Las Leonas and Hockeyroos complete Women’s World Cup semi-final line-up

13 July 2022 Lausanne, Switzerland: A slick three-pass move that finished with Victoria Granatto slipping the ball past Maddie Hinch was the sole goal in a fascinating encounter between Argentina and England. While Las Leonas dominated possession, England put up a stalwart defence and were it not for two moments of goalkeeping brilliance from Belen Succi could have taken the game to shoot-out. Argentina will now face Germany in the semi-finals.  The second quarter-final had a heap of expectation riding on it as the fans poured into the stadium to cheer on the host nation Spain. That hope was dented early as Australia scored in the third minute. Spain never stopped believing but a second goal meant the Red Sticks had a mountain to climb and it was not their day to achieve miracles. Argentina will now play Germany, while Australia will face the reigning champions Netherlands in the semi-finals on Saturday 16 July. In the earlier matches, Korea and India ended their World Cup campaigns with wins as they signed off with storng performances. Korea went toe-to-toe with a resilient Canada and then held their nerve in the shoot-out. India withstood an early Japan surge and then found a flowing style of play that had eluded them for most of the tournament. Canada vs Korea (13-16 place) In the sweltering heat of Terrassa, Canada and Korea went head to head in the battle for 13th place. There were personal milestones for stalwarts of both teams. For Canada, Sara McManus was playing her 200th cap, while Korea’s Cho Hyejon was celebrating 100 international caps. Both teams had good moments in the opening quarter although Korea looked the more dangerous towards the end of the 15 minutes. Twice, the Asian team created chances for a tap-in at each post after some good build-up play. On both occasions the ball placement was perfect but the recipient just failed to make contact. The second quarter was much the same, with both teams working hard to maintain possession but just failing to find the final, killer pass. Canada won a penalty corner but failed to convert, while Korea tended to spend a lot of time building up play but made very little inroad into the Canada circle. Going into the fourth quarter, neither team had really looked close to scoring and there was a growing tension as time ticked on. Brienne Stairs made some strong runs along the Korea baseline but again was unable to find her usual deft, goalscoring touch. Korea won their first penalty corner in the 50th minute. Karli Johansen timed a tackle all wrong and Korea sensed a chance to break the deadline. Johansen made up for her error as she dived full length to divert the ball away from the danger area. It was perhaps inevitable that the match would go to shoot-out. Neither team seemed to be prepared to take risks in order to go for the win, so it was a cagey game throughout. Throughout this tournament both Lee Jinmin and Rowan Harris, in the Korea and Canada goals respectively, have been super when under pressure. Today it was Lee Jinmin who really shone as she made two saves and ensured that Korea won the shoot-out. Player of the Match, Yuri Lee (KOR): ‘We are happy to win today, thank you to everyone here in Terrassa.’ Canada’s captain Natalie Sourisseau said: ‘We grew throghout the tournament. We were disapointed not to win a game but it is our first World Cup in 24 years. Now we we need to identify the gap between us and the other teams.’ The result means Korea end their campaign in joint 13th position alongside Chile, while Canada join South Africa in joint 15th place. India vs Japan (9-12th place) This was a well-contested match between two rivals who know each other well. Japan started the more brightly of the two teams, and were rewarded with a goal in the 20th minute from Asai Yu. The build-up play to that point had been very neat and creative from the Japanese team, with lots of 3D skills and high energy. India also had their opportunities in the opening 30 minutes, Nisha was proving a scourge to the Japanese defence and Navneet continued to show why she is such a respected forward. With four minutes left before half-time, India really began to pile on the pressure with a well disciplined press. This led to a penalty corner but Gurjit Kaur sent the shot just wide. More great work from Monika and Navneet earned the next penalty corner. Japan were defending with everything they had, with Suzuki Miyu and Oikawa Shihori foiling the India attack time and again. The breakthrough came from Navneet. She was fed the ball by Nisha, after some good build-up work by Jyoti. Navneet received the ball, turned and shot with venom past Nakamura Eika in the Cherry Blossom’s goal. That goal seemed to lift the tension in the India team and they began to play with the flowing passing and moving that is the Eves at their best. A penalty corner gave Grace the chance to take the lead: her shot flew firnly over the sprawling Nakamura into the goal. Navneet added to that on the cusp of quarter time and it was clear that India had finally found their groove. Player of the Match Neha (IND) said: ‘In the start of the match we rushed and hurried but by the end we had found our way and played well.’ The result means that India finish the tournament in joint ninth position with China. Japan join Ireland in joint 11th place. Argentina vs England (quarter-final) The blisteringly hot pitch in Terrassa was the scene of the first quarter-final of the day, but the temperature didn’t put any sort of brake on the tempo of the Argentina or England players. While the Argentina team had the lion’s share of possession in the opening quarter, England had set up a defence

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FIH Media Release

South Africa to host FIH Hockey Indoor World Cup in 2023

16 July 2022 Lausanne, Switzerland: Meeting yesterday in Terrassa, Spain, on the occasion of the ongoing FIH Hockey Women’s World Cup Spain and Netherlands 2022, the Executive Board (EB) of the International Hockey Federation (FIH) expressed thanks and congratulations to both Local Organising Committees, participating teams, officials and volunteers for putting together such a successful event. Furthermore, South Africa was confirmed as host of the next FIH Hockey Indoor World Cup, which was postponed due to Covid-related reasons. The event will be staged in Pretoria, from 5 to 11 February 2023. Also, the EB decided that the match schedule for the FIH Hockey Pro League will be divided in just 5 time windows (or “blocks”) from the 2023-24 season onwards – and this, for the subsequent three editions at least. Amongst others, this will help significantly for the planning of club competitions. Regarding the current situation with Hockey India, FIH will send an official communication to the Committee of Administrators of Hockey India with a request to have elections for India’s hockey governing body held as soon as possible, in order not to jeopardize the upcoming FIH Hockey Men’s World Cup scheduled in Bhubaneswar and Rourkela in January 2023. The next meeting of the Executive Board will take place on 3 November, ahead of the FIH Congress that will be held virtually on 4 and 5 November 2022. #HockeyEquals #HockeyInvites For more information about FIH and hockey in general, please consult FIH.hockey, follow the FIH social media channels – Facebook, Instagram and Twitter – and download the Watch.Hockey app.

Terrassa beckons for Netherlands and Germany

12 July 2022 Lausanne, Switzerland: After a day of contrasting matches we know who two of the semi-finallists are to be. First Germany put in a workmanlike performance to outplay New Zealand, then Netherlands and Belgium played out a scintillatng match, which the Netherlands edged in the final quarter. In the earlier matches, China finished their campaign with a win over Ireland, and Chile continued to win friends across the international community as they celebrated their first win at a Women’s World Cup. This was the final day of action at the Wagener Stadium, with the remaining matches all taking place in the Estadi Olimpic in the Spanish city of Terrassa. South Africa vs Chile (13-16 place) South Africa got off to an energetic start in the final World Cup match for these two teams. While Chile had a few good runs at the South African defence, they found Jean-Leigh du Toit in determiedn form and she swept well in front of Phumelela Mbande in the South Africa goal. For their part, South Africa were stringing some good passes together and looked ominously dangerous. In the second quarter, Chile made the most of a player advantage when Du Toit was gven a green card. Chile played a quick ball up the pitch and only some great awareness by Mbande kept the Diablas from opening the scoring. With 30 seconds left, Claudia Schuler in the Chile goal was called upon to make a great save. The keeper stretched her leg out to divert the ball from the path of the onrushing Zulu Onthatile. A yellow card for Erin Christie gave Chile the chance to attack but the South Africa team worked hard to compensate and Chile found it difficult to break out of their defensive half. It was a cruel twist for South Africa that they weathered the danger of Chile’s player advantage only to see Manuela Urroz give Chile the lead straight after they returned to 11 players. Urroz took her chance brilliantly, receiving a long pass out of midfield and slipping it into the corner past Mbande. That was the only goal of the game and the final whistle was greeted with huge celebrations by the Chile entourage as they ended their first ever FIH Women’s World Cup on a winning note. Player of the Match was Manuela Urroz (CHI). The result means Chile end their campaign in joint 13th position, while South Africa finish in joint 15th place. Ireland vs China (9-12th place) On the day that China defender Cui Qiuxia celebrated her 200th cap , China took an early lead in the seventh minute after Ma Ning quickly adapted to a misplaced penalty corner and passed the ball perfectly for Chen Yang to fire home past Ayeisha McFerran. Deirdrie Duke had an opportunity to square things a few minutes later but her quickly taken shot flew over the China goal. A good referral by captain Katie Mullan gave Ireland a penalty corner chance to equalise on the edge of quarter time. Unfortunately Roisin Upton was unable to get the ball on target and China went into the break with a narrow lead. The second quarter was immensely tight with both teams working hard to keep their defences’ closed to the opposition. In the final minutes of the quarter China won two consecutive penalty corners. Sarah Torrans showed great courage as she ran the corners down and singlehandedly dispelled the threat of the China penalty corner routine. The teams went into the second half knowing that they were starting their last 30 minutes of Women’s World Cup action for this edition. The sense of urgency was building within the Irish team, while China were conscious that their lead was very slender. Ireland will look back at this event with some frustration at the number of penalty corners that went unconverted and none more so than in this match. With five minutes left in the third quarter, Ireland won a couple more penalty corners, neither of which fiund a way past Liu PIng in the China goal. With just 15 minutes left, Ireland’s cause was not helped when Sarah Mcauley was given a yellow card. With Irealnd needing to throw everything into the game, a player disadvantage was the last thing Head Coach Sean Dancer and his team needed. And China struck the blow that looked to have ended Ireland’s aim to finish on a winning note when Zhong Jiaqi sent home a beautifully placed penalty corner to double their lead with just 11 minutes left. A yellow card to Yang Haoting dented China’s confidence and gave Ireland some hope of turning the score around. If possible, Katie Mullan and her team piled even more energy into the match, seeking a breakthrough that would allow them back into the match. That hope was dashed when Zhang Xindan slipped a ball to Chen Yanhua, who showed great balance and awareness to collect the ball, turn and shoot to give her team an unassailable 3-0 lead. With two minutes left Roisin Upton fired in a penalty corner which Michelle Carey directed into the goal to give the slightest glimmers of hope to her team. That was, however, the last shooting opportunity for either team and it was a delighted if exhausted China who left the field as winners. Cui Qiuxia, who won 200 caps today, said: ‘I never forget this day, it will be a great memory in my life. We played a very hard match today and we were very tired, but I am very proud of the team.’ Player of the Match was Chen Yang (CHN). The result means that China finish the tournament in ninth position. Ireland will finish in joint 11th place. New Zealand vs Germany (quarter-final) Two penalty corners which Sonja Zimmermann was unable to convert were really the only real scoring opportunities in the opneing quarter as both teams tried to gauge each others’ strengths and weaknesses. Germany shaded possession and looked the more ambitious but

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Late drama in Terrassa as Japan and India find winning ways

11 July 2022 Lausanne, Switzerland: It was tense and dramatic to the very end in both of today’s matches in the 9-16th place matches. First Japan waited until the final second of the game to break Korea’s hearts and then India hauled Canada back, first in the dying minutes of the match and then in the shoot-out to win their first match of the World Cup. Japan vs Korea (9-16 place) It was an entertaining first half of hockey between these two Asian rivals. Japan had the lion’s share of possession for the earlier part of the quarter but Korea began to get the measure of the fast passing and nimble movement of Japan and started to create their own pressure. Korea have their goal keeper Lee Jinmin to thank for not going a goal down early in the game. The keeper has gained plaudits throughout the tournament and her triple save was a masterclass is agility. Japan took the lead in the 18th minute when Kobayakawa Shiho wriggled through the Korea defence and created enough space to fire home a lovely reverse stick shot that even Lee Jinmin couldn’t save. Korea replied swiftly. A penalty corner led to a straight strike from Jung CheYoung, the ball flew with force into the Japan goal, past Nakamura Eika. Kim Seon should have given Korea the lead in the second half but, faced with only the goalkeeper to beat, after some fantastic stick work from Kim Jeong In to get the ball to her, Kim Seon mis-hit and the ball flew wide. This handed Japan the momentum and they capitalised through a penalty corner. Emi Nishikori was in the right place to collect the rebound from the initial strike. In the first minute of the final quarter Cheon Eunbi had a golden opportunity to score for Korea but the captain was just unable to turn the ball enough to steer it into the goal, after it had been crossed across the face of the goal towards her. That missed opportunity galvanised Cheon Eunbi and a few minutes later she danced her way through the Japan defence to earn her team a penalty corner. Once again Jung CheYoung stepped up and fired the ball straight at Nakamura, who will be disappointed with her failure to stop the shot. With the scores at 2-2, Japan really began to exert some pressure. Kaho Tanaka had a shot stopped at point blank rnage by Kim Eunji, who had replaced Lee Jinmin in the Korea goal. Seconds later and Mai Toriyama was tormenting the Korea defence with her skills. Japan won a series of penalty corners but the injection was slow and so the Korea defence dealt with the threat with ease. The match looked destined to go to shoot-out. However, hockey is a sport where goals can come at any moment and this was no exception. With less than a second on the clock, Japan scored from their third consecutive penalty corner and snatched victory just before the whistle blew. The scorer was Hazaki Nagai, although the ball took a cruel deflection from the first runner. Player of the Match Yu Asai (JPN) said: ‘Finally we could win. We couldn’t win a pool match so now we have focused on these games. We won the first one of these and now we are looking to win again. Now we will recover well and look to win against either Canada or India.’ Canada vs India (9-16th place) Both teams came to this match looking for their first win of the competition. For India, the disappointment of losing to Spain just the previous evening looked to be hanging heavy on the minds of the athletes as they prepared for the first quarter. After soaking up heaps of pressure from the fast-passing India forward line, Canada raced to the other end of the pitch and actually ended up with the ball in the back of the India net. Unfortunately the whistle had just gone for a penalty corner and Natalie Sourisseau was forced to adapt her attempt as the injection was just off target. Canada went one better a few minutes later as they won another penalty corner. This time the variation created confusion among the India defence and after the ball pinged to Kathleen Leahy, she slipped it to Madeline Secco who got the final touch. At the start of the second quarter, it was again India who came out stronger. Monika, in particular, was using her array of 3D skills to get past the Canada defence. Rowan Harris in the Canada goal was urging her team to maintain focus. As the game moved towards half-time, India really began to pour energy into their attacks. Navneet, Neha and Vandana were now all moving with freedom and Canada were very much on the back foot. After the break, India continued to pile on the pressure, with Lalremsiami making some speedy forays into the Canada circle. The north American side held firm, with Sara McManus and Hannah Haughn putting in some serious shifts breaking down the India attacks. This was particularly impressive from Haughn, who is only recently returned from an ACL injury. With four minutes left in the third quarter, Canada were content to soak up the pressure and wait for the chance to break. For India, there was more frustration creeping into their game as they just failed to make the connections that would turn their much superior possession into an all-important goal. A penalty corner with two minutes left in the third saw a shot from Grace which was well saved by Harris and another India chance came and went. From a Candian perspective, the fourth quarter was exhausting and tense as the team withstood wave after wave of Indian pressure. As Navneet and Tete Salima started to really run at the Canadian defence, Karli Johansen, McManus and just about every member of the Candian team dug deep to protect their 1-0 lead. For Gurjit Kaur

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Composed England hit five past Korea; Spain leave it late to beat India. China and Ireland get back to winning ways

10 July 2022 Lausanne, Switzerland: England and Spain progressed through to the quarter-finals after two hugely contrasting matches. England put in a measured and composed performance to beat Korea convincingly. Spain, on the other hand, kept an engrossed home crowd on tenterhooks until the 57th minute. Then, once they had the lead, Head Coach Adrian Lock’s side lost two players to cards, making the final seconds even more tense. Earlier in the day, Ireland beat a fatigued-looking South Africa, while China’s penalty corner routines finally wore down a resilient Chile side. Ireland will now meet China on 12 July in their final match of the World Cup. South Africa and Chile will also play their final matches on the same day. In the quarter-finals England now travel to Terrassa to face Argentina, while Spain will face Australia – the team they beat to bronze in the 2018 FIH Women’s World Cup. Ireland vs South Africa (9-16 place) The first quarter had a sense that both teams were a little hesitant in their play, with some unforced errors and very few scoring chances. Probaby the most dangerous moment in those opening minutes came courtesy of Onthatile Zulu, whose fast running with the ball drew a save from Ayeisha McFerran after she tore through the defence and fired at goal. South Africa started the second quarter with 10 players when Kristen Paton received a yellow card. They quickly made that advantage count when they won a penalty corner but Phumelela Mbande was alert to the slipped ball and stood up strong to make the save. There was nothing Mbande could do just a few seconds later when Sarah Hawkshaw was the final cog in a slick penalty corner routine that saw Hannah McLoughlin play the ball deliberately wide for Hawkshaw to slide into the goal. The Irish nearly doubled their lead a few seconds later when Sarah Torrans attempted the same move on the opposite side of the goal. Ireland doubled their lead just one minute into the second half when Roisin Upton put a lot of disguise on a penalty corner strike to beat Mbande and the South African defence. There were no further goals in the third quarter but Ireland spent much of the time defending a one player disadvantage as both Deirdrie Duke and Hawkshaw received cards. A further yellow card for Charlotte Beggs in the fourth quarter invited more pressure from South Africa but an assured performance from McFerran and the Irish defence, combined with some uncharacteristically poor finihsing from South Africa, meant the score stayed at 2-0 and Ireland progressed to the contest for 9-12th place. South Africa will face Chile to decide 13-16th position. Player of the Match Roisin Upton (IRL) said: ‘It wasn’t a perfect performance but we have rebuilt over the past three days. We created a lot of opportunities and finished two of them. We weren’t executing our corners in our first three games so that really became our focus. Tournaments like this are a rollercoaster. We try to stay in the moment and we will be all out for a win in our final game.’ South Africa’s Lilian du Plessis said: ‘We are disappointed in how we played today. If we had started how we finished, then we would have done better. But Ireland played well today. We will have a lot of preparation going into the next game and we will try to put right the things that we got wrong today.’ China vs Chile (9-16th place) Two sides came out to finish their tournaments with a flourish but under the pressure to win, both sides seemed to freeze when they were in front of goal. It was China who created the most opportunities with four penalty corners in the first half and a handful of chances from open play. To the frustration of both Head Coach Alyson Annan and the platers themselves, the final shot was often wayward. With three minutes left of the half a beautiful move between Ma Ning, Zhang Xiaoxue and Yuan Meng almost broke the deadlock as quick interchanges between the players saw Yuan Meng slide the ball inches from the Chile goal. The second half saw much of the same for the opening minutes: China were the dominant team but couldn’t find a way through the Chile defence. The longer the match went on, the more likely it was that Chile might find a rogue goal to take the win. A shot by Manuela Urroz nearly did exactly that. The midfielder worked her way into the China circle and unleashed a shot that just fizzed past the post. Eventually the China pressure on Claudia Schuler’s goal paid off and China scored two peanlty corners either side of the quarter time break. First Ma Ning rattled home a straight shot and then Zhong Jiaqi effectively sealed the match for China with another well-placed corner strike. The third China goal was scored with four minutes left. The ball was slipped by Gu Bingfeng to Ma Ning, who then slipped it to Cui Qiuxia. The multi-capped defender lifted the ball high into the Chile goal to top a performance that was workmanlike and professional. Player of the Match was Ma Ning. One of China’s goalscorers, Cui Qiuxia said: ‘It was an amazing game. We played very well and we deserved to win. Before this game we had missed a lot of penalty corners so it was important that we got it right today. We will enjoy our last game whoever it is against.’ England vs Korea (cross-over match) After a goalless first quarter, England discovered their scoring touch in the second quarter. Giselle Ansley scored the first of a brace when she let rip on a penalty corner, a move she repeated nine minutes later. Both goals were sent high to compensate for Lee Jinmin’s incredible ability to save anything low to the goal. In the middle of the Ansley goals, Tessa Howard scored a fantastic goal

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