India face Pakistan in Asiad hockey final after 32 years

Update: 2014-10-02 22:47 GMT
The match, similar to the one that was witnessed in the league phase which India lost 1-2 to Pakistan, promises severe intensity and no-hold-barred rivalry in front of vociferous flag-waving supporters of both the countries, for whom this is going to be the high point of the fortnight-long Games.

India and Pakistan had last played in the men’s hockey final at the quadrennial continental games way back in 1982 at New Delhi’s Dhyan Chand Stadium when the latter emerged with a shock 7-1 verdict after which the then goalkeeper Mir Ranjan Negi and the panicky deep defense was castigated.

The two South Asian giants have not met in the final of these Games after that wintry day on December 1 following the emergence of South Korea as a big force.

On Thursday’s game would only be India and Pakistan’s eighth summit clash at the Asian Games out of which India have won only twice, the last of the triumphs coming way back in 1966 Bangkok Games.

It is going to be a nerve-wracking contest between the two arch-rivals and the team which plays better under severe pressure is expected to lift the coveted gold. Once only after 1982, had Pakistan and India took the 1-2 positions at these Games, in 1990 at Beijing when the tournament was played on a round-robin basis. Pakistan emerged with the gold in that edition after topping the table with a 3-2 verdict over India.

India are seeking to clinch the gold medal that they last grabbed in 1998 at Bangkok when the mercurial Dhanraj Pillay led the team from the front.

‘We have made our entry to the final and our organisation and performance will be put to the highest test. Pakistan has their strengths and we will be working hard to capitalise on our strengths and put counters to theirs,’ said Walsh.

‘This game will be a different contest to the round (group) game. I believe we have the capacity and abilities to produce a quality performance at the right moment in the tournament,’ he added.

Captain Sardar Singh expressed optimism that India would have an answer to the questions posed by Pakistan earlier in the tournament after making it to the Asian Games summit clash after a dozen years.

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