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2011 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy

International Hockey tournament


International Hockey tournament

FieldValue
tournament2011 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy
image2011_men's_champions_trophy.png
size200px
captionofficial logo
countryNew Zealand
cityAuckland
venuesNorth Harbour Hockey Stadium
teams8
champions
count12
second
third
matches24
goals124
top_scorerAUS Jamie Dwyer
top_scorer_goals7
best_playerESP Santi Freixa
previous_year2010
previous_tournament2010 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy
next_year2012
next_tournament2012 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy

The 2011 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy, officially known as the Owen G Glenn FIH Men's Champions Trophy, was the 33rd edition of the Champions Trophy men's field hockey tournament. The International Hockey Federation (FIH) confirmed India as the host country, and announced New Delhi as the host city on February 4, 2011. The tournament dates were December 3 to December 11, 2011. However, on September 6, 2011, the FIH announced that India would no longer host the tournament due to a governance issue, and announced Auckland, New Zealand, as the new host on September 13, 2011 with the same time schedule. The tournament was held at North Harbour Hockey Stadium.

Australia won the title for the fourth consecutive and twelfth time total by defeating Spain 1–0 in the final.

Host city change

For the 33rd edition of the Hockey Champions Trophy, India was elected to host the tournament by the FIH on February 4, 2011. But due to an ongoing governance issue with the Indian Hockey Federation, the FIH announced that India would no longer host the competition, instead; Auckland, New Zealand hosted the tournament. New Zealand businessman Owen Glenn was instrumental in gaining the hosting rights for New Zealand. He funded Hockey New Zealand to gain the hosting rights.

The tournament was expected to have a television audience of approximately 38 million people. It being the largest hockey event in New Zealand's history. Auckland's mayor Len Brown said: "this event should inject around $1 million of new money into New Zealand's economy. The teams and officials directly involved in the event should generate over 4,000 visitor nights alone."

Qualification

The new qualification criteria were determined by International Hockey Federation (FIH), as follows:

  • (2010 World Cup Champions)
  • (2008 Olympics Champions and 2010 World Cup Runners-up)
  • (Third in 2010 World Cup)
  • (Fourth in 2010 World Cup as England)
  • (Fifth in 2010 World Cup)
  • (Invitational)
  • (Invitational)
  • (Host nation)

Results

All times are New Zealand Daylight Time (UTC+13:00)

First round

Pool A

Abbott Tubau Germán Montes de Oca (ARG) S. Mantell Kim Hong-lae (KOR)

Gohdes Dwyer Doerner Peter Wright (RSA) Dabanch Quemada Abbas Satoshi Kondo (JPN)

Quemada Freixa Dabanch Fernández Oliva Germán Montes de Oca (ARG) Ockenden Doerner Paterson Satoshi Kondo (JPN)

Pool B

Wesley Peter Wright (RSA) Bakker Gareth Greenfield (NZL)

Hertzberger Hofman Menke Haider Rasool (PAK) Burrows Wilson Neal Hayward Gareth Greenfield (NZL)

Kim Y. Seo Montag Matania Nigel Iggo (NZL) Hertzberger Taekema Burrows Couzins Hamish Jamson (ENG)

Second round

Pool C

Verga Gohdes Dwyer Nigel Iggo (NZL) Tubau D. Alegre Hilton Murray Grime (AUS)

Oliva Dabanch Kim Hong-lae (KOR) Ockenden Germán Montes de Oca (ARG)

Pool D

Khan W. Ahmad Rasool Nam Peter Wright (RSA) Montag Gareth Greenfield (NZL)

Montag Weß Fuchs Fürk Gareth Greenfield (NZL) Jackson Pearn Seo Nam Haider Rasool (PAK)}}

Classification

Seventh and eighth place

Imran Tousiq Khan Jang K. You Gareth Greenfield (NZL)}}

Fifth and sixth place

Murray Grime (AUS)}}

Third and fourth place

Child Jenness De Nooijer Van der Weerden De Voogd Bakker Germán Montes de Oca (ARG)}}

Final

Kim Hong-lae (KOR)}}

Awards

Player of the TournamentTop GoalscorerGoalkeeper of the TournamentFair Play Trophy
Santi FreixaJamie DwyerKyle Pontifex

Statistics

Final standings

As per statistical convention in field hockey, matches decided in regular time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws.

group stage

Goalscorers

  • Jamie Dwyer

  • Billy Bakker

  • Eduardo Tubau

  • Muhammad Imran

  • You Hyo-Sik

  • Gabriel Dabanch

  • Matthew Gohdes

  • Edward Ockenden

  • Tobias Matania

  • Jan-Marco Montag

  • Jeroen Hertzberger

  • Andrew Hayward

  • Abdul Haseem Khan

  • Seo Jong-Ho

  • Santiago Freixa

  • Pau Quemada

  • Desmond Abbott

  • Luke Doerner

  • Florian Fuchs

  • Thilo Stralkowski

  • Simon Mantell

  • Mark Pearn

  • James Tindall

  • Taeke Taekema

  • Bob de Voogd

  • Phil Burrows

  • Blair Hilton

  • Shea McAleese

  • Nicholas Wilson

  • Muhammad Rizwan Sr.

  • Muhammad Tousiq

  • Nam Hyun-Woo

  • Roc Oliva

  • Matthew Butturini

  • Christopher Ciriello

  • Mark Paterson

  • Benedikt Fürk

  • Christoph Menke

  • Christopher Wesley

  • Benjamin Weß

  • Martin Zwicker

  • Ashley Jackson

  • Glenn Kirkham

  • Barry Middleton

  • Rogier Hofman

  • Teun de Nooijer

  • Valentin Verga

  • Mink van der Weerden

  • Simon Child

  • Dean Couzins

  • Hugo Inglis

  • Stephen Jenness

  • Shay Neal

  • Sohail Abbas

  • Shakeel Abbasi

  • Waseem Ahmad

  • Shafqat Rasool

  • Jang Kyu-Yeob

  • Lee Nam-Yong

  • Cho Suk-Hoon

  • Kim Young-Jin

  • David Alegre

  • Ramón Alegre

  • Juan Fernández La Villa

References

References

  1. (2010-07-21). "India to host Champions Trophy 2011". The Times of India.
  2. (2011-02-04). "FIH President meets Ajay Maken / CT Dates announced". FIH.
  3. (2011-09-06). "2011 Men's Champions Trophy no longer in India". FIH.
  4. (2011-09-13). "New Zealand named host of 2011 Champions Trophy". FIH.
  5. (2011-12-11). "Australia win Owen G Glenn FIH Champions Trophy". fih.ch.
  6. (2011-09-13}}{{Dead link). "The biggest international hockey event for 2011 is coming to New Zealand". New Zealand Major Events.
  7. (2010-08-05). "FIH announces new Champions Trophy qualifications rules". Hockey Asia.
  8. (2010-12-16). "FIH confirms participating teams for 2011 tournaments". FIH.
  9. (2011-12-04). "Owen G Glenn FIH Champions Trophy: Rescheduled matches". fih.ch.
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