Former players have said that penalty corner conversion would be the key to Indian hockey team’s success in next month’s London Olympics. “Unless the Indian team converts two out of three penalty corners into goals in every game, it is very difficult for the team to match the likes of Holland, Germany and Australia,” said Michael Kindo, part of the bronze-medal winning 1972 Munich Olympics team. A fullback in the 1975 World Cup-winning team, Kindo put his faith on drag-flick specialist Sandeep Singh. [caption id=“attachment_361439” align=“alignleft” width=“380” caption=“Penalty corner conversion would be the key to the Indian hockey team’s success. Getty Images”]
[/caption] “On his day, hardly anyone can match Sandeep Singh in hitting targets in the penalty corners. I hope he excels in all the matches,” Kindo, who had also excelled in India’s silver and bronze medal feats in the 1971 and 1973 World Cup, said. India, clubbed in Group ‘B’ along with Holland, Belgium, Germany, South Korea and New Zealand in the Games beginning July 27, had a good outing in the recent Sultan Azlan Shah Cup in Malaysia finishing third. “If the boys continue to play the way they played in Malaysia, there is every chance of India getting an Olympic medal,” says another fullback Sylvanus Dungdung, one of the stalwarts that fetched the gold medal for India in the 1980 Moscow Olympics. “I hope the exposure trip to France and Spain will also help the team, which should focus on building up speed to match the Europeans…I also hope the team emulates our cricket team which won the World Cup after 28 years,” he said. Putting his hopes on midfielder Sardar Singh and forward Shivendra Singh to clinch penalty corners for the team, the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic team’s fullback Manohar Topno said any chance missed against teams like Holland will cost India dearly. “With teams like Holland and Australia, we can’t afford to miss a single scoring chance. I hope Sardar Singh and Shivendra Singh get more penalty corners to help Sandeep Singh convert them into goals,” he said. “Indian players also have the added pressure of matching the speed of the Europeans and Australians,” Topno, who recently watched a tournament and was impressed with the speed of European players, said. Former Indian women’s hockey team captain Savitri Purti advised the team to go by the adage “Offence is the best form of defence”. “Defensive play will not yield any result. So the best way for the team is to go bang-bang from start to finish,” Purti felt. PTI
If there is one place Pulasta Dhar wanted to live, it would be next to the microphone. He writes about, plays and breathes football. With stints at BBC, Hallam FM, iSport, Radio Mirchi, The Post and having seen the World Cup in South Africa, the Manchester United fan and coffee addict is a Mass Media graduate and has completed his MA in Broadcast Journalism from the University of Sheffield."
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