QNET Men’s ACT Day Two Review

Malaysia on fire! #ACT2016

21 Oct
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Kuantan (21 Oct, 2016): Malaysia Tigers continued their superb form to down China 5-1 and Pakistan bounced back from a bad start to defeat Korea 1-0 in the QNET 4th Asia Champions Trophy at the Wisma Belia Hockey Stadium in Kuantan today.

The host now leads the table standings with six points from two games with India and Pakistan staying closely behind in second and third spots.

For Malaysia, it was Haziq Samsul who was the hero of the day by scoring two penalty corner goals from rebounds after Mohammad Razie Rahim’s flicks in the sixth and 20th minutes were denied entry by a fortified China’s defence but goalkeeper Wong Hongyu could do little in the counter attack.

The Malaysians shot 3-0 ahead two minutes later via a Fitri Saari reverse stick shot just inside the semi-circle from the left that sizzled past the Chinease goalkeeper. It was one of the best goals the 2,000 fans here have seen in two days of the tournament.

The world 18th-ranke China,  however, were far from beaten and showed strong fight back in the third quarter when Wong Boven sneaked the ball past goalkeeper S. Kumar to reduce the deficit 3-1 two minutes after the interval.

The host, needing as many goals to stay close to India who defeated Japan 10-2 in Thursday’s opening encounter, earned their fourth penalty corner in the 37th minute and rode on the superb form of Shahril Saabah for a 4-1 lead before forward Firhan Ashari stepped on the pedal with a field goal for goal No 5 six minutes to the end.

The Malaysians will next play Japan on Sunday.

“I am happy with the three points. It does not matter if we are not scoring directly from penalty corners as long as we score that is important. But there are still areas that we need to improve in terms of individual performance,” said Malaysian head coach Stephen Van Huizen.

“There is no doubt that China is a young and inexperienced side but these players will surely get better and better in next matches. We have to credit them for giving us a fight along the way,” he added.

In an earlier match, Abdul Khan restored Pakistan’s pride with a penalty corner goal – coming just 28 seconds remaining to the hooter– as the two-time champions stayed in the race for the semifinals with a 1-0 win over Korea in this fourth edition.

The Koreans arrived in the Champions Trophy after missing the 2012 and 2013 editions and played their first match today while the Pakistanis stepped on the blue pitch still reeling from the 2-4 defeat against Malaysia on Thursday.

“Today we definitely made a good comeback into the tournament after losing to Malaysia. Had we lost this match too it would be very difficult to stay in the tournament,” said Pakistan head coach Khawaja Junaid.

“We had good ball possession and so did the Koreans but the strong defence from both sides made it difficult for any team to score. The difference between today’s game and that against Malaysia on Thursday is my players kept their emotions intact and played a far better tactical game,” added the former Pakistan Olympian.

Pakistan takes a break on Saturday in preparation for the much hyped-up match against neighbours and traditional hockey rivals India on Sunday.

The Koreans had six penalty corners throughout the match against Pakistan’s three but it was Abdul Khan’s late strike that made all the difference following a video referral call by skipper Ahmad Fareed after the ball had struck Lee Daeyeol’s leg and the umpire’s decision went in Pakistan’s favour.

Korean hockey consultant and head coach, Paul Lissek, though dismayed by the outcome of first match in the Asian Champions Trophy, is looking at winning scores in the remaining matches against India on Saturday, China (24 Oct), Japan (26 Oct) and Malaysia on 27 Oct before the 29 Oct semi-finals.

“This is our first game and the result did not go to our expectation. It is not the end of the tournament for us. When you cannot score in 59 minutes we must go and do all the opposite. The players should have defended. I would have accepted a draw.

“That was okay as we were against a tough team with lots of international experience. We will do our best to recover against India tomorrow,” said the German, adding that their mission here is to qualify for the semifinals but good results in pool matches matter most.

Results: Malaysia 5 China 1; Pakistan 1 Korea 0.

Fixtures:

Saturday (22 Oct, 2016): India v South Korea (6,30pm); China v Japan (8.30pm).

Sunday (23 Oct, 2016): India v Pakistan (6.30pm); Malaysia v Japan (8.30pm).

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Live score update and fixtures: https://goo.gl/4srpzj

For video highlights: https://goo.gl/JUEoXN

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