2004 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy

2004 Men's Hockey
Champions Trophy
Tournament details
Host country Pakistan
City Lahore
Dates 4 December – 12 December
Teams 6
Venue(s) National Hockey Stadium
Top three teams
Champions  Spain (1st title)
Runner-up  Netherlands
Third place  Pakistan
Tournament statistics
Matches played 18
Goals scored 85 (4.72 per match)
Top scorer(s) Netherlands Karel Klaver (7 goals)
Best player Netherlands Karel Klaver
2003 (previous) (next) 2005

The 2004 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy was the 26th edition of the Hockey Champions Trophy men's field hockey tournament. It was held in Lahore, Pakistan from December 4–12, 2004.

Squads

Umpires

Below is the eight umpires appointed by International Hockey Federation (FIH):

  • Rashad Butt (PAK)
  • Ged Curran (SCO)
  • Muhammad Faiz (PAK)
  • Hamish Jamson (ENG)
  • Tim Pullman (AUS)
  • Daniel Santi (ARG)
  • Virendra Singh (IND)
  • Rob ten Cate (NED)

Results

All times are Pakistan Standard Time (UTC+05:00)

Pool

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Spain 5401177+1012
 Netherlands 54012113+812
 Pakistan 5302910–19
 India 5113913–44
 Germany 5113613–64
 New Zealand 5023613–72
4 December 2004
10:00
New Zealand  2–5  Netherlands
Hari  29', 42' Report Taekema  26', 50'
R. Brouwer  31'
Reckers  44'
Klaver  60'
Umpires:
Hamish Jamson (ENG)
Muhammad Faiz (PAK)

4 December 2004
12:00
India  0–4  Spain
Report Fàbregas  43'
Arbós  60'
Freixa  63'
Escarré  64'
Umpires:
Tim Pullman (AUS)
Ged Curran (SCO)

4 December 2004
15:00
Pakistan  3–1  Germany
Abbas  34'
Abbasi  52'
Jawad  64'
Report Montag  40'
Umpires:
Rob ten Cate (NED)
Daniel Santi (ARG)

5 December 2004
10:00
Netherlands  5–4  India
G. Derikx  10'
Taekema  16'
De Nooijer  25', 59'
Klaver  34'
Report Michael  5'
Vakkaliga Swamy  20'
Halappa  45'
Pillay  61'
Umpires:
Rashad Butt (PAK)
Daniel Santi (ARG)

5 December 2004
13:00
Germany  2–5  Spain
Keller  25', 55' Report Sala  20', 70+'
Escarré  40'
Arbós  41'
Quemada  67'
Umpires:
Hamish Jamson (ENG)
Rob ten Cate (NED)

5 December 2004
15:00
New Zealand  1–3  Pakistan
Archibald  39' Report Abbasi  49'
Abbas  53', 55'
Umpires:
Virendra Singh (IND)
Ged Curran (SCO)

7 December 2004
10:30
Spain  3–1  New Zealand
Quemada  40', 54'
Freixa  63'
Report Smith  46'
Umpires:
Rashad Butt (PAK)
Virendra Singh (IND)

7 December 2004
12:30
Pakistan  1–4  Netherlands
Abbas  19' Report R. Brouwer  15'
Taekema  39'
Klaver  65'
Delmee  68'
Umpires:
Ged Curran (SCO)
Tim Pullman (AUS)

7 December 2004
14:30
India  3–1  Germany
Michael  40'
Halappa  58'
Gupta  67'
Report Montag  20'
Umpires:
Muhammad Faiz (PAK)
Hamish Jamson (ENG)

8 December 2004
11:00
Netherlands  4–2  Spain
Klaver  15', 45', 69'
G. Derikx  18'
Report Freixa  35'
Quemada  57'
Umpires:
Virendra Singh (IND)
Hamish Jamson (ENG)

8 December 2004
13:00
Germany  1–1  New Zealand
Montag  43' Report Burrows  25'
Umpires:
Rashad Butt (PAK)
Rob ten Cate (NED)

8 December 2004
15:00
Pakistan  2–1  India
Saqlain  32'
Abbas  66'
Report Sandeep  57'
Umpires:
Tim Pullman (AUS)
Daniel Santi (ARG)

10 December 2004
09:00
Spain  3–0  Pakistan
Fàbregas  47'
D. Alegre  53'
Freixa  69'
Report
Umpires:
Ged Curran (SCO)
Rob ten Cate (NED)

10 December 2004
11:00
New Zealand  1–1  India
Smith  56' Report Halappa  62'
Umpires:
Muhammad Faiz (PAK)
Tim Pullman (AUS)

10 December 2004
15:00
Netherlands  3–4  Germany
Meijer  9'
Weusthof  35'
Taekema  41'
Report Montag  18'
Hentschel  37'
Purps  60'
Wein  67'
Umpires:
Daniel Santi (ARG)
Rashad Butt (PAK)

Classification

Fifth and sixth place

12 December 2004
09:00
Germany  2–1  New Zealand
Keller  43', 53' Report Hari  69'
Umpires:
Virendra Singh (IND)
Muhammad Faiz (PAK)

Third and fourth place

12 December 2004
11:30
Pakistan  3–2  India
Abbas  4'
Butt  27'
Ali Khan  54'
Report Sandeep  2', 65'
Umpires:
Rob ten Cate (NED)
Tim Pullman (AUS)

Final

12 December 2004
14:30
Spain  4–2  Netherlands
Quemada  18'
Freixa  51', 61'
Sojo  57'
Report Taekema  42'
Klaver  60'
Umpires:
Hamish Jamson (ENG)
Ged Curran (SCO)

Awards

Topscorer Most Promising Player Best Player Best Goalkeeper
 Karel Klaver (NED)  Shakeel Abbasi (PAK)  Karel Klaver (NED)  Guus Vogels (NED)

Final standings

  1.  Spain
  2.  Netherlands
  3.  Pakistan
  4.  India
  5.  Germany
  6.  New Zealand

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.