2011 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy

2011 Women's Hockey
Champions Trophy
Tournament details
Host country Netherlands
City Amstelveen
Teams 8
Venue(s) Wagener Stadium
Top three teams
Champions  Netherlands (6th title)
Runner-up  Argentina
Third place  New Zealand
Tournament statistics
Matches played 24
Goals scored 83 (3.46 per match)
Top scorer(s) Netherlands Maartje Paumen (6 goals)
Best player Netherlands Maartje Paumen
2010 (previous) (next) 2012

The 2011 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy was the 19th edition of the Hockey Champions Trophy for women. It was held from 25 June to 3 July 2011 in Amstelveen, Netherlands.

The Netherlands won the tournament for the sixth time after defeating Argentina 3–2 in the final on a penalty shoot-out after a 3–3 draw, tying the record previously set by Australia in 2003 of six titles won. New Zealand won the third place match by defeating Korea 3–2 to claim their first ever Champions Trophy medal.[1]

After the preliminaries were over, the final originally was scheduled to be played between the Netherlands and Korea, but the Argentine side protested against the second round standing in which they were ranked third behind Korea based on goals scored in that round. After a second appeal by the Argentine team, the final day schedule was changed, since the regulations stated that in case of a draw in points in the second round, the total points in the tournament should be the next tie-breaker.[2]

Format

A new format was used for the 2011 tournament, with eight teams participating instead of the traditional six. All temas are split in two groups (pools A and B) and play a round robin. The top two teams advance to Pool C and play for the medals, the bottom two teams play in Pool D for fifth to eighth place. For this second round, points for the game with the advancing team from the same preliminary group are carried over and two games are played against teams from the other group. In the final classification games, the two top teams from Group C play for gold, the third and fourth team for bronze. The two top teams from Group D play for fifth and sixth place, while the third and fourth team of Group D play for seventh and eighth Place.

Teams

The participating teams were determined by International Hockey Federation (FIH):[3] [4]

Umpires

Below are the 11 umpires appointed by the International Hockey Federation:

  • Netherlands Stella Bartlema
  • England Frances Block
  • Russia Elena Eskina
  • United States Amy Hassick
  • Germany Christiane Hippler
  • New Zealand Kelly Hudson
  • South Africa Michelle Joubert
  • China Miao Lin
  • Argentina Irene Presenqui
  • Australia Lisa Roach
  • Japan Chieko Soma

Results

All times are Central European Summer Time (UTC+02:00)[5]

First round

Pool A

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Argentina 321062+47
 South Korea 30305503
 England 302123−12
 China 302136−32
     Advanced to medal round
25 June 2011
09:00
China  2 – 2  South Korea
Zhao Yudiao  58'
Mao Weilin  68'
Report Cheon Eun-Bi  41'
Kim Jong-Hee  52'
Umpires:
Frances Block (ENG)
Irene Presenqui (ARG)

25 June 2011
11:30
Argentina  1 – 0  England
Aymar  52' Report
Umpires:
Lisa Roach (AUS)
Amy Hassick (USA)

26 June 2011
09:00
England  2 – 2  South Korea
Herbert  21', 63' Report Kim Da-rae  39', 60'
Umpires:
Chieko Soma (JPN)
Kelly Hudson (NZL)

26 June 2011
11:30
China  1 – 4  Argentina
Zhao Yudiao  20' Report Barrionuevo  16'
García  43'
Merino  50'
D. Sruoga  56'
Umpires:
Stella Bartlema (NED)
Christiane Hippler (GER)

28 June 2011
11:00
England  0 – 0  China
Report
Umpires:
Amy Hassick (USA)
Elena Eskina (RUS)

28 June 2011
15:00
Argentina  1 – 1  South Korea
D. Sruoga  57' Report Park Mi-Hyun  26'
Umpires:
Michelle Joubert (RSA)
Miao Lin (CHN)

Pool B

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Netherlands 321051+47
 New Zealand 31113304
 Germany 310223–13
 Australia 310236–33
     Advanced to medal round
25 June 2011
14:00
Germany  1 – 0  New Zealand
Müller  28' Report
Umpires:
Stella Bartlema (NED)
Miao Lin (CHN)

25 June 2011
16:30
Netherlands  3 – 0  Australia
Paumen  7'
Welten  19'
Dijkstra  57'
Report
Umpires:
Michelle Joubert (RSA)
Elena Eskina (RUS)

26 June 2011
14:00
Australia  2 – 3  New Zealand
Close  52'
Eastham  64'
Report Glynn  10'
Forgesson  11'
Finlayson  44'
Umpires:
Frances Block (ENG)
Amy Hassick (USA)

26 June 2011
16:30
Germany  1 – 2  Netherlands
Keller  10' Report Welten  1'
Lammers  14'
Umpires:
Irene Presenqui (ARG)
Lisa Roach (AUS)

28 June 2011
13:00
Australia  1 – 0  Germany
Schulz  65' Report
Umpires:
Stella Bartlema (NED)
Kelly Hudson (NZL)

28 June 2011
17:00
Netherlands  0 – 0  New Zealand
Report
Umpires:
Chieko Soma (JPN)
Christiane Hippler (GER)

Medal round

Pool C

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Netherlands 321041+37
 Argentina 31115504
 South Korea 31116604
 New Zealand 301258−31
     Advanced to final

Argentina was moved to second place after a second appeal.[2]

30 June 2011
17:00
South Korea  5 – 3  New Zealand
Kim Jong-Hee  8', 55', 67'
Hong Yoo-Jin  13'
Kim Jong-Eun  42'
Report Glynn  26'
C. Harrison  27'
Finlayson  43'
Umpires:
Elena Eskina (RUS)
Irene Presenqui (ARG)

30 June 2011
19:30
Argentina  1 – 2  Netherlands
Merino  28' Report Paumen  21', 68'
Umpires:
Lisa Roach (AUS)
Frances Block (ENG)

2 July 2011
10:00
Argentina  3 – 2  New Zealand
García  14'
Aymar  24'
Sánchez Moccia  29'
Report Eshuis  35'
C. Harrison  37'
Umpires:
Michelle Joubert (RSA)
Elena Eskina (RUS)

2 July 2011
12:30
South Korea  0 – 2  Netherlands
Report Lammers  1'
Welten  29'
Umpires:
Chieko Soma (JPN)
Irene Presenqui (ARG)

Non-medal round

Pool D

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 England 321042+27
 Australia 31115504
 Germany 310243+13
 China 302137–42
30 June 2011
11:30
China  2 – 2  Australia
Li Hongxia  30'
Gao Lihua  54'
Report Eastham  16'
Schulz  23'
Umpires:
Kelly Hudson (NZL)
Christiane Hippler (GER)

30 June 2011
14:00
England  1 – 0  Germany
Danson  50' Report
Umpires:
Chieko Soma (JPN)
Michelle Joubert (RSA)

1 July 2011
12:00
China  1 – 4  Germany
Gao Lihua  18' Report Wilde  8', 55'
Stöckel  40'
Mävers  46'
Umpires:
Lisa Roach (AUS)
Amy Hassick (USA)

1 July 2011
14:30
England  3 – 2  Australia
Walsh  34'
Panter  43'
White  60'
Report Hudson  41', 67'
Umpires:
Stella Bartlema (NED)
Miao Lin (CHN)

Classification

Seventh and eighth place

3 July 2011
09:00
Germany  3 – 5  China
Mävers  31'
Beermann  40'
Müller  43'
Report Sun Sinan  20'
Zhao Yudiao  22', 26', 54'
Song Qingling  30'
Umpires:
Kelly Hudson (NZL)
Amy Hassick (USA)

Fifth and sixth place

3 July 2011
11:30
England  2 – 0  Australia
Herbert  8'
Rogers  52'
Report
Umpires:
Michelle Joubert (RSA)
Irene Presenqui (ARG)

Third and fourth place

3 July 2011
14:00
South Korea  2 – 3  New Zealand
Kim Jong-Eun  42', 56' Report Glynn  15'
Forgesson  16'
C. Harrison  70'
Umpires:
Stella Bartlema (NED)
Frances Block (ENG)

Final

3 July 2011
16:30
Netherlands  3 – 3 (a.e.t.)  Argentina
Paumen  35', 41', 48' Report Rebecchi  1'
Aymar  32'
D. Sruoga  34'
Penalties
Bos
de Goede
Paumen
van den Heuvel
3 – 2 García
Rebecchi
Aymar
Merino
D. Sruoga
Umpires:
Lisa Roach (AUS)
Chieko Soma (JPN)

Awards

Top Goalscorer Player of the Tournament Goalkeeper of the Tournament Young Player of the Tournament Fair Play Trophy Best Goal
Netherlands Maartje Paumen Netherlands Maartje Paumen Argentina Belén Succi Netherlands Willemijn Bos  England China Zhao Yudiao

Statistics

Final ranking

  1.  Netherlands
  2.  Argentina
  3.  New Zealand
  4.  South Korea
  5.  England
  6.  Australia
  7.  China
  8.  Germany

Goalscorers

References

  1. "Penalty drama as Netherlands win Rabo FIH Champions Trophy". FIH. 2011-07-03. Retrieved 2011-07-03.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Rabo FIH Champions Trophy Final Day Schedule Changed". FIH. 2011-07-02. Retrieved 2011-07-02.
  3. "Qualification FIH Champions Trophies 2011". World Hockey. 2010-08-04. Retrieved 2012-09-12.
  4. "FIH confirms participating teams for 2011 tournaments". Hockey Asia. 2010-12-16. Retrieved 2012-09-19.
  5. "Rabo FIH Champions Trophy (women) schedule announced". FIH. 2011-02-24. Retrieved 2012-09-20.

External links