused a big upset beating Olympic champs Argentina.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India