Asian Champions Trophy: Final chance for India to fine-tune before Hangzhou 

Stiff challenge: An inexperienced Pakistan side will take on Malaysia.

Stiff challenge: An inexperienced Pakistan side will take on Malaysia.
| Photo Credit: M. VEDHAN

Little time to get into the groove, an under-the-weather Indian captain Harmanpreet Singh, teams unsure of the scheduling and officials racing against time to get everything in place will mark the return of international hockey to Chennai when teams take the field on the opening day of the Asian Champions Trophy on Thursday.

For the host, it will be the final opportunity to try out its plans and personnel before the Asian Games next month amidst high pressure and higher expectations at the revamped Mayor Radhakrishnan Stadium. For everyone else, it will be a chance to assess the opponents in what is being billed as a test event ahead of the big-ticket outing in Hangzhou.

On Wednesday evening, India had its first training session without Harmanpreet although the drag-flicker is expected to play in India’s opening game against China, the lowest-ranked side in the tournament. Given India’s record of starting slow and often slipping against Asian opponents, it could not have asked for an easier game to get into the rhythm, relatively speaking.

India has lost only once to China in their last seven outings, the lone defeat coming in the 2013 edition of the ACT, the only time India did not return with a medal in the event after fielding a second-string side. It was a long time ago but India would do well to guard against any complacency. The fact that India could not score a single field goal in its recent outing to Spain will also be a concern, even if the opponents were vastly superior.

“The turf is actually very fast so it’s a good one to play on. It’s also good that we will be playing late in the evening because you need a little time to adjust after coming from Europe. But other than that, we are ready to go,” midfielder Vivek Sagar Prasad said after the practice.

Defending champion Korea, on an upward swing in the last one year, will be keen to continue its charge in the opener — the Korean coach though has already expressed his unhappiness with having to play in testing conditions at 4 p.m. — against reigning Asian Games champion Japan, both teams hoping to start on a winning note.

Pakistan, with the least experienced side in the fray largely consisting of junior players, will take on Malaysia with maximum collective experience, in another match.

Thursday’s games: Korea vs Japan (4 p.m.), Pakistan vs Malaysia (6.15 p.m.), India vs China (8.30 p.m.).

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