China saw their dream completely dashed as they suffered their
third consecutive loss in the Women's Hockey World Cup, beaten 3-1
by Germany on Sunday.
Forward Maike Stoeckel opened the scoring for Germany in the
24th minute when struck the ball past Chinese goalkeeper Zhang
Yimeng.
Six minutes later, another forward Silke Muller made it 2-0 as
her fierce shot gave Zhang no chance to save in the 52nd
minute.
China pulled one goal back in the 53rd minute through Sun Zhen,
but Mandy Haase sealed the win for Germany when she netted her
personal second goal in the tournament with eight minutes to
go.
The loss indeed smashed any chance for China, who arrived in
Madrid as a serious potential title-contenders, to reach the
semifinals, as Australia and Netherlands have garnered 9 and 7
points respectively, beyond China's reach with only two pool games
left.
India drew with England 1-1 in an earlier Pool A match which was
besmirched by controversies.
England's Kerry Williams set up Chloe Rogers for the opener in
the 47th minute, before Surinder Kaur equalized for India 11
minutes later from the penalty spot.
Controversies arose as both teams had goals disallowed - India
for dangerous play and Williams having her claims for a late winner
dismissed.
Asunta Lakra scored a goal in the 34th minute, which should put
India 1-0 ahead, but was overruled by the TV umpire for dangerous
play.
The decision left Indian coach Mk Kaushik furious.
"I said 'please watch the TV again,' he just refused, he said
no, and gave no explanation," he snarled.
"That's injustice, that should be cheat, that's wrong, it's very
bad for hockey. I am very sorry for that," the incensed coach
said.
"What's justice? I don't believe in that too much now. We
deserved to win the match, we were a better side," he bemoaned.
After the match ended 1-1 for both sides, Danny Kerry, the
English coach shunned any questions about the controversial
goal.
"I didn't see it, I was looking at the substitutions and was
thinking about the second half," he said.
And he felt aggrieved that Williams' goal did not stand.
"If you look at the umpire's reaction and Kerry's reaction they
both instinctively felt it was a goal," he said.
"The brave decision would have been to go with instinct. It is
easier not to give it."
In another Pool A match, the Netherlands beat Spain 2-0 to gain
three wins from as many games in the world cup.
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(Xinhua News Agency October 2, 2006)