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Not many tournaments in the world of hockey have the reputation of
surviving after initial euphoria. Being amateur in spirit, field hockey
could not afford
to galaxy of tournaments to cater to its fans. Only contests that
survived, or survives, are those which carry the world body’s label such
as Champions
Trophy, which comes outside the regulars such as Olympics, World Cup and
Continental events.
An exception is Sultan Azlan Shah Cup, put on board in 1983. It’s a
stand alone invitation tournament that survived time, and satiated the
the quest of
event-starved hockey fans.
That the proud possession of Asia is now on its twenty-second edition,
is a great news. Fittingly, this year has wonderful line up, what with
return of
Australia, and former winners in New Zealand, India and Pakistan.
seven top teams with full strength.
A walk down the memory lane fills one with pride and nostalgia.
The Sultan Azlan Shah Cup, the biggest tournament in the Asian Hockey
Federation calendar, is the Malaysian Hockey Federation’s baby, which it
conceived to
cater to their domestic needs. Though initially known after the host
city or a name denoting the number of teams in the field, it was later
named after
Sultan Azlan Shah. Field hockey is one of the popular sports in Malaysia
and it also elicits patronage from the elite rulers. It was, therefore,
in the
fitness of things that the tournament was named after one of its kings
Raja Sultan Azlan Shah, who headed the Asian Hockey Federation for long
and the MHF
then. Besides being a great hockey fan, Azlan Shah also lends his
personality to the development of hockey, discharging many prestigious
national and global
assignments.
Though originally contemplated as a bi-annual event, as the enthusiasm
grew the Azlan Cup became an annual affair since 1994. Indira Gandhi
Gold Cup was the
only other international tournament in those times but the Indian event
was discontinued after 1995. The inaugural edition, known as Pentangular
Tournament
as five nations took part, was held at Kuala Lumpur from August 21 to
28, 1983. India and Pakistan played the first match which ended in a 1-1
draw. Rajinder
Singh (Jr.), Indian coach for the 2005 edition, was among the proud
participants of that match. Ric Charlesworth’s Australia won all four
round-robin matches
and then defeated the reigning World Cup holders Pakistan 1-0 in the
final to lift the Cup, then called as Raja Tun Azlan Trophy. The winning
goal came from
the stick of Terry Walsh.
Ten years after winning the World Cup in Malaysia, India again became
toast of that country when it lifted the second Azlan Cup in Ipoh in the
fag end of
1985. India defeated defending champions Australia 4-3 in its pool
before firing Pakistan in the semis (1-0). It was the hosts who faced
defeat (4-2) in the
final on 3rd December. India won the Cup twice since then. A week after
India’s win, Azlan Shah, MHF president and FIH Vice-President, was
crowned as Sultan
of Perak and became the Deputy King of Malaysia.
Germany became the first European nation to engrave its name on the Cup
in 1987 at Perak. Next edition due for 1989 was not staged, perhaps the
dates clashed
with the onset of the annual Indira International Gold Cup in India.
When it was revived in 1991, celebrated coach Balkrishen Singh’s India
won the
six-nation round robin event without giving away a point. India defeated
Pakistan, courtesy Mukesh Kumar’s only goal, and USSR on its way to
podium.
England’s turn it was in 1994 before India was once again on the
victor’s podium in 1995. All the teams in the 1995 event were rather
experimental ones, a
rare thing in the history of the Cup. Goalie Ashish Ballal blocked
greenhorn Michael Green’s stroke in the tie-breaker for India’s third
and till date, the
last title.
Eight editions were staged in the nine-year interregnum between 1996 and
2004, 1997 being the blank occasion. Pakistan won the title
successively twice (1999
and 2000, 2002 and 2003), a feat no other country could match.
The 2004 number was won by Australia in January and six months later
they were at heavens in Athens. Like in the past, victory in Azlan
proved to be the
stepping stone for greater glory for the Aussies. They again won the
title in 2005.
undefined Australia’s dominance continued in 2007 also. In the 2008
editon at Ipoh, Argentna put it across India in the final through golden
goal. Canada,
New Zealand, Pakistan, all qualified for the Beijing Olympics were in
the fray.
In 2009, held a month before the Asia Cup, India won the Cup and it
missed another outright title win next year when rains prevented what
was expected to be
a grand battle between India and Korea.
Azlan Cup is perhaps the only tournament in the world that provided
airfare for the invited teams besides free hospitality for long time.
Secondly, the
organisers strictly ensure participation of national sides; violators
have been sternly sidelined for the future editions. This policy helped
the tournament
grow in stature.
Normally timed before major global events such as the World Cup or the
Olympics, it drew worthy teams and the participants too took the
tournament with the
seriousness it deserved.
Having seen so much action on the field, tremendous support from Sultan
Azlan Shah himself, the event carved a niche for itself in the sporting
history of
Malaysia, if not the Asia.
One immediate task that, if accomplished will help it grow further and
make it a commercial success, is to put on plan to telecast the matches
to as much
countries as possible. Thankfully this time Neo Prime beams it to Indian
homes, so also Astro in Malaysia.
However, the annual feature of Malaysia, the Azlan Cup, is a veritable
window for future of Asian Hockey is an established fact, and it cannot
be denied.
Recently, FIH president was quoted as saying allocating a window for
Azan Shah Cup to facilitate strong nations to participate. That is for
the future, as
of now past is prisine glory and present is equally same.
Let us savour another edition of this great tournament.