Memories of the bottom-place finish at the 1986 World Cup here returned to haunt the Indian hockey team, who will now have to lift their game to avert the wooden spoon at the London Olympics.
India, who play Belgium in their final Pool B fixture on Tuesday, will finish last in the group irrespective of the result of this match and will then have to play the bottom-place team in the other pool in the playoff for the 11th and 12th positions.
India are the only team not to have secured a point so far in the ongoing Olympic Games hockey competition, while all others in their group have four points or more. Even an Indian victory over Belgium, who are determined to move up the rankings, will leave India at the bottom.
“This is a reality we have to face now,” says India’s national hockey coach Michael Nobbs.
Nobbs said the players had worked hard and were fit to take on the top teams “but they have let themselves, the team, their supporters and the country down“.
“It is not a God-given right to play for your country. It is an honour you earn through hard work,” said Nobbs. “If they cannot play, we have to move on.”
“Perhaps this is what was required to clean the slate,” he said, expressing his disgust at the manner in which the Indian team had crashed to four successive defeats.
Not only the defeats, it was the manner in which India played that has disappointed it supporters, who turned up in large numbers at every match at these Games, only to return dejected by the poor show of the team.
London was the venue where the hockey team won independent India’s first sporting honour by winning the gold medal at the 1948 Olympics.
Balbir Singh, the centre-forward who won three Olympic gold medals as a member of the Indian teams in 1948, 1952 and 1956 editions, came to the Olympic hockey arena to support the Indian team against South Korea, but like thousands of other supporters left the venue disappointed at India’s performance.
It was not the glory of the 1948 Olympic gold medal, but the dejection of the 1986 World Cup at the British capital that has arrived on the horizon.
Under the new format that is being used at the Olympic Games, teams that fail to make the semifinals will play just one more match to decide their final standing in the tournament.
India will finish below their number 10 ranking as they will feature in the play-off for the last two spots (11th and 12th).
This will be the lowest position in the Olympics for eight-time gold medallists India, whose previous lowest was the eighth-place finish at the 1996 Atlanta Games.
India did not feature in the Beijing Olympic Games as they lost to Great Britain in the qualifier, which left them out of the top 12 teams.
Captain Bharat Chetri said he was hopeful of the Indian team picking up for the last two games -- the pool match against Belgium and the play-off for the 11th and 12th spots.
“I hope we can improve. We must put the four losses behind us and play well as a team to salvage something from the last two matches,” Chetri said, adding that India had paid a heavy price for missing chances in their previous outings.
“We’re a young team, most of the players did not have the experience of a big event like the Olympic Games,” Chetri said.
Belgium defeated India in the final of last year’s Champions Challenge in Johannesburg, and are looking to repeat that performance on Tuesday.
Winners of a bronze medal in the 1920 Olympic Games at Antwerp, Belgium returned to the Olympic Games in 2008 after 32 years.



I just hope HI does not fire Mr. Nobbs. He deserves to continue till the next olympic.
He picked the best team available. But if the country does not produce competitive players he can not be blamed for a week performance by the team. The best for Indian hockey would be to let him help in nurturing the younger generations and definitely by next Olympic we will have a good pool of players to choose for the national team. Winning is a habit and many in this team are good players but are just not winners.
The reason why India has done remarklby well is that BCCI is not under control of govt. India don't have sporting culture and govt is too busy with 2g and commanwealth scams to put their hands on grooming new talent pool. I still remember somewhere I have read that in India, to become a sportsman you have to be genuinelly talented and gifted but in other countries, even though, you are not as talented as indians, the training and practice, combined with world class facilities will make you a good player.
The performance was nothing short of disgusting.
They were helpless and hopeless.
The whole team need to be changed.
Pakistan play with much more enthusiasim for their country.
Just sack all of them.
Absolutely good for nothing.
No one in the country wants to play hockey, neither does anyone want to watch any of it's matches and the credit goes to our "national" team. Any school team in Australia or Germany or The Netherlands could defeat our national team easily. This is the time when we should replace the hockey by any other game as the national game. I see no reason why it has not happened yet..These amateurs who play in our national team should start doing something which really helps in improving one's game--"Training and Practice".
Mr. Nobbs seems to be overly negative and harsh. If he acknowledges
that the team trained hard, then he also has to accept that they did
their personal best. They were just not up to the mark this time. They
need to work even harder and smarter for the next time. Take a look at
Swimming Australia president's Urquhart's comments on carrying out an
internal inquiry following their performance in swimming: "This is not
a time for blame and scapegoating, this is an opportunity to make the
changes required to rise to the international challenge." We need to
take a more positive attitude if we want our team to continue
improving.
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