Aussies prevail in a battle of agression

December 05, 2015 04:11 am | Updated March 24, 2016 01:53 pm IST - RAIPUR:

RAIPUR, INDIA - DECEMBER 04:  Dylan Wotherspoon of Australia celebrates after he scores during the match between Australia and Netherlands on day eight of The Hero Hockey League World Final at the Sardar Vallabh Bhai Patel International Hockey Stadium on December 04, 2015 in Raipur, India. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty images)

RAIPUR, INDIA - DECEMBER 04: Dylan Wotherspoon of Australia celebrates after he scores during the match between Australia and Netherlands on day eight of The Hero Hockey League World Final at the Sardar Vallabh Bhai Patel International Hockey Stadium on December 04, 2015 in Raipur, India. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty images)

The match was the same but the result different. Australia avenged its semifinal defeat to defending champion The Netherlands in the inaugural Hockey World League Finals last year with a 3-2 win and sealed a spot in the final here on Friday. Australia had lost 3-4 at the same stage last year.

Decidedly the better team on the day, Australia came out winner in a battle that saw both teams go on the attack from the beginning. The Dutch attempts, however, fizzled out quickly. Scoring a goal each in the first three quarters and defending well against a desperate Dutch in the fourth, the Aussies proved their indifferent form in the league phase was not permanent.

Alert goalkeeper

Knowing well that taking an early lead was half the battle won in a tight contest, the Dutch tried to get the first goal in but were thwarted by an alert Andrew Charter in the goal. The Aussies, slow to start off, stepped on the gas after the first five minutes and were almost immediately rewarded. And the supposedly over-the-hill Jamie Dwyer was in the thick of action.

He first put through Trent Mitton, who hit wide. Dwyer then earned the team’s first penalty corner, which was saved. He then received the corner just inside the circle, controlled the ball and then shot at the goal, deflected in by Dylan Wotherspoon. He was again instrumental in accurately deflecting the ball to an unmarked Daniel Beale in an indirect attempt at penalty corner conversion in the 22nd minute.

The Dutch pulled one back through Constantijn Jonker's rebound hit after Australian goalkeeper Tyler Lovell thwarted Floris van der Linden but even though the European champion tried its best, Australia made it look ordinary.

Except for a meagre difference in possession percentage, it was Australia all the way in every department. From shots on target to effecting turnovers to creating scoring chances, the Netherlands was a shadow of itself.

Even in the final moments and trailing by a single goal, there was no urgency as Australia casually kept passing the ball.

The scoreline may indicate that it was a close contest but on the ground, there was only one winner.

The result (semifinal):

Australia 3 (Dylan Wotherspoon, Daniel Beale, Matthew Gohdes) bt The Netherlands 2 (Constantijn Jonker, Mirco Pruijser).

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