FOUR Asian giants will be looking to revive their hockey fortunes against Australia and New Zealand in the Azlan Shah Cup which begins this Saturday in Ipoh.
In Asia, South Korea, India, Pakistan and Malaysia have been holding the top-four positions for as long as one can remember, but at the world stage, they are known as struggling former giants.
Australia, ranked No 2, are known as the Kookabooras and they have proven themselves to be the sport-loving country’s most most successful sporting team.
They are the only Australian team in any sport to receive medals at five Olympic Games (1992–2008), and have placed themselves in the top four in every Olympics since 1980.
They also won the Hockey World Cup in 1986 and 2010, and finally broke their Olympic gold curse in 2004 in Athens.
The Champions Trophy and Commonwealth Games ac colades and thropies need another cabinet to store.
New Zealand, who shocked all and sundry by beating Argentina 1-0 to the Azlan Shah gold last year, are ranked 6th in the World but do not have a collection of medals like their neighbours.
But the Kiwis are known fighters, and will prove them selves to be the team to beat in Ipoh from Saturday.
Among the struggling Asian giants, Pakistan are the highest ranked at No 5, South Korea at No 8, India at No 11 while Malaysia a distant 13th.
The Azlan Shah Cup was mooted by the Sultan of Perak to match the Champions Trophy, and after its launch in 1983 this invitational, today, remains one of the only two com petition designed to enhance the profile of Asian countries.
The other is the new kid on the block, the Asian Champions Trophy.
India, Pakistan, Korea and Malaysia, do, remain on the minds of hockey aficionados, but only in history.
The domination of India ended somewhere in the Eighties - Moscow Olympics to be exact - and that of Pakistan a decade later, probably at the World Cup in Sydney.
Neither Korea nor Malaysia reached the level of grabbing the Olympics gold. At least Korea came close to the summit at Sydney 2000.
So it goes without saying that unless the former Asian giants revitalise their development programmes, the chances of narrowing the gap with the European countries will remain just that, a chance.
But with the Azlan Shah Cup at their disposal to play against themselves, and also two higher ranked teams, it is visioned that at least three Asian teams from Ipoh will make the cup to the next year’s World Cup in Netherlands, be it from the World League, or the Asia Cup -- both of which will be hosted by Malaysia.