OLYMPICS (1976) HOCKEY
Barely a year after winning the World Cup in the hot and
steamy Kuala Lumpur, Indian hockey slid to its nadir amidst considerable
controversy and acrimony among players as the high-profile team finished a
shocking seventh. The unheralded New Zealand won the gold on the spanking new
synthetic pitch that made its international debut.With few players having even
seen an artificial surface much less played on it, the Indian team, under World
Cup captain Ajit Pal Singh, playing in his third Olympics, set off for Canada
via Europe where they played a few warm-up games. It was a journey that was
marred by infighting regarding the division of money accrued through sale of
hockey sticks.Indiscipline that bordered on open rebellion affected India’s
performance that can be best described as up and down on a surface the players
were unfamiliar with. Three victories and two losses tied India with Australia
in the battle for the second place in the group.
The two teams were then involved in a play-off that ended
in a 1-1 draw resulting in the tie-breaker. Ajit Singh, taking the fourth
stroke, failed to convert and the Aussies came through 5-4 in the shootout for
an aggregate 6-5 win and a berth in the semifinals.India never really recovered
from this defeat and went down 2-3 to West Germany after leading 1-0 at the
break in the play-off game for 5-8 positions before defeating Malaysia 2-0 on
penalty corner conversions by Aslam Sher Khan to finish seventh for their worst
ever performance in the Olympics.The repercussions of the Montreal disaster
were to resonate over the following couple of years that witnessed player
rebellion, suspensions and quarrel over captaincy. And though India were destined
to regain the gold medal four years later at the boycott-ridden Moscow Olympics
from a depleted field, the country’s hockey reign and the “golden era” had well
and truly ended.Indian team: Ajit Pal Singh (captain),
Ashok Dewan, Ajit Singh, Bir Bahadur Chhetri, Aslam Sher Khan, Surjit Singh,
Baldev Singh, Virender Singh, Mehboob Khan, Mohinder Singh, Victor John
Phillips, Ashok Kumar, BP Govinda, Harcharan Singh, Vasudevan Baskaran, Chand
Singh.The results:League: India lost to Holland 1-3 (Phillips 1).India
lost to Australia 1-6 (Surjit Singh 1).India beat Canada 3-0 (Phllips 2, Ajit
Singh 1).India beat Malaysia 3-0 (Ashok Kumar 2; Surjit Singh 1).Play-off for
2nd position in Group: India lost to Australia 6-5 on penalty strokes*.
Full-time: 1-1 (Surjit Singh 1); Extra-time: 1-1.Classification (5-8
positions): India lost to Germany 2-3 (Mohinder Singh 1; Ajit Pal Singh 1).For
7-8 positions: India beat Malaysia 2-0 (Aslam Sher Khan 2).*Penalty Stroke
competition v Australia: India — Surjit Singh (scored 1-0); Ajit Pal Singh
(scored 2-1); Ashok Kumar (scored 3-2); Ajit Singh (missed 3-3); Phillips
(scored 4-4). Australia — David Bell (scored 1-1); Robert Haigh (scored 2-2);
Terry Walsh (scored 3-3); Trevor Smith (scored 3-4); Ric Charlesworth (scored
4-5).Positions — New Zealand 1; Australia 2; Pakistan 3; Holland 4; Germany 5;
Spain 6; India 7; Malaysia 8; Belgium 9; Canada 10; Argentina 11.
Prof.
John Kurakar
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