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2014 Women's Hockey World Cup
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| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| tournament | 2014 Women's Hockey World Cup |
| image | 2014 FIH Hockey World Cup logo.svg |
| size | 200px |
| caption | Official logo |
| country | Netherlands |
| city | The Hague |
| venues | Kyocera Stadion |
| GreenFields Stadium | |
| dates | 31 May – 14 June |
| teams | 12 |
| champions | |
| count | 7 |
| second | |
| third | |
| matches | 38 |
| goals | 146 |
| top_scorer | Netherlands Maartje Paumen |
| top_scorer_goals | 7 |
| best_player | Netherlands Ellen Hoog |
| previous_year | 2010 |
| previous_tournament | 2010 Women's Hockey World Cup |
| next_year | 2018 |
| next_tournament | 2018 Women's Hockey World Cup |
GreenFields Stadium The 2014 Women's Hockey World Cup was the 13th edition of the Women's Hockey World Cup field hockey tournament. It was held from 31 May to 14 June 2014 at the Kyocera Stadion in The Hague, Netherlands. simultaneously with the men's tournament. It was the third time that the Netherlands hosted the Women's World Cup after 1986 and 1998.
The Netherlands won the tournament for a seventh time after defeating Australia 2–0 in the final. Defending champions Argentina won the third place match by defeating the United States 2–1.
Bidding
The host was announced on 11 November 2010 during the FIH Congress and Forum in Montreux, Switzerland after FIH received bids from The Hague and London.
Qualification
Each of the continental champions from five confederations and the host nation receive an automatic berth. In addition to the six highest placed teams at the Semifinals of the 2012–13 FIH Hockey World League not already qualified, the following twelve teams, shown with final pre-tournament rankings, competed in this tournament.
| Dates | Event | Location | Qualifier(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 11 November 2010 | Host nation | (1) | |
| 13–22 June 2013 | [2012–13 Hockey World League Semifinals](2012-13-women-s-fih-hockey-world-league-semifinals) | Rotterdam, Netherlands | (8) |
| (5) | |||
| (12) | |||
| 22–30 June 2013 | London, England | (3) | |
| (7) | |||
| (10) | |||
| 17–24 August 2013 | [2013 EuroHockey Championship](2013-women-s-eurohockey-nations-championship) | Boom, Belgium | (6) |
| 21–27 September 2013 | [2013 Asia Cup](2013-women-s-hockey-asia-cup) | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | (9) |
| 21–29 September 2013 | [2013 Pan American Cup](2013-women-s-pan-american-cup) | Mendoza, Argentina | (2) |
| 30 October–3 November 2013 | [2013 Oceania Cup](2013-women-s-oceania-cup) | Stratford, New Zealand | (4) |
| 18–23 November 2013 | [2013 Africa Cup of Nations](2013-women-s-hockey-africa-cup-of-nations) | Nairobi, Kenya | (11) |
Squads
Umpires
17 umpires were appointed by the FIH for this tournament.
- Claire Adenot (FRA)
- Amy Baxter (USA)
- Karen Bennett (NZL)
- Frances Block (ENG)
- Caroline Brunekreef (NED)
- Laurine Delforge (BEL)
- Elena Eskina (RUS)
- Soledad Iparraguirre (ARG)
- Michelle Joubert (RSA)
- Kang Hyun-young (KOR)
- Michelle Meister (GER)
- Miao Lin (CHN)
- Irene Presenqui (ARG)
- Lisa Roach (AUS)
- Chieko Soma (JPN)
- Wendy Stewart (CAN)
- Melissa Trivic (AUS)
Results
All times are Central European Summer Time (UTC+02:00)
First round
Pool A
Pool B
Fifth to twelfth place classification
Eleventh and twelfth place
Ninth and tenth place
Seventh and eighth place
Fifth and sixth place
First to fourth place classification
|12 June 2014||4||0 |12 June 2014||2 (1)| (p.s.o.)|2 (3) |14 June 2014||2||0 |14 June 2014||2||1 |team-width=175|score-width=55
Semifinals
Third and fourth place
Final
Awards
| Top Goalscorer | Player of the Tournament | Goal of the Tournament | Goalkeeper of the Tournament | Young Player of the Tournament |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Netherlands Maartje Paumen | Netherlands Ellen Hoog | Netherlands Kim Lammers | Australia Rachael Lynch | Argentina Florencia Habif |
Statistics
Final standings
Goalscorers
;7 goals
- Netherlands Maartje Paumen
;6 goals
- Australia Anna Flanagan
;5 goals
- Netherlands Kim Lammers
- New Zealand Anita Punt
- United States Kelsey Kolojejchick ;4 goals
- Argentina Silvina D'Elía
- China Peng Yang ;3 goals
- Argentina Luciana Aymar
- Argentina Carla Rebecchi
- Belgium Stephanie De Groof
- Netherlands Kelly Jonker
- New Zealand Krystal Forgesson
- South Korea Cheon Eun-bi
- United States Katie Reinprecht ;2 goals
- Argentina Noel Barrionuevo
- Argentina Delfina Merino
- Australia Jodie Kenny
- Belgium Jill Boon
- Belgium Emilie Sinia
- China Liang Meiyu
- Germany Kristina Hillmann
- Germany Hannah Krüger
- Germany Marie Mävers
- Japan Akane Shibata
- Netherlands Naomi van As
- Netherlands Ellen Hoog
- New Zealand Kayla Whitelock
- South Africa Dirkie Chamberlain
- South Africa Pietie Coetzee
- South Africa Shelley Russell
- South Korea Cheon Seul-ki
- South Korea Kim Jong-eun
- South Korea Park Mi-hyun
- United States Lauren Crandall
- United States Rachel Dawson
- United States Caroline Nichols
- United States Katie O'Donnell
- United States Kathleen Sharkey ;1 goal
- Australia Emily Hurtz
- Australia Emily Smith
- Australia Kellie White
- Belgium Barbara Nelen
- Belgium Alix Gerniers
- Belgium Manon Simons
- China Wang Na
- China Wang Mengyu
- China Wu Mengrong
- England Sophie Bray
- England Alex Danson
- England Susie Gilbert
- England Hannah Macleod
- England Kate Richardson-Walsh
- England Susannah Townsend
- England Nicola White
- Germany Tina Bachmann
- Germany Julia Müller
- Japan Hazuki Nagai
- Japan Yuri Nagai
- Japan Ayaka Nishimura
- Japan Shiho Sakai
- Japan Shihori Oikawa
- Netherlands Carlien Dirkse van den Heuvel
- Netherlands Roos Drost
- Netherlands Marloes Keetels
- Netherlands Xan de Waard
- New Zealand Sophie Cocks
- New Zealand Katie Glynn
- South Africa Tarryn Bright
- South Africa Marsha Cox
- South Africa Sulette Damons
- South Africa Kelly Madsen
- South Africa Kathleen Taylor
- South Korea Han Hye-lyoung
- South Korea Kim Da-rae
- South Korea Kim Ok-ju
- United States Paige Selenski
- United States Michelle Vittese
References
References
- "Tournament & location". [[Koninklijke Nederlandse Hockey Bond.
- (2014-06-14). "Netherlands women crowned Rabobank Hockey World Cup champions". FIH.
- (2014-06-14). "Women 3/4th: Lucha defies pain to lead Las Leonas to bronze". FIH.
- Williams, Ollie. (11 November 2010). "Olympic Park loses bid to host 2014 Hockey World Cups". [[BBC Sport]].
- (2012-11-20). "Qualification System for Rabobank Hockey World Cup 2014". FIH.
- (2013-12-12). "Pools announced for women's Rabobank Hockey World Cup". FIH.
- (2013-12-13). "Women's officials confirmed for Rabobank Hockey World Cup 2014". FIH.
- (2014-01-31). "Get Your Diaries Ready!". FIH.
- [http://www.fih.ch/files/Sport/Event%20Management/FIH%20Tournament%20Regulations%20-%20January%202015.pdf Regulations]
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