Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Amin Rahim's super show

By Ajitpal Singh

MALAYSIA were three minutes away from defeat but Amin Rahim’s penalty corner strike levelled proceedings before he scored again with his trademark drag flick in sudden-death extra time to clinch a 4-3 win over India to qualify for their first ever Asian Games final at the Aoti Stadium yesterday.
And awaiting them in the gold medal match tomorrow is Pakistan, who upset favourites South Korea 4-3 on penalty strokes after the match ended 1-1 in regulation time.
For the record, Malaysia have never reached the final of the Asian Games since making their first appearance in 1958 but finished third on seven occasions.
It is expected to be an explosive final as the winner will gain direct entry into the 2012 London Olympics.
Prior to the Asian Games, critics were unkind to national coach Stephen van Huizen and his players after doing badly in last month’s New Delhi Commonwealth. But now they have silenced their critics with an exceptional performance in Guangzhou.
“I am delighted for being a hero for my team. I was under pressure after making a mistake, which resulted in India scoring at the start of the second half but I am really glad for making up for my blunder with two goals,” said Amin at the Aoti Stadium yesterday.
Malaysia captain Madzli Ikmar Mohd Nor said everyone in the team played their roles well to earn victory yesterday.
“We were patience and played a tactical game to win. It was a tough match as India were also looking at qualifying for the Olympics through the Asian Games.
“I can’t describe my happiness right now as being in the final is like a dream for us. It all boiled down to hard work and determination today (yesterday),” said Madzli Ikmar, who has been Malaysian captain since last year.
Malaysia were 3-2 down when Amin sounded the board with a low drag flick three minutes before the full time whistle.
And five minutes into extra time, Amin turned hero with his trademark flick, off a penalty corner, which sailed past India’s goalkeeper Bharat Kumar Chetri’s left before sounding the board.
Malaysia drew first blood in the match through Tengku Ahmad Tajuddin Tengku Jalil’s solo effort after 32 minutes but India’s Sandeep Singh levelled proceedings off a penalty corner set-piece three minutes later.
Tushar Khandker took advantage of a defensive mix-up from Amin to put India in the lead off a field attempt in the 37th minute.
However, the young Malaysian team pressed hard upfront and their persistence paid off through Azlan Misron, off a penalty corner set-piece, after 49 minutes.
Azlan pushed the ball into an empty India goalmouth, after Amin had dummied India’s penalty corner defensive line up by passing to the goal scorer instead of making a direct attempt.
But five minutes later, captain Rajpal Singh put India in the lead after Malaysia goalkeeper S. Kumar failed to clear the ball cleanly off a penalty corner attempt from Dhananjay Mahadik.
The match was heading to India’s way before Malaysia earned a penalty corner three minutes from time, in which 30-year-old Amin scored from it.
But suspense crept into the match after India was awarded a penalty corner two minutes from time. Dhananjay lined-up for it and his attempt forced a melee before an India stick managed to squeeze the ball past keeper Kumar but a defender managed to clear it away in the nick of time.
And Amin’s golden goal, in sudden death extra time, sealed victory for Malaysia.

Twitter spreads the good news

  1. shiva_tina: RT @PKamalanathan: Malaysia beat India 4 - 3 in Asian Games Hockey Semi-Finals & will now meet Pakistan in the Finals. Well Done MALAYSIA.
  2. azmi_777: Good job RT @Khairykj: RT @PKamalanathan: Malaysia beat India 4 - 3 in Asian Games Hockey Semi-Finals & will ...
  3. qazisaleem: Malaysia beat India in Asian Games Hockey Semi-final. So Pakistan to face Malaysia in the Final :D
  4. MFitriMArif: RT @Khairykj: RT @PKamalanathan: Malaysia beat India 4 - 3 in Asian Games Hockey Semi-Finals & will now meet Pakistan in the Finals. Wel ...
  5. 9W2MUC: Malaysia beat India 4 - 3 in Asian Games Hockey Semi-Finals
  6. honour789: Malaysia beat India 4 - 3 in Asian Games Hockey Semi-Finals. Congratz!
  7. livingkoshary: RT @mrrafie Malaysia beat India 4 - 3 in Asian Games Hockey Semi-Finals & will now meet Pakistan in the Finals. MALAYSIA BOLEH
  8. stephendoss: RT @VenkatesRao: RT @PKamalanathan: Malaysia beat India 4 - 3 in Asian Games Hockey Semi-Finals & will ...
  9. khaleeqshah: RT @Khairykj: RT @PKamalanathan: Malaysia beat India 4 - 3 in Asian Games Hockey Semi-Finals & will now meet Pakistan in the Finals.
  10. ric_wee: Malaysia Beat India in Asian Games Semi-Final. We meet Pakistan in the Finals

Pakistan edge Korea on strokes

Goalkeeper Salman Akbar made two crucial saves in a sudden-death penalty shootout as Pakistan knocked out defending champion South Korea 4-3 in the Asian Games men's field hockey semifinals.
The six-foot Akbar denied Jang Jong-hyun and Yeo Woon-kon from the spot after experienced Sohail Abbas had missed one for Pakistan. Haseem Khan converted from the spot to book Pakistan's first berth in an Asian Games final in 20 years.
The score was locked 1-1 at the end of regulation, and neither team produced a winner in extra time. It was at 3-3 after first round of penalty strokes.
"It was the most nerve-racking international match I have ever played," Akbar, veteran of 300 internationals, said.
"I visualized pictures of my mother and father before preparing myself in today's shootout.
"It was just because of their prayers that I managed to stop the last two." In regulation time both teams tried to take their chances through counterattacks instead of challenging the rival defenders.
"A semifinal is a big occasion and naturally nobody wanted to take chances," Pakistan striker Rehan Butt, who did not feature in the shootout, said. "I was in tears during the shootout and was just praying to the god for victory."
In regulation time, striker Mohammad Waqas had given Pakistan a 1-0 halftime lead when he fired in an angular drive in the 22nd minute from the top of the circle.
Kang Moon-kyu equalized in the 39th minute with a deft touch in a rare South Korean attempt at goal. Just before South Korea's equalizer came in, Abbas failed to convert off three successive short corners. Mohammad Shafqat's attempt in the 53rd went wide.
South Korea also had its opportunities in the extra time, but Jang missed the 75th minute short corner.
"No matter against whom we play, now we have just gold in our minds," Butt said.

Malaysia beat India 4-3 in semi-finals!

Zeenews Bureau

Guangzhou: Malaysia’s Amin Rahim ended India’s Asiad gold campaign with a goal in the fag end of extra time, bringing an end to the most entertaining match of the tournament.
The final score was 4-3 in Malaysia’s favour as the Indian outfit had to suffer the heartbreak despite giving it their all in the field.
However, despite the loss, India will fight it out with S Korea for a bronze medal.
Malaysia refused to die out of the semi-final of the Asian Games and equalised, taking the score to 3-3 in the dying phases of the second half and gave the most gripping match of the tournament.
Indian skipper Rajpal Singh had come good just when it was needed the most and he flicked one into the opponent’s net to take 3-2 lead in the action packed tie that had gotten the crowd worked up in Guangzhou.
The second half had started with India taking the honours in the first minutes as the lead went to Rajpal and Co. 2-1. The opponents however came back strongly and again equalised 2-2 with 21 minutes remaining before the whistle.
The first half yielded two goals with the first one just three minutes to go before the buzzer as Malaysia made the first breakthrough in the Indian defence.
However, it was a great comeback by the tournament’s highest scorer Sandeep Singh as he equalized in the last minute to finish the first quarter 1-1.
India had started the tie, looking to carve out a dream India-Pakistan final for the gold but the chances could not be converted for the maximum early-on due to solid Malaysian defence.

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Your comment(s) on this article
No matter atleast we won against our enemy Pakistan. - Arsad Reyaz - Patna
koi naa ......pakistan ko hara liya naaaaaa.. - rajesh - bikaner
we have won against pakistan that is enough instead of going for the gold and dear pakistanis pray that we dnt make it to d finals or else it would have been another crushing defeat for u ,,.. - ANUP CHANDRAN - CHENNAI
india plz gold lana h or har team ko harana h - akshay - delhi
ha ha i am so happy bcoz india lost the game.& hope pakistan will get gold medal - lalpari - india

Malaysia's Asian Games history

Asian Games

  • 2010 - Silver
  • 2006 - Sixth place
  • 2002 - Bronze
  • 1998 - Fifth place
  • 1994 - Fifth place
  • 1990 - Bronze
  • 1986 - Fourth place
  • 1982 - Bronze
  • 1978 - Bronze
  • 1974 - Bronze
  • 1970 - Bronze
  • 1966 - Fourth place
  • 1962 - Bronze
  • 1958 - Fourth place
By S. Thyagarajan

A formidable challenge awaits India from the in-form Malaysia in the semifinal of the Asian Games men's hockey competition on Tuesday. Neither team was in the penultimate round in the last edition at Doha; but much water has flowed down the river since then.
It will be impudent to relate the track record of Malaysia in its matches against India. True, it serves a statistical perspective but nothing beyond.
That India has won all its 10 matches played in the Asian Games is an interesting piece of information as also the overall record of 95 matches and 68 victories, 16 drawn games and 11 defeats. Even the fact that Malaysia was beaten 3-2 in the recent Commonwealth Games is just a figure.
The Malaysians in Guangzhou are keen to come out with a new script, if not a chapter. And they have worked hard for that under Stephen van Huizen, a sincere coach without any pretensions. The results accomplished by the Malaysians must be recognised and applauded too. They had shared points with the powerhouse in Asia — South Korea, the holder of the gold — and overpowered a strong Chinese squad on ome turf to snatch a place in the last four.
This time the players have amalgamated the essence of aggression, speed and perfect finish as symbolised by the goals by Hanifi, Rahim Amin and Azlan Misron.
All these are elaborated only to project the intensity of the challenge to be expected. True, India finished without dropping a point in a comparatively easy pool, despite being stretched a bit by Japan in the last pool match.

Worrisome factor

Thus far, the team has relied on the penalty corner strikes of Sandeep Singh, the effective role of Sardar in the back zone, and the constructive work of mid-fielder Arjun Halappa. After a poor start, Gurbaj Singh has regained his touch but the worrisome factor is Prabbodh Tirkey's inconsistency in the mid-field.
What coach Brasa needs is to ensure the team elevates itself to a different plane to smother the challenge. Team work is the sine qua non for this. The attack requires greater sharpness than what has been so far.
A lot rests on the skipper Rajpal Singh, Tushar Khandekar and Shivendra Singh, apart from Dharamvir Singh and Sarvanjit, to put a greater punch in the attack and finish. Only this can deter the Malaysian defenders, and the usually energetic goalkeeper Kumar.

Absorbing fare

The other semifinal between South Korea and Pakistan is likely to produce an absorbing fare. Though Korea enjoys the statistical advantage of having won 26 of the 49 meetings losing only 13, the teams have shared three victories each in the Asian Games in which they met last in 1998. Any prediction for Tuesday is hazardous.
Notwithstanding Shakeel Abbassi's scoring skills, the team looks unsettled. The Dutch coach van Heuvel has not succeeded so far in fashioning a winning unit. How far Sohail's magic can carry forward the team is to be watched with interest.
One admirable facet of Korea's approach is the ability to raise the pace and precision to a different level in a trice. With sharp-shooters like Jang Jong and Nam Hyunwoo and strikers Seo Jongho in good form, Pakistan can ill-afford to let its guard down.
The Hindu

Malaysia in historic final

Malaysia-Pakistan Asian Games men's hockey final!
And the Malaysian team beat the damned gloomy statistics!

India-Malaysia by B.G.Joshi (India)

IND vs. MAS

MP

W

D

L

GF

GA

Total

95

68

16

11

268

108

In AG

10

10

-

-

33

5

Last Played

CWG Hockey –Delhi won 3-2.

Head to head: in Asian Games

KOR-PAK: MP 6, KOR wins 3, PAK wins 3,

GF (Kor)7, GF(Pak)28

Year

Match

Score

1958

League

0-8

1982

Pool

0-10

1986

Final

2-1

1990

League

0-5

1994

SF

2-2,tb 4-1

1998

SF

3-2

Not played in

1962 to 1978,

2002 and 2006



IND-MAS: MP 10, IND wins all,

GF (Ind) 33, GF (Mas) 5

Year

Match

Score

1958

League

6-0

1962

Pool

3-0

1966

Pool

1-0

1970

Pool

2-0

1974

League

2-0

1978

Pool

5-3

1982

Pool

5-1

1986

Bronze

4-1

1990

League

1-0

2006

5th place

4-0

Not played in 1994 to 2002



Compiled by B.G.Joshi

Hockey Statistician www.sportstar.com
www.bharatiyahockey.org
.

www.naidunia.com(Hindi newspaper from Indore)

Pakistan-Korea by Akbar Wahidi of Pakistan

PAK vs.KOR

MP

W

D

L

GF

GA

Total

49

26

10

13

150

79

In AG

6

3

1

2

28

7

Last Played

Azlan Shah Cup –Ipoh, Lost 2-4.