FIH Pro League: Indian women aim to end 6-match skid, avoid relegation
The Indian women are currently placed at the bottom of the nine-team table with 10 points from 14 games and are in danger of relegation to the second tier FIH Nations Cup in 2026.
PTI
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FIH Hockey Pro League game between Belgium and India
Berlin,
27 June
The Indian women's hockey team would look to break its six-match
losing streak and avoid relegation from the FIH Pro League with positive
results against China, starting with the first match on Saturday.
The
Indian women are currently placed at the bottom of the nine-team table with 10
points from 14 games and are in danger of relegation to the second tier FIH
Nations Cup in 2026.
It's
not what Hockey India had in its mind when Harendra Singh was brought back on
board as the head coach.
After
a relatively good outing at home leg earlier this year, the Indian women lost
six consecutive matches against Australia, Argentina and Belgium (two matches
against one opponent) in the European leg of the tournament.
India
will be determined to sign off their Pro League campaign with valuable wins in
back-to-back matches against fourth placed China on Saturday and Sunday.
The
Indians might have suffered six straight defeats, but they played good,
attacking hockey here.
But
their inability to utilise their chances upfront and convert penalty corners
did them in.
There
was too much pressure on Deepika to score from penalty corners and she fumbled
under pressure on quite a few occasions.
The
Indian midfield though impressed with the likes of Salima Tete, Lalremsiami,
Sharmila Devi, Vaisnavi Vitthal Phalke and Neha creating enough chances for the
forward line.
Sunelita
Toppo, in particular, was a live wire in the midfield, and threatened the
opposition defence with her brilliant stick work and runs.
But
the strikers let India down as the likes of Navneet, Deepika, Baljeet Kaur and
others struggled to get the decisive final touch.
The
backline comprising Sushila Chanu, Jyoti, Ishika Chaudhary, Jyoti Chatri and
Suman Devi Toudam too were guilty of committing silly mistakes under pressure.
But
with relegation looming, the Indian women can't afford to commit any mistakes
in their last two matches.
Harendra
too would be under immense pressure to help his wards to deliver for two
complete performances this weekend.
Before
the European leg, Harendra roped in Dutch great Taeke Taekema to work with the
drag-flickers but that move hasn't translated into results.
The
Indians have literally struggled to convert their chances besides being sloppy
at the back.
Having
lost the chance to qualify directly for next year's World Cup through Pro
League, India will need to win the Asia Cup in Hangzhou in September to book
their berth in the quadrennial event.
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