2018 Men's Asian Champions Trophy| Men's Hero Asian Champions Trophy 2018 |
|---|
|
| Host country | Oman |
|---|
| City | Muscat |
|---|
| Dates | 18–28 October |
|---|
| Teams | 6 (from 1 confederation) |
|---|
| Venue(s) | Sultan Qaboos Sports Complex |
|---|
|
| Champions | India & Pakistan (3rd title) |
|---|
| Third place | Malaysia |
|---|
|
| Matches played | 19 |
|---|
| Goals scored | 92 (4.84 per match) |
|---|
| Top scorer(s) | Faizal Saari (8 goals) |
|---|
| Best player | Akashdeep Singh |
|---|
| ← 2016 (previous) |
(next) 2021 → |
|
The Hero Asian Champions Trophy 2018 was held at Muscat, Oman between October 18–28, 2018. It was the fifth edition of the Asian Hockey Champions Trophy, a field hockey tournament for the six best Asian national teams. This was announced by the Asian Hockey Federation (AHF) on 29 January 2018. The Oman Hockey Association hosted the tournament.[1]
The 5th edition of the biennial event took place at the Sultan Qaboos Sports Complex in Muscat, Sultanate of Oman. The tournament featured host nation Oman, Pakistan, Malaysia, India, South Korea, and Japan.
Hero MotoCorp, a global partner of the International Hockey Federation (FIH) and a long-term associate of the Asian Hockey Federation (AHF), were the title sponsor of the tournament.
India and Pakistan were declared joint winners by virtue of forfeiture of the final due to persistent rain. Malaysia finished at the 3rd place after defeating Japan 3-2 in the penalty shootouts in the bronze medal match.[2] Malaysia's Faizal Saari was the top scorer of the tournament with 8 Goals. India remained the only undefeated team in the tournament.
Umpires
A total of nine umpires were appointed by the FIH and National Association to officiate the tournament.[3]
- Anand (IND)
- Bruce Bale (ENG)
- Dong Yoon Shin (KOR)
- Jakub Mejzlik (CZE)
- Kamran Hussain (PAK)
- Khalil Al Balushi (OMA)
- Michihiko Watanabe (JPN)
- Nazmi Kamaruddin (MAS)
- Peter Wright (RSA)
Results
All times are Gulf Standard Time (UTC+04:00)
Round robin
Umpires: Jakub Mejzlik (CZE) Kamran Hussain (PAK)
|
|
Umpires: Peter Wright (RSA) Shin Dong Yoon (KOR)
|
|
Umpires: Bruce Bale (ENG) Nazmi Kamaruddin (MAS)
|
|
Umpires: Michihiko Watanabe (JPN) Anand (IND)
|
|
Umpires: Jakub Mejzlik (CZE) Khalil Al Balushi (OMA)
|
|
Umpires: Peter Wright (RSA) Bruce Bale (ENG)
|
|
India
|
9–0
|
Japan
|
Mandeep 4', 49', 57' Gurjant 8' Harmanpreet 17', 21' Akashdeep 36' Sumit 42' Lalit 45'
|
Report
|
|
Umpires: Nazmi Kamaruddin (MAS) Jakub Mejzlik (CZE)
|
|
Umpires: Khalil Al Balushi (OMA) Bruce Bale (ENG)
|
|
Oman
|
1–8
|
Pakistan
|
Al Lawati 60'
|
Report
|
Bilal 13', 18', 39' Irfan Jr. 22' Butt 26' Irfan 34' Mahmood 45' Atiq 52'
|
Umpires: Anand (IND) Shin Dong Yoon (KOR)
|
|
South Korea
|
4–2
|
Oman
|
Hwang Tae-il 7' Cho Suk-hoon 47' Yang Ji-hun 51' Jang Jong-hyun 59'
|
Report
|
Al Saadi 6' Al Lawati 36'
|
Umpires: Kamran Hussain (PAK) Nazmi Kamaruddin (MAS)
|
|
Umpires: Michihiko Watanabe (JPN) Peter Wright (RSA)
|
|
Umpires: Nazmi Kamaruddin (MAS) Bruce Bale (ENG)
|
|
Umpires: Michihiko Watanabe (JPN) Khalil Al Balushi (OMA)
|
|
Umpires: Michihiko Watanabe (JPN) Jakub Mejzlik (CZE)
|
|
Japan
|
5–0
|
Oman
|
Yamasaki 14' W. Matsumoto 33' K. Matsumoto 38' Ochiai 45' Zendana 45'
|
Report
|
|
Umpires: Peter Wright (RSA) Anand (IND)
|
|
Fifth place game
Umpires: Anand (IND) Kamran Hussain (PAK)
|
|
First to fourth place classification
Semi-finals
Umpires: Jakub Mejzlik (CZE) Bruce Bale (ENG)
|
|
Umpires: Peter Wright (RSA) Nazmi Kamaruddin (MAS)
|
|
Third place game
Malaysia
|
2–2
|
Japan
|
Faizal 20', 51'
|
Report
|
Kitazato 18' H. Wakuri 48'
|
| Penalties
|
Aiman  Sumantri  Jalil  Cholan  Tengku
|
3–2
|
Yamasaki
S. Tanaka
Ochiai
H. Wakuri
Matsumoto
|
Umpires: Brace Bale(ENG) Peter Wright(RSA)
|
|
Final
Umpires: Nazmi Kamaruddin (MAS) Jakub Mejzlik (CZE)
|
|
Statistics
Final standings
Awards
The following individual awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.[2]
| Player of the tournament
|
Best Goalkeeper of the Tournament
|
Highest Scorer of the Tournament
|
Emerging Player of the Tournament
|
Akashdeep Singh
|
P. R. Sreejesh
|
Faizal Saari
|
Abu Bakkar Mahmood
|
Goalscorers
There were 92 goals scored in 19 matches, for an average of 4.84 goals per match.
8 goals
Faizal Saari
6 goals
Harmanpreet Singh
5 goals
Dilpreet Singh
Mandeep Singh
Aleem Bilal
4 goals
Gurjant Singh
Tengku Ahmad Tajudin
Muhammad Irfan Jr.
3 goals
Yang Ji-hun
2 goals
Akashdeep Singh
Chinglensana Kangujam
Lalit Upadhyay
Hirotaka Wakuri
Hirotaka Zendana
Kenji Kitazato
Wataru Matsumoto
Firhan Ashaari
Mohammed Al Lawati
Abu Mahmood
Cho Suk-hoon
Hwang Tae-il
Jang Jong-hyun
1 goal
Manpreet Singh
Nilakanta Sharma
Sumit
Varun Kumar
Hiromasa Ochiai
Kazumasa Matsumoto
Koji Yamasaki
Shota Yamada
Aiman Nik Rozemi
Shahril Saabah
Ahmed Al Nofali
Rashad Al Fazari
Salah Al Saadi
Ajaz Ahmad
Ammad Butt
Mubashar Ali
Muhammad Atiq
Muhammad Irfan
Muhammad Rizwan Jr.
Umar Bhutta
Kim Hyeong-jin
Lee Seung-Il
Source: FIH
See also
References
|
|---|
- Ordos 2011
- Doha 2012
- Kakamigahara 2013
- Kuantan 2016
- Dhaka 2021
- Chennai 2023
- Hulunbuir 2024
|