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India coach
quits after Olympic hopes crash
NEW DELHI—India’s field hockey coach Joaquim Carvalho resigned on Monday
after the eight-time Olympic champions failed to qualify for the Beijing
Games.
India crashed to a 2-0 defeat to Great Britain in the final of the
qualifying tournament in Santiago, Chile on Sunday night, ending a proud
record of having played in every Olympics since 1928. “When I took over
11 months ago, I had said I would resign if I cannot deliver results,”
Carvalho told Indian media in Santiago.
“So now I am keeping my word. I am as disappointed and hurt as any other
Indian hockey fan.” Indian Hockey Confederation vice-president Narendra
Batra also resigned, hoping to put pressure on the entire IHC
administration, led by Kunwar Pratap Gill, to step down.
“I am ashamed because all of us have failed,” said Batra. “This is the
lowest point in Indian hockey and we in the federation must take the
blame for it.” Gill, the former supercop credited with wiping out Sikh
militancy in Punjab in the 1980s, played down the setback.
“We do not have an instant coffee machine to get results instantly,”
Gill told the Press Trust of India. “It takes time to regain your
position. We have put the process in place and the results will take
some time.” Batra was, however, unsure if any attempt would be made to
overhaul the sport’s administration.
“Is anyone really concerned?” he said. “The sports ministry has already
demoted hockey as a priority sport although it remains our national
sport.” Signs that India were headed for a major fall were evident over
the last decade.
Since winning the last of their eight Olympic golds at the
western-boycotted Moscow Games in 1980, India claimed just one major
title when Dhanraj Pillay’s men took the Asian Games gold in Bangkok in
1998. India finished seventh in the last two Olympics and were forced to
qualify for Beijing after failing to win an Asian Games medal for the
first time at Doha in December 2006.
Carvalho, however, dismissed fears that Indian hockey would not recover
from the latest defeat in a country where cricket rules. “Failure to
qualify for the Olympics is not the end of the road,” the outgoing coach
said. “But we must start from scratch. We must retain the core team and
perhaps even induct a few junior players. Some of the seniors will have
to think hard about their future in international hockey.”
Former international Viren Rasquinha, who retired earlier this year to
pursue management studies, said the exit from the Olympics was “one hell
of a blow.” “It was almost taken for granted that we will be part of the
Olympics,” he said. “No one could think of an Olympics without India.
—Agencies |