BERLIN OLYMPICS1936 (HOCKEY)
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As destiny would have it, the Berlin Games was to be
Dhyan Chand’s third and last Olympics at the age of 31, for he had decided to
retire. Undoubtedly at the peak of his prowess, he was handed the Indian team’s
captaincy and this time, there was no dissent, though the omission of Richard
Carr raised a few eyebrows, but he was not released by the Indian Railways.The
run-up to the Games was not exactly satisfactory. A 1-4 defeat to Germany in a
practice game rang alarm bells in the Indian camp. Following a team meeting, it
was decided to bring in Ali Iqtidar Shah Dara who was to represent Pakistan in
the 1948 Olympics following the partition.India won all their three league
matches and hammered France 10-0 in the semifinals and Germany 8-1 in the gold
medal round, but not without some drama. Dhyan Chand lost a tooth in a
collision with the particularly aggressive Germany goalkeeper Tito Warnholtz
who had a nightmarish game.Returning to the field after medical attention,
Dhyan Chand reportedly told the players to “teach a lesson” to the Germans by
not scoring. The Indians repeatedly took the ball to the German circle only to
backpedal.
Dhyan Chand established himself as the greatest hockey
player of the time and ended the Berlin Olympics on a high with a tally of 11
goals, the same as his brother Roop Singh.Team manager Swami Jagan Nath said of
Dhyan Chand in his tournament report: “Dhyan Chand who once more proved himself
as the best centre-forward in the World, demonstrated his worth as a great
captain. Held in great esteem, affection and admiration by the players, he was
the central luminary around whom the members of the team revolved.”Such was the
fan following for Dhyan Chand that after the Partition in 1947, he was included
in the Indian team on a goodwill tour of Kenya who insisted on the wizard's
inclusion. India won all the 28 matches with Dhyan Chand scoring 61 goals,
second only to Kunwar Digvijay Singh "Babu", the new star on the
horizon, who topped with a strike of 70.Thus, Dhyan Chand finished his international
career with three Olympic gold medals, but more importantly drew World-wide
attention not only on himself but Indian hockey.
Indian team: Dhyan Chand (captain), Iqtidar
Ali Shah Dara, Richard James Allen, Md Hussain, Ahmed Sher Khan, Carlyle Carrol
Tapsell, Baboo Narsoo Nimal, Ernest John Goodsir-Cullen, Syed Md Jaffar, Ashan
Md Khan, Joseph Gallibardy, Roop Singh, Gurcharan Singh Grewal, Lionel C Emmet,
Mirza Nasir-ud-Din Masud, Paul Peter Fernandes, Joseph Phillip, Shabban
Shaahab-ud-Din.
Results:League --
India beat Hungary 4-0 (Roop Singh 2; Carlyle Tapsell; Shabab Ud Din Shabban
1).India beat USA 7-0 (Sayed Mohommed Jaffar 2; Dhyan Chand 2; Roop Singh 2;
Ernest Goodsir-Cullen 1).India beat Japan 9-0 (Dhyan Chand 4; Peter Fernandes
2; Carlyle Tapsell 2; Roop Singh 1).Semifinal: India
beat France 10-0 (Dhyan Chand 4; Roop Singh 3; Iqtidar Ali Dara 2; Carlyle
Tapsell 1).Final India beat Germany 8-1 (Dhyan Chand 3; Iqtidar Ali Dara 2;
Roop Singh 1; Carlyle Tapsell 1; Sayed Mohomed Jaffar 1).Positions: India
1; Germany 2; The Netherlands 3; France 4; Switzerland 5; Afghanistan 6; Japan;
7; Hungary 8; Belgium 9; Denmark 10; USA 11.
Prof.
john Kurakar
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