|
The history of Pakistan Hockey is as old as
that of the country itself. This was the second team game
in which the newly born independent sovereign state made its
international debut. A team led by the late Ali lqtedar Shah
Dara represented Pakistan in the first Post-War Olympic Hockey
Tournament held in London in 1948. Pakistan lost in the play-off
for the bronze medal between the losing semifinalists. The
same fate met the Pakistan team led by fullback Niaz Khan
in the 1952 Olympic Hockey Tournament in Helsinki.
The failure to win even a bronze medal in
two successive Olympic c6ntests made the hockey organisers
in Pakistan put on their thinking caps. An inquiry committee
was set up by the authorities in Pakistan with a senior ICS
Officer, Riazuddin Ahmed, as the Convener. The mandate of
this probe body was to analyse the cause of the failures in
the past and, if possible, to suggest ways and means to improve
the game and bring it up to the required international standard.
The findings of the inquiry Committee were embodied in a report
which came to be regarded as the Blueprint of Pakistan Hockey
in the years that followed. The proposals in the said Report
were implemented and followed with religious dedication. This
resulted in Pakistan defying the jinx and reaching the final
of the 1956 Olympic Hockey Tournament in Melbourne (Australia).
Although Pakistan won only the silver medal,
she had achieved international recognition as a serious challenger
to India's supremacy as the world leaders in the game. Thereafter
Pakistan never looked back and went from strength to strength,
setting up new records and milestones enroute to the top.
Between 1956 and 1986, Pakistan recorded unprecedented
feats which are still unmatched. Thrice during this period
of three decades Pakistan won the Olympic and World Cup crowns.
The Asian Games title was won six times and the Champions
Trophy in the first two years of its inauguration. Twice Pakistan
held three of the world's most prestigious titles at the same
time - the Asian, Olympic and World Cup crowns. No other hockey
playing country has achieved this feat in the history of the
game so far.
Came 1986. the year when two of the three
coveted titles were at stake. Within three weeks Pakistan
lost both the Asian Games and the World Cup titles. With India
dropping out in the race for top global honours, Pakistan
was the lone standard-bearer of Asian Hockey. Quite a few
of the great players who donned the green Pakistani shirts
had retired or been forced to quit. Thus the teams that went
to Seoul for the tenth Asiad and London for the World Cup
were deplorably weak. South Korea, the hosts, snatched the
Asian games title from Pakistan, a crown she had held since
1970. A team which had lost to Pakistan by ten goals in the
ninth Asiad at Delhi four years ago beat Pakistan 2-1 in the
final to claim the gold medal and the coveted title. About
a fortnight later, Pakistan met much tougher opposition in
the World Cup staged in London. Her performance was abysmally
dismal. The holders finished second from the bottom, just
one rung ahead of India, in a twelve nation contest, It was
the irony of fate that the two top teams from Asia who used
to fight out for the two top positions in international tournaments
not long ago had to play off for the last two places in the
1986 World Cup.
Those humiliating defeats and the loss of
two prestigious titles sent a shock wave among the entire
nation. This in turn started a wave of indignation against
the Pakistan Hockey Federation (PHF). There was a general
demand for urgent punitive action against those who had brought
about the two debacles at Seoul and London. History thus repeated
itself after nearly three decades when a high-level Inquiry
Committee was set tip with Mr. Riazuddin Ahmad against as
its Chairman. As was the case in 1953-54, the mandate of the
seven-member Inquiry Committee was to ascertain the causes
of the dismal debacles and, if, possible. propose remedial
measures for eradicating the weaknesses in Pakistan's hockey
with a view to prepare a strong team for defending the Olympic
title." At the start of the Olympic year (1988), the
Pakistan Hockey Federation was engrossed in a race against
time to train and groom a world-beating team, not only to
retain the coveted Olympic crown but also to place Pakistan
back at its high perch in world rankings.
Pakistan's fortune in field hockey for men
have fluctuated during the period under review. It goes without
saying that no one remains oil top all the time - with four
World Cup victories and three Olympic gold plus the same number
of victories in the Champions Trophy contests to her credit
during the past fifty years of her history as an independent
sovereign state, Pakistan has remained among the top four
hockey playing nations of the world. In fact, her record in
the four major contests of the world (World Cup, Olympic Games,
Asian Games & Champions Trophy) has not even been equalled
leave alone surpassed.
Pakistan has held more than two of these four
times simultaneously more often than any other leading hockey
playing nation like Australia, Germany, Holland or even neighbours
India. But with the retirement of a good many of stars and,
of course, the closing up of the gap between the best and
the next best, no other country has shown any consistency
at the international level. All such contests thus remain
an open race.
Pakistan's two attempts to regain Olympic
glory failed during the period under review. Pakistan could
only win a bronze at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics but failed
to improve on that performance at Atlanta four years later.
This was because Pakistan's hockey was in a turmoil at home.
Twenty four of the 33 under canvas awaiting final trials and
selection to undertake the trials and until all their demands
were met. The rebellion of the "gand of 24" was
master-minded by no less a player than former captain star
forward, Shahbaz Ahmed. The issue took an unprecedented turn
and had to be referred to the Selection Committee on Sports,
Culture and Tourims. This was perhaps the ugliest chapter
in the history of Pakistans hockey.
Shahbaz Ahmed was finally blown to Atlanta
and diplomatic pressure was used to have been included in
the Pakistans Olympic squad at the eleventh hour. The
Pakistans team final phase of training and preparation
to recapture Olympic glory was thus very badly effected the
team that was exported to Atlanta was ill-balanced and under-trained
for the tough task that lay ahead. As expected, Pakistan failed
to mount the Hockey Stand and returned home without even a
bronze, finishing sixth in a 12-nation contest
Pakistans record in the World Cup contests
during the past six years has not been too bad. Lahore was
the venue of the seventh World Cup tournament for the first
time in 1990. Those who said that Pakistan had built a "white
elephant" called the Lahore Hockey Stadium with a seating
capacity of 50,000 spectators had to eat their words when
as many as 60,000- plus thronged the spacious Stadium to witness
in Pakistan-Australia semi-final which Pakistan won and the
Pakistan - Holland final which Pakistan lost.
Pakistan improved on that performance and
avenged that defeat by beating Holland in the final of the
next World Cup contest staged in Sydney in 1994. Thus Pakistan
won the World Cup for the fourth time since its inception
in 1971. This is a feat which no other member country of the
FIH has recorded so far. It is the only major title Pakistan
holds currently.
|