Field hockey at the 1980 Summer Olympics

Field hockey
at the Games of the XXII Olympiad
VenuesCentral Dynamo Stadium
Young Pioneers Stadium
DatesJuly 20 – 31, 1980

Hockey at the 1980 Summer Olympics was represented by two events: men's team event and women's team event. For the first time a women's Olympic Games hockey tournament was organized. Both events were held in two venues, located in the north-western part of Moscow:

The schedule started on July 20 and ended on July 31. The 33 matches of hockey events at stadiums were watched by 177,880 spectators.

Medals

Pos Country Gold Silver Bronze Total:
1  India (IND) 1 0 0 1
 Zimbabwe (ZIM) 1 0 0 1
3  Czechoslovakia (TCH) 0 1 0 1
 Spain (ESP) 0 1 0 1
5  Soviet Union (URS) 0 0 2 2

Men's Tournament

In the Preliminary Pool, all six teams played against each other in a single round-robin tournament. Then teams placed 1st and 2nd contested for gold and silver medals; placed 3rd and 4th contested for bronze medals and placed 5th and 6th contested for 5th place.

Qualification

The original plan was for a twelve-team tournament, divided into two round-robin groups of six, with the top two of each qualifying for the semi-finals.[1] The teams would have been:[1]

Group A

Argentina, Great Britain, India, Kenya, Netherlands, Pakistan

Group B

Australia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Soviet Union, Spain, West Germany

However, nine of the twelve teams withdrew as part of the U.S.-led boycott in response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Argentina, Kenya, Pakistan, Malaysia, and West Germany boycotted completely, and while Australia, Great Britain, the Netherlands, and New Zealand competed in some sports, their hockey governing bodies pulled out. The organising committee reduced the competition to six teams, with Cuba and Tanzania representing the Americas and Africa in place of Argentina and Kenya respectively, and Poland also drafted in as the next best team from the 1978 Men's Hockey World Cup.

Preliminary round

Team Pld W D L GF GA Pts
Spain 5 4 1 0 33 3 9
India 5 3 2 0 39 6 8
Soviet Union 5 3 0 2 30 11 6
Poland 5 2 1 2 19 15 5
Cuba 5 1 0 4 7 42 2
Tanzania 5 0 0 5 3 54 0
20 July
Poland  7 – 1  Cuba

20 July
India  18 – 0  Tanzania

20 July
Soviet Union  1 – 2 Spain

21 July
Cuba  2 – 11  Soviet Union

21 July
Tanzania  0 – 12 Spain

21 July
Poland  2 – 2  India

23 July
Tanzania  0 – 4  Cuba

23 July
India  2 – 2 Spain

23 July
Soviet Union  5 – 1  Poland

24 July
India  13 – 0  Cuba

24 July
Poland  0 – 6 Spain

24 July
Soviet Union  11 – 2  Tanzania

26 July
Tanzania  1 – 9  Poland

26 July
India  4 – 2  Soviet Union

26 July
Cuba  0 – 11 Spain

Classification

Fifth place qualifiers

26 July
Cuba  4 – 1  Tanzania

Third place match

26 July
Soviet Union  2 – 1  Poland

First place match

26 July
India  4 – 3 Spain

Final Ranking

Rk Team
1st, gold medalist(s) India
2nd, silver medalist(s) Spain
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Soviet Union
4 Poland
5 Cuba
6 Tanzania

Men's Medal Winners

Gold Silver Bronze
 India (IND)
Vasudevan Baskaran
Bir Bhadur Chettri
Sylvanus Dung Dung
Merwyn Fernandes
Zafar Iqbal
Maharaj Krishan Kaushik
Charanjit Kumar
Sommayya Maneypande
Allan Schofield
Mohamed Shahid
Davinder Singh
Gurmail Singh
Amarjit Singh Rana
Rajinder Singh
Ravinder Pal Singh
Surinder Singh Sodhi
 Spain (ESP)
Juan Amat
Juan Arbós
Jaime Arbós
Javier Cabot
Ricardo Cabot
Miguel Chaves
Juan Coghen
Miguel de Paz
Francisco Fábregas
José Garcia
Rafael Garralda
Santiago Malgosa
Paulino Monsalve
Juan Pellón
Carlos Roca
Jaime Zumalacárregui
 Soviet Union (URS)
Sos Hayrapetyan
Minneula Azizov
Valeri Belyakov
Viktor Deputatov
Aleksandr Goncharov
Aleksandr Gusev
Sergei Klevtsov
Viacheslav Lampeev
Aleksandr Miasnikov
Mikhail Nichepurenko
Leonid Pavlovski
Sergei Pleshakov
Vladimir Pleshakov
Aleksandr Sychyov
Oleg Zagorodnev
Farit Zigangirov

Women's Tournament

A women's tournament was held for the first time in Olympic history. Six teams played a single round-robin tournament.

Qualification

In 1980, there was an International Federation of Women's Hockey Associations (IFWHA) separate from the mainly male Fédération Internationale de Hockey (FIH). Because the FIH was the international federation affiliated to the International Olympic Committee, it supervised the Olympic tournament. The FIH and IFWHA agreed that qualification for the Olympics would be decided by a joint FIH–IFWHA committee based on the results over the previous two years, including the 1978 (FIH) and 1979 (IFWHA) women's world championships.[2] Five teams were chosen to join the host Soviet team, namely the Netherlands, West Germany, the United States, New Zealand, and Great Britain[1] (taking the place of Wales, England, and Scotland, who finished 5th, 6th, and 7th respectively in the 1979 tournament[3]). However, all five teams withdrew as part of the U.S.-led boycott in response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. The National Olympic Committees (NOCs) of the U.S. and of West Germany boycotted completely, and while the other three NOCs competed in some sports, their hockey governing bodies pulled out. The organising committee sent out invitations to other countries to make up numbers.[4] Ireland controversially declined an invitation.[5]

Preliminary Pool

Rk Team Pld W D L GF GA Pts
1st, gold medalist(s) Zimbabwe Zimbabwe 5 3 2 0 13 4 8
2nd, silver medalist(s) Czechoslovakia 5 3 1 1 10 5 7
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Soviet Union 5 3 0 2 11 5 6
4 India 5 2 1 2 9 6 5
5 Austria 5 2 0 3 6 11 4
6 Poland 5 0 0 5 0 18 0
25 July
Poland  0 – 4  Zimbabwe

25 July
Austria  0 – 2  India

25 July
Soviet Union  2 – 0  Czechoslovakia

27 July
India  4 – 0  Poland

27 July
Zimbabwe  2 – 2  Czechoslovakia

27 July
Soviet Union  0 – 2  Austria

28 July
India  1 – 2  Czechoslovakia

28 July
Austria  3 – 0  Poland

28 July
Soviet Union  0 – 2  Zimbabwe

30 July
Soviet Union  6 – 0  Poland

30 July
India  1 – 1  Zimbabwe

30 July
Austria  0 – 5  Czechoslovakia

31 July
Poland  0 – 1  Czechoslovakia

31 July
Austria  1 – 4  Zimbabwe

31 July
Soviet Union  3 – 1  India

Women's Medal Winners

Gold Silver Bronze
 Zimbabwe (ZIM)
Liz Chase
Sandra Chick
Gillian Cowley
Patricia Davies
Sarah English
Maureen George
Ann Grant
Susan Huggett
Patricia McKillop
Brenda Phillips
Christine Prinsloo
Sonia Robertson
Anthea Stewart
Helen Volk
Linda Watson
 Czechoslovakia (TCH)
Milada Blažková
Jiřina Čermáková
Jiřina Hájková
Berta Hrubá
Ida Hubáčková
Jiřina Kadlecová
Jarmila Králíčková
Jiřina Křížová
Alena Kyselicová
Jana Lahodová
Květa Petříčková
Viera Podhányiová
Iveta Šranková
Marie Sýkorová
Marta Urbanová
Lenka Vymazalová
 Soviet Union (URS)
Liailia Akhmerova
Natalia Buzunova
Natalia Bykova
Tatiana Embakhtova
Nadezhda Filippova
Liudmila Frolova
Lidia Glubokova
Nelli Gorbatkova
Elena Guryeva
Galina Inzhuvatova
Alina Kham
Natella Krasnikova
Nadezhda Ovechkina
Tatiana Shvyganova
Galina Viuzhanina
Valentina Zazdravnykh

References

Sources

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 Gaanderse, Aad (8 February 1980). "Deelnemers Olympisch hockeytoernooi aangewezen". Hockey Sport (in Dutch). KNHB (24): 650. Retrieved 9 August 2016.
  2. Gaanderse, Aad (10 August 1979). "Eindstation voor dames is Moskou". Hockey Sport (in Dutch). KNHB (3): 73–76. Retrieved 9 August 2016.
  3. Gaanderse, Aad (7 September 1979). "Wie dan wel?". Hockey Sport (in Dutch). KNHB. Retrieved 9 August 2016.
  4. Harris, Cathy (11 May 2008). "Caught in Time: Zimbabwe win hockey gold, 1980 Moscow Olympics". The Sunday Times. London. Retrieved 21 February 2014.
  5. Watterson, Johnny (Jun 17, 2015). "Irish women's hockey on the brink of Rio qualification". The Irish Times. Retrieved 9 August 2016.
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