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India still fail to learn from mistakes

Vasudevan Bhaskaran | August 21, 2003

The reluctance of the Indian hockey team to learn from its mistakes surprises me. The team can have one bad day, but to keep committing the same mistakes in all the matches so far is unthinkable.

I have never seen the Indian team perform so badly against Argentina and the 2-4 defeat has demolished India's hopes of winning even a bronze medal in the Champions Trophy. It is a real tragedy!

I am not at all happy with the way the midfielders have performed while the defenders have also been unimpressive. The poor quality in defending, tackling and controlling the midfield was noticeable. None of the midfielders could raise their game to be effective at this level.

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It is a mystery how even in the fourth game of the tournament the Indians did not understand the importance of linking the forwardline on attack and also linking the deep defenders when defending the opponents.

It is pathetic that Viren Rasquinha and Bimal Lakra failed to do anything worthwhile on these aspects. I felt that the team was missing quality players like Tirumal Valvan and Arjun Halappa. Lifting the game in these situations is the responsibility of the midfielders. When this fails to happen, the pressure keeps building on the entire team.

I fail to understand why a player like Vikram Pillay is cooling his heels on the benches. In the deep defence, Jugraj Singh and Kanwalpreet Singh have lost their momentum and appears that they are too exhausted due to the failure of the midfielder and forwards. Even the normally unflappable Dilip Tirkey is committing mistakes.

The team has not been following a game plan or may be they could not do so because of the intense pressure of winning the outing against Argentina. As a coach for seven years, I have also experienced similar situations when the team cannot implement the plans. But never has the team played so badly match after match.

Very soon, there will be a post-mortem as to what went wrong in Amstelveen, particularly after all the hype that was created before the elite tournament. There may even be a high level probe which is quite common in Indian sport. It is imperative for coach Rajinder Singh to regain his self-confidence and take complete charge of the team. He has to involve the players in his strategy sessions because their inputs can be vital.

When the team performs badly, the team management has to come into command and get the message across to the players.

The match against Argentina was crucial for India to keep their medal hopes alive and it is this 'must win' situation which took a heavy toll on the players. In such a situation, attacking hockey was the need of the hour but the Indians failed miserably.

But it is not that they did not try. They succeeded in the first ten minutes of the first half. There were some good attacks by the forwards but the quality of shooting inside the 'D' was not good enough to beat the Argentinians.

The forwards -- captain Dhanraj Pillay, Gagan Ajit Singh and Prabhjot Singh -- were guilty of squandering whatever opportunities that came their way. The frontline kept committing too many errors, losing the ball and indulging in unimaginative passes.

This gave the Argentinians, who play the game on soccer pattern both in attack and defence, the advantage that they were looking for. Their three mid-field players did some good over turn with the ball and started rolling the passes to an unmarked forwardline. There were some good overlapping attacks, interchange of position by the forwards, running into open space which made it too difficult for the tired-looking Indian defenders.

The Argentinians, with limited resources, started executing the plans well and got their goals through frequent ball control inside the 25-yard line.

 The Indian camp must be devastated by the performance so far and I sincerely hope that the team managment will sit together and work out a definite plan when they take on Pakistan on Friday. A win against Pakistan will at least salvage some pride.



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