1998 Men's Champions Trophy (field hockey)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 20th edition of the Men's Champions Trophy took place from Saturday October 31 until Sunday November 8, 1998 in the National Hockey Stadium in Lahore. Participating nations were Australia, titleholders Germany, The Netherlands, hosting nation Pakistan, South Korea and Spain.

The South Koreans replaced England, that withdrew from the tournament. The decision was taken followng consideration of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office's travel advice which deters 'non essential visits' to the region and suggests that any visitors 'adopt a low profile.' England may have felt cause for concern because it supported the US bombing in August of guerrilla bases in neighbouring Afghanistan.

The FIH later concluded that "the withdrawal was the result of circumstances beyond the control of the English Hockey Association, and was made having regard for their responsibility as a hockey association representing the best interests of their players and officials." Later, the FIH Competitions Committee decided to include England among the panel of participants for the 21st Men’s Champions Trophy scheduled for June 10 to 20, 1999 in Brisbane, Australia. This dashed the hopes of Canada, who were hoping to participate in the Brisbane Champions Trophy if England was barred.

For the seventh time the annual six nations tournament ended with play-offs, in which the numbers one and two from the Round Robin faced each other in the final. The numbers three and four played the bronze medal game, while the numbers five and six tried to avoid relegation in their 5th/6th place match. For the third time a win was rewarded with three instead of two points in the preliminary round robin.

Contents

[edit] Results


[edit] Standings after Round Robin

 MEN'S CHAMPIONS TROPHY 1998 Pld W D L GF GA Pts
Netherlands 5 4 0 1 19 10 12
Pakistan 5 2 2 1 17 14 8
Australia 5 2 2 1 11 10 8
South Korea 5 2 2 1 14 15 8
Spain 5 1 1 3 13 15 4
Germany 5 0 1 4 7 17 1


[edit] Play-offs


[edit] Final ranking


1. The Netherlands


2. Pakistan


3. Australia


4. South Korea


5. Spain


6. Germany


[edit] Awards

[edit] Topscorers

[edit] Best Player of the Tournament

  • Atif Bashir (Pakistan)

[edit] Fair Play Trophy

  • South Korea

[edit] Remarks

  • In the final, Holland defeated Pakistan 3-1 in front of a 40,000 strong Pakistani crowd to win the 20th Champions Trophy. The Dutch team thus picked up the third jewel in the hockey triple crown. The Netherlands are also World Champions (Utrecht 1998) and Olympic Champions (Atlanta 1996) – the only men's team to hold all three major world titles at once.



Men's Champions Trophy
v  d  e

Lahore 1978 | Karachi 1980 | Karachi 1981 | Amstelveen 1982 | Karachi 1983 | Karachi 1984 | Perth 1985 | Karachi 1986 | Amstelveen 1987 | Lahore 1988 | Berlin 1989 | Melbourne 1990 | Berlin 1991 | Karachi 1992 | Kuala Lumpur 1993 | Lahore 1994 | Berlin 1995 | Madras 1996 | Adelaide 1997 | Lahore 1998 | Brisbane 1999 | Amstelveen 2000 | Rotterdam 2001 | Keulen 2002 | Amstelveen 2003 | Lahore 2004 | Madras 2005 | Terrassa 2006 | Lahore 2007

Women's Champions Trophy

Amstelveen 1987 | Frankfurt 1989 | Berlin 1991 | Amstelveen 1993 | Mar del Plata 1995 | Berlin 1997 | Brisbane 1999 | Amstelveen 2000 | Amstelveen 2001 | Macau 2002 | Sydney 2003 | Rosario 2004 | Canberra 2005 | Amstelveen 2006 | Quilmes 2007


In other languages