Upbeat India ready for England

Egged on by a packed crowd at the 21,000 capacity Birsa Munda stadium, India showcased superb attacking hockey in the first two quarters and scored through local hero Amit Rohidas from a penalty corner before Hardik Singh doubled the lead with a brilliant solo effort.

Update: 2023-01-15 05:03 GMT

ROURKELA: A perfect start to its campaign with a dominant win over Spain, notwithstanding, India will face a stern test when it takes on an equally impressive England in its second pool match of the FIH Men’s Hockey World Cup here on Sunday.

India outclassed Spain 2-0 with a near flawless show in its opening Pool D match on Friday at the brand new Birsa Munda stadium but England is an equally tough side, if not more.

The home team cannot drop the intensity and quality it showed against Spain as England, too, is on a high after a 5-0 thrashing of Wales in its opening match.

Egged on by a packed crowd at the 21,000 capacity Birsa Munda stadium, India showcased superb attacking hockey in the first two quarters and scored through local hero Amit Rohidas from a penalty corner before Hardik Singh doubled the lead with a brilliant solo effort.

Skipper Harmanpreet Singh and his deputy Rohidas then produced a defensive masterclass -- which impressed head coach Graham Reid.

Harmanpreet and Co. would look to dish out another strong defensive show against England, which scored at least one goal each in all the four quarters.

“It is good to get the first game. What was pleasing was the defensive effort and we handled the ball very well. There weren’t too many people who did not play well. That is what you need to win a World Cup. We need to continue it in the next game,” Reid said.

The only weakness of the Indians was penalty corners as they could not directly convert any of the five they secured against Spain.

Harmanpreet, the best player and top scorer of the team in almost every tournament in recent years, had an off day by his high standards, as he missed a penalty stroke besides failing to find the target from penalty corners.

He admitted his below-par show after the match, and will be looking to make amends against England.

Not being able to convert penalty corners can cost India dear against a team like England.

The Indian players will also have to be cautious about getting into the referee’s book as they had to play the major part of the final quarter without Abhishek, who got a yellow card for a foul.

A win against England is important as that will take India one step closer to the quarterfinals. The host will fancy its chances against Wales, the lowest ranked side in the group at 15th, to top the pool, considered a group of death.

England is one rung above India at fifth in world rankings and there is not much to differentiate between the two sides in the past year and historically also.

Last year, the two sides played three matches against each other with their last game, played at the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, ending in a 4-4 draw. They played out a 3-3 draw in the first leg of FIH Pro League before India won 4-3 in the second, both games played in April.

Nick Bandurak, who was the top scorer in the 2002 CWG with 11 goals, was on target against Wales, as was Phil Roper who was another prolific player in Birmingham. England scored three field goals, the third from Nicholas Park while Liam Ansell struck twice from penalty corners.

Historically, India had won 10 matches as against seven by England while four games ended in draws.

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