Asian Games: India mauls Hong Kong

Breaks own record of biggest victory margin after 86 years

August 22, 2018 10:16 pm | Updated 10:16 pm IST - JAKARTA

Ceaseless: India took over a minute to score its first, and then kept coming at the target.

Ceaseless: India took over a minute to score its first, and then kept coming at the target.

It took 86 years but when the Indian men’s hockey team walked off the turf here on Wednesday, it had broken its own record of the biggest victory margin ever with a 26-0 mauling of Hong Kong.

The result overshadowed the 24-1 India had registered against USA at the 1932 Olympics but, more importantly, it gave the boys the right momentum ahead of what coach Harendra Singh said the “real beginning of Asian Games competition”. The highest ever in the world is a massive 37-0 win by New Zealand against Samoa in 2015.

“I was looking more at the structure and discipline of the team. The way they played the ball, moved ahead, executed the plans were areas of interest for me. Records are meant to be broken but for now, these boys are part of a historical win and I am sure they will savour it,” he said.

If anything, the result was lesser than what was expected given the way India started off. Fourteen goals at half time — seven in each quarter — and Harendra admitted the pace dropped off post break. But he blamed it more on experimenting and attempting variations than any complacency. “If they were complacent then they wouldn’t have scored so many,” he added.

India took over a minute to get the first goal, and then kept coming at the target. The ball entered the Indian half a grand total of five times through the match. The last of them was in the penultimate minute, when Hong Kong received a penalty corner and India was without a goalkeeper, but it was overturned.

Asked about a goalkeeper’s role in such games, captain P.R. Sreejesh was generous. “Such matches are actually sometimes difficult because you never know when a stray ball might come and beat you. Staying alert in such games is difficult but you have to do it,” he said.

Harendra, though, was still looking at areas of improvement. “Clean movement and sharpness inside the D. There will always be areas to get better,” he said.

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