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Prime Minister's Gold Cup tourney from today
By S. Thyagarajan
DHAKA, MARCH 9. Hockey in Asia will acquire an added image, a
credible identity and a vibrant vista with the start tomorrow of
the Prime Minister's Gold Cup tournament here. A new entity
emerges in the role of a promoter, allured by the romance that
has set the sub-continental ethos on a different equation, Not
that Bangladesh is a newcomer. Only the threads are picked up
after the momentous Asia Cup in 1985.
Traumatic though the end then was with the verdict engulfing
India and Pakistan in the vortex of controversy, it is difficult
to refrain from recalling the tumult that lasted well over a
year. The attack on the Japanese umpire, Yubuta, shocked the
fraternity and the FIH slapped a ban on the five suspected
Indians. Much water has flowed under the Farakka Barrage
thereafter. Now, Bangladesh reinvents itself as an organiser.
With the Government lending a helping hand, prompted by the
encouraging performance, the tournament promises to fulfil the
goal of seeing Bangladesh as part of the next World Cup in Kuala
Lumpur. That it won the nod for the qualifier in Edinburgh, is in
itself a recognition of the country's enhanced credentials.
Bangladesh will be happy with a semifinal berth here. But what
the authorities are keen about is to assess the leeway between
the Olympic rankers and their national team. A fifth place in
Asia Cup last year after the 10th slot in the Asian Games is
definitely a vast improvement. Given the disadvantage of not
having a synthetic pitch till a few years ago, the progress
recorded cannot be ignored, despite being dwarfed by the
achievements of the neighbors, India and Pakistan.
How professionally Bangladesh Hockey Federation approaches its
goal can be substantiated by the efforts taken to rope in a
German coach, York Schumacher, for a period of four years under
the Bangla-Germany agreement. There is a new dynamism in the
training under the expert German since November last. The
efficacy of it will be judged when Bangladesh takes on Japan,
fourth in the last Asiad in 1998.
India and Scotland are the other contenders in Pool A. Quite
predictably, the expectation is an India-Pakistan final on March
20. The course towards this end can be fascinating to foretell.
For India the reverse in the German series is no doubt a minor
setback. But the team has been revamped with appropriate
replacements.
Dhanraj Pillay returns
The return of the veteran Dhanraj Pillay should inspire the
youth. Fit and artful as ever, Dhanraj is still the best bet to
transform the course of a contest. With Baljit Singh Dhillon and
Deepak Thakur, the attack, led by Dhanraj, can be formidable if
the youngsters Daljit Singh Dhillon and, the newcomers, Prabhjot
Singh and Inderjit Singh, contribute substantially to inject that
verve into the attack. Inderjit Singh is fresh from a trophy
triumph for the junior team at Cairo.
The strength of the mid-field wears an enhanced look with the
induction of Radhakrishnan and Arjun Halappa, both promising
juniors. In the German series, Bipin Fernandes, distinguished
himself in the company of the seniors, Thirumal and Baljit Singh
Saini. With Barla acting as additional link backed by the
indefatigable Dilip Tirkey and Dinesh Nayak, the base defence can
be projected a solid. Additionally, the work of Jude Menezes
under the bar has been exemplary in the last year and half. He
is, in present form, as good as any of his contemporaries.
The hospitalisation of the chief coach, Cedric D'Souza in Chennai
following suspected food poisoning, upset the rhythm of
preparations. It is a measure of Cedric's commitment that he
managed to conduct a theoretical coaching session with the board
within the hospital. The Indian team surviving moments of
uncertainty about their departure schedule reached here this
afternoon. India takes on Scotland on Sunday in the opening
match.
Pakistan, whose participation was personally cleared by the Chief
Executive, Gen. Parvez Mushraff, after some uncertainty cropped
up over strained diplomatic relations between Islamabad and
Dhaka, is the highest rated Olympic outfit in the competition.
Fourth at Sydney and possessing a few brilliant strikers and
stylists, Pakistan will lean heavily on the penalty corner
strikes of Sohail Abbas. The absence of Atif Bashir, Shabir
Ahmed, Ali Raza and Zakarulla, who are injured may affect the
frontline power, which now rests on Sarwar, Kamran Asriff and
Naveed Iqbal. Goal-keeper Ahmed Alam leads the side which has
three coaches, Shahbaz Ahmed, Hanif Khan and Kwaja Junaid.
New role for Shahbaz
Acknowledging the pressure as a coach after an illustrious career
as a player, Shahbaz said the experience gained over the years
would be invaluable to him. The four year stint in Holland, he
said, had given him an insight into modern coaching. ``I will
give the team my best,'' he said, when the Pakistanis trained
this morning.
Malaysia has a newlook squad. Only Kuhen Shanmuganathan and Nor
Azlan Baker could easily be spotted as being part of the
experienced brigade. The worth of the experiment remains to
tested, especially when the team has acquired again the services
of a stalwart coach as Paul Lissek.
The Pools: A: India, Bangladesh, Japan and Scotland: B: Pakistan,
China, Egypt, Malaysia and Ireland.
Saturday's match: Bangladesh v Japan (3 p.m. IST).
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