2010 Women's Hockey World Cup

Summary

The 2010 Women's Hockey World Cup was the 12th edition of the Women's Hockey World Cup field hockey tournament. It was held from 29 August to 11 September 2010 in Rosario, Argentina.

2010 Women's Hockey World Cup
Tournament details
Host countryArgentina
CityRosario
Dates29 August – 11 September
Teams12
Venue(s)Estadio Mundialista de Hockey
Final positions
Champions Argentina (2nd title)
Runner-up Netherlands
Third place England
Tournament statistics
Matches played38
Goals scored153 (4.03 per match)
Top scorer(s)Netherlands Maartje Paumen (12 goals)
Best playerArgentina Luciana Aymar
2006 (previous) (next) 2014
The Argentine squad, champions
class=notpageimage|
Location of the World Cup venue

Argentina won the tournament for the second time after defeating defending champions the Netherlands 3–1 in the final. England won the third place match by defeating Germany 2–0 to claim their first ever World Cup medal.[1][2]

Background edit

After Argentina was confirmed as host nation,[3] it was decided to hold the tournament in Buenos Aires in a new stadium built in GEBA's grounds,[4] but the club later refused to organize it due to economical difficulties. The second option had been the Jockey Club de Rosario, venue of the 2014 Champions Trophy, but the local government of Rosario decided instead to build a new stadium with a capacity for 12,000 people with mobile grandstands in Fisherton, a neighbourhood located in the western part of the city.[5][6]

Qualification edit

Each of the continental champions from five federations and the host nation received an automatic berth. The European and Asian federations received two and one extra quotas respectively based upon the FIH World Rankings at the completion of the 2008 Summer Olympics. In addition to the three winners of each of the three Qualifiers, the following twelve teams, shown with final pre-tournament rankings, competed in this tournament.[7]

Dates Event Location Qualifier(s)
Host nation   Argentina (2)
7–15 February 2009 2009 Pan American Cup Hamilton, Bermuda 1
10–18 July 2009 2009 Africa Cup of Nations Accra, Ghana   South Africa (12)
22–29 August 2009 2009 EuroHockey Championship Amsterdam, Netherlands   Netherlands (1)
  Germany (4)
  England (6)
  Spain (8)
25–29 August 2009 2009 Oceania Cup Invercargill, New Zealand   New Zealand (7)
29 October–8 November 2009 2009 Asia Cup Bangkok, Thailand   China (3)
  India (13)
26 March–3 April 2010 Qualifier 1 San Diego, United States   South Korea (11)
17–26 April 2010 Qualifier 2 Kazan, Russia   Japan (9)
24 April–2 May 2010 Qualifier 3 Santiago, Chile   Australia (5)
^1Argentina qualified both as host and continental champion, therefore that quota was given to the European federation allowing Spain to qualify directly to the World Cup as the fourth placed team at the 2009 EuroHockey Nations Championship

Competition format edit

Twelve teams competed in the tournament with the competition consisting of two rounds. In the first round, teams were divided into two pools of six teams, and played in a round-robin format with each of the teams playing all other teams in the pool once. Teams were awarded three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss. At the end of the pool matches, teams were ranked in their pool according to the following criteria in order:

  • Total points accumulated
  • Number of matches won
  • Goal difference
  • Goals for
  • The result of the match played between the teams in question

Following the completion of the pool games, teams placed first and second in each pool advanced to a single-elimination round consisting of two semifinal games, a third place play-off and a final. Remaining teams competed in classification matches to determine their ranking in the tournament. During these matches, extra time of 7½ minutes per half was played if teams were tied at the end of regulation time. During extra time, play followed golden goal rules with the first team to score declared the winner. If no goals were scored during extra time, a penalty stroke competition took place.

Squads edit

Umpires edit

Below are the 16 umpires appointed by the International Hockey Federation:

  • Claire Adenot (FRA)
  • Julie Ashton-Lucy (AUS)
  • Stella Bartlema (NED)
  • Frances Block (ENG)
  • Marelize de Klerk (RSA)
  • Carolina de la Fuente (ARG)
  • Elena Eskina (RUS)
  • Amy Hassick (USA)
  • Kelly Hudson (NZL)
  • Soledad Iparraguirre (ARG)
  • Michelle Joubert (RSA)
  • Carol Metchette (IRL)
  • Miao Lin (CHN)
  • Irene Presenqui (ARG)
  • Lisa Roach (AUS)
  • Wendy Stewart (CAN)

Results edit

All times are Argentina time (UTC−03:00)[8]

First round edit

Pool A edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Netherlands 5 5 0 0 25 8 +17 15 Semi-finals
2   Germany 5 4 0 1 10 4 +6 12
3   Australia 5 3 0 2 13 10 +3 9
4   New Zealand 5 1 1 3 9 15 −6 4
5   India 5 1 0 4 7 20 −13 3
6   Japan 5 0 1 4 6 13 −7 1
Source: FIH
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) head-to-head result.[9]
30 August 2010
14:30
Netherlands   7–1   India
Agliotti   8'
Hoog   24'
Lammers   28'45'
Paumen   41'49'60'
Report Rani R.   22'
Umpires:
Julie Ashton Lucy (AUS)
Frances Block (ENG)
30 August 2010
17:00
Germany   2–0   New Zealand
Wilde   15'
Bachmann   17'
Report
Umpires:
Soledad Iparraguirre (ARG)
Wendy Stewart (CAN)
30 August 2010
19:30
Australia   2–1   Japan
McGurk   14'
Blyth   61'
Report Chiba   63'
Umpires:
Amy Hassick (USA)
Carolina de la Fuente (ARG)

1 September 2010
14:30
India   3–6   Australia
Rani R.   30'62'
Ritu   42'
Report Blyth   17'
Nelson   34'58'
Eastham   52'
Arrold   55'
Liddelow   64'
Umpires:
Kelly Hudson (NZL)
Soledad Iparraguirre (ARG)
1 September 2010
17:00
Netherlands   7–3   New Zealand
Hoog   3'60'
Lammers   16'
Agliotti   36'
Paumen   38'
Van der Pols   39'
Schopman   49'
Report Forgesson   2'65'70'
Umpires:
Marelize de Klerk (RSA)
Carol Metchette (IRL)
1 September 2010
19:30
Germany   2–1   Japan
Stöckel   57'
Keller   61'
Report Murakami   39'
Umpires:
Elena Eskina (RUS)
Stella Bartlema (NED)

3 September 2010
16:30[10]
India   1–4   Germany
Rani R.   24' Report Hoffmann   22'
Stöckel   32'
Keller   36'
Haase   49'
Umpires:
Carol Metchette (IRL)
Amy Hassick (USA)
3 September 2010
19:00[10]
Australia   1–4   Netherlands
Arrold   21' Report Paumen   10'34'40'
Smeets   46'
Umpires:
Michelle Joubert (RSA)
Frances Block (ENG)
3 September 2010
21:30[10]
Japan   2–2   New Zealand
Chiba   47'
Nakashima   54'
Report Forgesson   56'
Sharland   57'
Umpires:
Irene Presenqui (ARG)
Lisa Roach (AUS)

5 September 2010
14:30
Japan   0–2   India
Report Rani R.   14'
Jajeet   42'
Umpires:
Miao Lin (CHN)
Julie Ashton-Lucy (AUS)
5 September 2010
17:00
Germany   1–2   Netherlands
Stöckel   3' Report Paumen   39'
Lammers   69'
Umpires:
Lisa Roach (AUS)
Soledad Iparraguirre (ARG)
5 September 2010
19:30
New Zealand   1–4   Australia
Forgesson   5' Report McGurk   12'
Nelson   57'65'
Liddelow   63'
Umpires:
Carolina De La Fuente (ARG)
Carol Metchette (IRL)

7 September 2010
14:30
New Zealand   3–0   India
Sharland   44'54'
Glynn   51'
Report
Umpires:
Amy Hassick (USA)
Michelle Joubert (RSA)
7 September 2010
17:00
Netherlands   5–2   Japan
Van As   2'
Paumen   10'54'
Welten   38'
Lammers   49'
Report Chiba   67'69'
Umpires:
Lisa Roach (AUS)
Miao Lin (CHN)
7 September 2010
19:30
Australia   0–1   Germany
Report Bachmann   43'
Umpires:
Soledad Iparraguirre (ARG)
Wendy Stewart (CAN)

Pool B edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Argentina 5 5 0 0 14 2 +12 15 Semi-finals
2   England 5 3 1 1 7 6 +1 10
3   South Korea 5 2 2 1 10 8 +2 8
4   China 5 2 0 3 11 6 +5 6
5   South Africa 5 1 0 4 9 17 −8 3
6   Spain 5 0 1 4 5 17 −12 1
Source: FIH
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) head-to-head result.[9]
29 August 2010
14:30
China   1–2   South Korea
Zhao   11' Report Kim Y.   23'
Park M.   51'
Umpires:
Kelly Hudson (NZL)
Lisa Roach (USA)
29 August 2010
17:00
Spain   2–3   England
Comerma   4'
Petchamé   31'
Report Danson   17'
Cullen   28'
Gilbert   35'
Umpires:
Marelize de Klerk (RSA)
Elena Eskina (RUS)
29 August 2010
19:30
Argentina   5–2   South Africa
Barrionuevo   16'
Aymar   37'39'63'
Russo   69'
Report Coetzee   22'
Ryan   65'
Umpires:
Carol Metchette (IRL)
Stella Bartlema (NED)

31 August 2010
14:30
China   0–1   England
Report MacLeod   2'
Umpires:
Irene Presenqui (ARG)
Julie Ashton-Lucy (AUS)
31 August 2010
17:00
South Africa   2–1   Spain
Coetzee   21'
Damons   61'
Report Camón   31'
Umpires:
Lisa Roach (AUS)
Carolina de la Fuente (ARG)
31 August 2010
19:30
Argentina   1–0   South Korea
Rebecchi   45' Report
Umpires:
Miao Lin (CHN)
Michelle Joubert (RSA)

3 September 2010
09:00[10]
South Africa   1–4   China
Wilson   16' Report Ren   26'
Fu   44'
Gao   58'60'
Umpires:
Stella Bartlema (NED)
Carolina de la Fuente (ARG)
3 September 2010
11:30[10]
England   1–1   South Korea
Richardson   37' Report Kim J.   1'
Umpires:
Soledad Iparraguirre (ARG)
Wendy Stewart (CAN)
3 September 2010
14:00[10]
Spain   0–4   Argentina
Report Barrionuevo   13'47'
Gulla   14'
Luchetti   40'
Umpires:
Julie Ashton-Lucy (AUS)
Marelize de Klerk (RSA)

4 September 2010
14:30
England   2–1   South Africa
Richardson   9'48' Report Coetzee   58'
Umpires:
Carolina De La Fuente (ARG)
Kelly Hudson (NZL)
4 September 2010
17:00
South Korea   2–2   Spain
Kim B.   7'
Cheon   35'
Report Comerma   32'
Muñoz   38'
Umpires:
Frances Block (ENG)
Carol Metchette (IRL)
4 September 2010
19:30
China   0–2   Argentina
Report Barrionuevo   51'
Aymar   60'
Umpires:
Wendy Stewart (CAN)
Michelle Joubert (RSA)

6 September 2010
14:30
Spain   0–6   China
Report Li H.   11'
Fu   42'
Ma Y.   49'58'63'66'
Umpires:
Elena Eskina (RUS)
Marelize de Klerk (RSA)
6 September 2010
17:00
South Korea   5–3   South Africa
Lee   34'
Kim B.   55'
Cheon   58'
Kim Y.   61'
Park M.   67'
Report Damons   2'
Botha   50'52'
Umpires:
Irene Presenqui (ARG)
Wendy Stewart (CAN)
6 September 2010
19:30
Argentina   2–0   England
Barrionuevo   13'
Sruoga   67'
Report
Umpires:
Stella Bartlema (NED)
Julie Ashton-Lucy (AUS)

Fifth to twelfth place classification edit

Eleventh and twelfth place edit

9 September 2010
13:30
Japan   2–1   Spain
Murakami   62'
Chiba   68'
Report Cruz   52'
Umpires:
Kelly Hudson (NZL)
Amy Hassick (USA)

Ninth and tenth place edit

10 September 2010
13:30
India   4–3   South Africa
Rani R.   9'10'
Anjum   37'
Jasjeet   56'
Report George   3'
Ryan   27'
Coetzee   58'
Umpires:
Stella Bartlema (NED)
Miao Lin (CHN)

Seventh and eighth place edit

10 September 2010
16:00
New Zealand   3–0   China
Forgesson   2'
C. Harrison   13'
Eshuis   66'
Report
Umpires:
Irene Presenqui (ARG)
Carolina de la Fuente (ARG)

Fifth and sixth place edit

10 September 2010
19:30
Australia   2–1   South Korea
Eastham   33'
Arrold   68'
Report Kim Y.   22'
Umpires:
Carol Metchette (IRL)
Wendy Stewart (CAN)

First to fourth place classification edit

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
9 September 2010
 
 
  Netherlands (p.s.o)1 (4)
 
11 September 2010
 
  England1 (3)
 
  Netherlands1
 
9 September 2010
 
  Argentina3
 
  Argentina2
 
 
  Germany1
 
Third place
 
 
11 September 2010
 
 
  England2
 
 
  Germany0

Semifinals edit

9 September 2010
16:30
Netherlands   1–1 (a.e.t.)   England
Paumen   61' Report MacLeod   56'
Penalties
Paumen  
Schopman  
Goderie  
Welten  
Lammers  
4–3   Richardson
  Cullen
  Walsh
  Craddock
  Rogers
Umpires:
Lisa Roach (AUS)
Michelle Joubert (RSA)

9 September 2010
19:30
Argentina   2–1   Germany
Aymar   25'
Luchetti   63'
Report Stöckel   69'
Umpires:
Frances Block (ENG)
Julie Ashton-Lucy (AUS)

Third and fourth place edit

11 September 2010
16:30
England   2–0   Germany
Danson   28'
Richardson   31'
Report
Umpires:
Soledad Iparraguirre (ARG)
Carolina de la Fuente (ARG)

Final edit

11 September 2010
19:30
Netherlands   1–3   Argentina
Paumen   44' Report 1
Report 2
Rebecchi   3'54'
Barrionuevo   7'
Umpires:
Lisa Roach (AUS)
Marelize de Klerk (RSA)

Awards edit

Top Goalscorer Player of the Tournament Goalkeeper of the Tournament Young Player of the Tournament Fair Play Trophy
  Maartje Paumen   Luciana Aymar   Beth Storry   Rani Rampal   Australia

Statistics edit

Final standings edit

Pos Grp Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Final result
1 B   Argentina (H) 7 7 0 0 19 4 +15 21 Gold medal
2 A   Netherlands 7 5 1 1 27 12 +15 16 Silver medal
3 B   England 7 4 2 1 10 7 +3 14 Bronze medal
4 A   Germany 7 4 0 3 11 8 +3 12 Fourth place
5 A   Australia 6 4 0 2 15 11 +4 12 Eliminated in
group stage
6 B   South Korea 6 2 2 2 11 10 +1 8
7 A   New Zealand 6 2 1 3 12 15 −3 7
8 B   China 6 2 0 4 11 9 +2 6
9 A   India 6 2 0 4 11 23 −12 6
10 B   South Africa 6 1 0 5 12 21 −9 3
11 A   Japan 6 1 1 4 8 14 −6 4
12 B   Spain 6 0 1 5 6 19 −13 1
Source: FIH
(H) Hosts

Goalscorers edit

There were 153 goals scored in 38 matches, for an average of 4.03 goals per match.

12 goals

7 goals

6 goals

5 goals

4 goals

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

Source: FIH

References edit

  1. ^ "Las Leonas win BDO FIH World Cup". 2010-09-12. Retrieved 2012-10-23.
  2. ^ "BDO FIH World Cup - Results Book" (PDF). 2010-09-15. Retrieved 2014-12-22.
  3. ^ "Hosts for 2010 Hockey World Cup". FIH. 2007-03-21. Retrieved 2012-10-24.
  4. ^ "GEBA quiere ser Mundial" [GEBA wants the World Cup] (in Spanish). infobae.com. 2008-08-25. Retrieved 2012-10-23.
  5. ^ "Hockey: Rosario será sede del Mundial femenino 2010" [Hockey: Rosario will host the 2010 Women's World Cup] (in Spanish). La Capital. 2008-11-08. Archived from the original on 2010-01-05. Retrieved 2012-10-23.
  6. ^ "Así será el estadio mundialista de hockey que se construirá en Rosario" [This will be the World Cup stadium that will be built in Rosario] (in Spanish). La Capital. 2009-06-26. Archived from the original on 2015-12-22. Retrieved 2012-10-23.
  7. ^ "Qualification Criteria, Men's and Women's World Cups, 2010" (PDF). FIH. September 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2012-10-23.
  8. ^ "FIH releases BDO FIH World Cup match schedule". FIH. 2010-05-20. Retrieved 2012-10-24.
  9. ^ a b Regulations
  10. ^ a b c d e f "Official Communication: Revised Match Schedule". WorldHockey.org. 2010-09-02. Archived from the original on 6 September 2010. Retrieved 2010-09-03.

External links edit

  • Official FIH website