HomeNewsTrendsSportsAsian Games 2023 | Strong, accurate, lethal: How India hockey gave Pakistan a 10-2 drubbing

Asian Games 2023 | Strong, accurate, lethal: How India hockey gave Pakistan a 10-2 drubbing

To Indian hockey fans who live with the memory of India's 7-1 loss to Pakistan in the 1982 Asian Games final in Delhi, this might have felt like revenge.

October 01, 2023 / 11:17 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
With four goals against Pakistan in the Pool A match on September 30, 2023, Harmanpreet Singh led from the front, and was also freeman, attacking midfielder, defender, all in one concise role. (Illustration by Suneesh K.)
With four goals against Pakistan in the Pool A match on September 30, 2023, Harmanpreet Singh led from the front, and was also freeman, attacking midfielder, defender, all in one concise role. (Illustration by Suneesh K.)

On a humid September 30 evening, underneath darkened skies, the Indian hockey team went in to play a Pool A match against Pakistan, wielding scythes instead of the usual graphite sticks. In 60 minutes of mayhem, a bloodless battle, not only were records rewritten, historical and psychological markers were reset.

In a game where flair, finesse, skill came together like never before, Harmanpreet Singh’s boys, played with great panache. On the face of it, the 10-2 score-line for India makes it out to be like driving a Maserati on an empty 2am street. Yet, it was far from that. Irrespective of the sport, when you play against an eleven, you still need to put in the yards, be on top of your game – and India was exactly that: Strong, unwieldy, accurate, and above all, lethal. It was a game where no prisoners would be taken.

Story continues below Advertisement

In a game of large margins, the perfect set-up is a must. Adequate pressure, the right loading of players in the middle and in the front, plus to keep it boarded up in the defence. It was the kind of evening that would have started with a plan for Pakistan, then come down to keeping the margin low and later, like a tired boxer hanging on the ropes, welcoming the knock-out blow, willing the torment to pass; the night itself stretching, unfolding into one of the worst nightmares for Pakistan hockey.

India punched from the start. Aerials that homed in like radio signals, a fluent midfield, the pressure from the flanks and the unsettling pace of Mandeep, Sukhjeet, and Abhishek, sliced through a harried Pak defence.