Olympic Qualifiers | Host India will have its task cut out in clinching the Paris ticket

HOCKEY | The advantage for India will be familiarity with the turf after winning the ACT and the massive crowd support

January 12, 2024 06:27 pm | Updated 08:59 pm IST - Ranchi

Preparation time: India is the second-highest-ranked side in the competition.

Preparation time: India is the second-highest-ranked side in the competition. | Photo Credit: PTI

The comprehensive triumph at the Asian Champions Trophy already in the past, the Indian women’s hockey team will be hoping to build on its success and get the coveted ticket to Paris Olympics when it starts its campaign in the Olympic Qualifiers against USA here on Saturday.

It will be a repeat of India’s route to the Olympics last time around although the format is different this time. India outplayed USA, with coach Janneke Schopman then in the rival dugout, in a two-game thriller in 2019 by a solitary goal to qualify for the Tokyo Olympics. While only four from that USA team have travelled this time, India too has had an overhaul with several seniors missing.

Schopman is aware of the challenge. “Every team is here only to qualify and we know rankings don’t matter any more. We need to be ready against every team. Knowing the USA’s mentality, we know they will fight hard and compete... they have speed and strength and some skilful players too. We need to defend well and score off the chances we get to get full points,” she admitted.

On paper, the host should have it easy – it is the second-highest-ranked side in the competition with only former Olympic and world champion Germany ahead, and a favourite to win, and three spots up for grabs.

But as the Asian Games proved, rankings matter little under pressure. The format of the competition means there will be little time to slip and recover as India will have to finish among the top two in its four-team pool and then reach the final.

Not an easy task

With New Zealand and Italy as the other teams with India in Pool B, the host must make its chances count. While New Zealand is known for its physical play and has a massively lopsided head-to-head record in its favour, Italy won’t be a pushover either, especially with India relying on youngsters to get its job done.

The team suffered a blow when veteran Vandana Katariya was ruled out with a freak injury just before the competition. With Deep Grace Ekka excluded, the team is light in experience and a lot will depend on the scoring prowess of the local trio of Sangita Kumari and Salima Tete, joined by a returning Beauty Dung Dung.

Nikki Pradhan will have to shoulder the burden of defence along with captain Savita, and the absence of Ekka means the inexperienced Deepika will be the sole penalty corner executioner for the side, an area of concern since the past few tournaments.

The advantage for India will be familiarity with the turf after winning the ACT and the massive crowd support. Janneke had expressed reservations before the ACT given the team had rarely played in front of a full house before but the team’s performance back then should ease her worries.

Pool A: Germany (5), Japan (11), Chile (14), Czech Republic (25).

Pool B: India (6), New Zealand (9), United States (15), Italy (19).

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