Field hockey at the 2011 Pan American Games – Men's tournament

Men's field hockey
at the 2011 Pan American Games
Tournament details
Host country Mexico
City Guadalajara
Teams 8
Venue(s) Estadio Panamericano de Hockey
Top three teams
Champions  Argentina (8th title)
Runner-up  Canada
Third place  Chile
Tournament statistics
Matches played 20
Goals scored 136 (6.8 per match)
Top scorer(s) Mexico Francisco Montoya
Argentina Ignacio Bergner
Canada Scott Tupper (9 goals)
2007 (previous) (next) 2015
Field hockey at the
2011 Pan American Games

Tournament
menwomen
Squads
menwomen

The men's field hockey tournament at the 2011 Pan American Games was held in Guadalajara, Mexico at the Pan American Hockey Stadium from October 20–29.[1][2]

For these Games, the men competed in an 8-team tournament. Preliminary matches will commence on 20 October. The teams were grouped into two pools of four teams each for a round-robin preliminary round. The top two teams in each pool advanced to a four-team single-elimination bracket.

Canada are the defending champions from the 2007 Pan American Games in Rio de Janeiro, defeating Argentina in penalty shootout, 5–4 after both teams were held at 2–2 draw after the extra time.

Qualification

A National Olympic Committee may enter one men's team for the field hockey competition. Mexico, the host nation along with seven other countries qualified through regional competitions.[2]

Event Date Location Vacancies Qualified
Host nation 1  Mexico
2010 South American Championship[3] April 3–11, 2010 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 2  Argentina
 Chile
2010 Central American and Caribbean Games[4] July 22–31, 2010 Mayagüez, Puerto Rico 2  Trinidad and Tobago
 Barbados
Top two teams from 2009 Pan American Cup not qualified from above criteria March 7–15, 2009 Santiago, Chile 2  Canada
 United States
Qualifier for 2011 Pan American Games February 3–6, 2011 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 1  Cuba
Total 8

Pools

Pools were based on the current world rankings (January 4, 2011). Teams ranked 1, 4, 5 and 8 would be in Pool A, while teams ranked 2, 3, 6 and 7 would be in Pool B.[6]

Pool A Pool B

Umpires

Twelve officials were appointed by Pan American Hockey Federation to officiate matches.[7]

  • John Wright (RSA)
  • Lim Hong Zhen (SIN)
  • Diego Barbas (ARG)
  • Jamar Springer (BAR)
  • Chris Wilson (CAN)
  • Martín Vatter (CHI)
  • Daniel López Ramos (URU)
  • Arturo Vázquez Serrano (MEX)
  • Grant Hundley (USA)
  • Constantine Soteriades (USA)
  • Maximiliano Scala (ARG)
  • Devin Hooper (GUY)

Competition format

Eight teams competed in both the men's and women's Pan American Games hockey tournaments with the competition consisting of two rounds.[8] In the first round, teams were divided into two pools of four teams, and play followed round robin format with each of the teams playing all other teams in the pool once. Teams were awarded three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss.[9]

Following the completion of the pool games, teams placing first and second in each pool advanced to a single elimination round consisting of two semifinal games, and the bronze and gold medal games. Remaining teams competed in classification matches to determine their ranking in the tournament. During these matches, extra time of 7½ minutes per half was played if teams were tied at the end of regulation time. During extra time, play followed golden goal rules with the first team to score declared the winner. If no goals were scored during extra time, a penalty stroke competition took place.[9]

Results

All times are Central Daylight Time (UTC−5)[10]

Qualified for the quarterfinals

Preliminary round

Pool A

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Canada 3300212+199
 Chile 3201126+66
 Trinidad and Tobago 31021411+33
 Barbados 3003230–280
20 October 2011
09:00
Canada  7–2  Trinidad and Tobago
Guest  2', 37', 46'
Tupper  26'
Smythe  29', 30'
Wright  62'
Report Scipio  1'
Browne  35'
Umpires:
Constantine Soteriades (USA)
Diego Barbas (ARG)

20 October 2011
11:00
Chile  9–1  Barbados
J. Richter  3', 13', 22', 50'
Rodriguez  8'
Krainz  51', 67'
S. Richter  53'
Berczely  68'
Report Forde  42'
Umpires:
Maximiliano Scala (ARG)
Arturo Vazquez Serrano (MEX)

22 October 2011
14:00
Trinidad and Tobago  11–1  Barbados
Browne  3', 16'
Pierre  6', 36'
Chan  23', 68'
Scipio  27', 42'
Whittington  37'
de Gannes  39'
Toussaint  60'
Report Holder  9'
Umpires:
Grant Hundley (USA)
Devin Hooper (GUY)

22 October 2011
16:00
Chile  0–4  Canada
Report Tupper  15', 49', 56'
Short  61'
Umpires:
Daniel Lopez Ramos (URU)
Diego Barbas (ARG)

24 October 2011
09:00
Canada  10–0  Barbados
Froese  3'
Pereira  7'
Guest  10', 16', 62'
Tupper  25', 35', 46'
Pearson  49'
Short  54'
Report
Umpires:
Constantine Soteriades (USA)
Maximiliano Scala (ARG)

24 October 2011
11:00
Trinidad and Tobago  1–3  Chile
Whittington  36' Report J. Richter  15'
S. Richter  51'
Rodriguez  65'
Umpires:
Grant Hundley (USA)
John Wright (RSA)

Pool B

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Argentina 3300201+199
 Cuba 3201713–66
 Mexico 3102412–83
 United States 300349–50
20 October 2011
14:00
Argentina  8–0  Mexico
Paredes  4', 53'
Cammareri  29'
Bergner  35', 48', 51'
L. Vila  52'
López  58'
Report
Umpires:
Chris Wilson (CAN)
Daniel Lopez Ramos (URU)

20 October 2011
16:00
United States  2–4  Cuba
Holt  35+', 38' Report Sardut Gomez  19', 49'
Blanco Hernandez  53'
Perez Perez  56'
Umpires:
John Wright (RSA)
Lim Hong Zhen (SIN)

22 October 2011
09:00
Mexico  1–2  Cuba
Aguilar Montoya  53' Report Valero Camejo  61'
Sardut Gomez  63'
Umpires:
Jamar Springer (BAR)
Martin Vatter (CHI)

22 October 2011
11:00
United States  0–2  Argentina
Report Bergner  34'
López  52'
Umpires:
Chris Wilson (CAN)
John Wright (RSA)

24 October 2011
02:00
Argentina  10–1  Cuba
Bergner  23', 27', 34'
Ibarra  25', 50', 62', 63'
Rossi  37'
R. Vila  67'
M. Vila  69'
Report Blanco Hernandez  13'
Umpires:
Martin Vatter (CHI)
Lim Hong Zhen (SIN)

24 October 2011
16:00
Mexico  3–2  United States
Aguilar Montoya  7'
Aguayo Olguin  18'
Campillo Lopez  20'
Report Dijxhoorn  3'
Barber  29'
Umpires:
Devin Hooper (GUY)
Daniel Lopez Ramos (URU)

Fifth to eighth place classification

Crossover

27 October 2011
17:30
Mexico  10–0  Barbados
Aguilar Montoya  16', 22', 40', 42', 45', 49', 56'
Rios Benitez  20'
Aguayo Olguin  46'
Galvan Nieves  66'
Report
Umpires:
Davin Hooper (GUY)
Constantine Soteriades (USA)

27 October 2011
19:30
Trinidad and Tobago  0–2  United States
Report Sundeen  33', 63'
Umpires:
Jamar Springer (BAR)
Maximiliano Scala (ARG)

Seventh and eighth place

29 October 2011
09:00
Trinidad and Tobago  9–1  Barbados
Toussaint  8', 20', 52', 67', 69'
Scipio  13', 39', 68'
Browne  16'
Report Small  45'
Umpires:
Daniel Lopez Ramos (URU)
Arturo Vazquez Serrano (MEX)

Fifth and sixth place

29 October 2011
11:30
United States  6–0  Mexico
Holt  2', 43'
Runzi  12'
Sundeen  29'
Martin  45'
Harris  64'
Report
Umpires:
Maximiliano Scala (ARG)
Lim Hong Zhen (SIN)

First to fourth place classification

Semi-finals Final
27 October
  Canada  3  
  Cuba  2  
 
29 October
      Canada  1
    Argentina  3
Third place
27 October 29 October
  Argentina  7   Cuba  3
  Chile  1     Chile  4

Semi-finals

27 October 2011
11:30
Canada  3–2  Cuba
Guest  1'
Tupper  6'
Singh  21'
Report Blanco Hernandez  14'
Lemus Dominguez  49'
Umpires:
Grant Hundley (USA)
Diego Barbas (ARG)

27 October 2011
15:00
Argentina  7–1  Chile
Bergner  7'
L. Vila  27', 65'
Rey  33'
Ibarra  34'
M. Vila  49', 69'
Report Berczely  60'
Umpires:
Chris Wilson (CAN)
Lim Hong Zhen (SIN)

Bronze medal match

29 October 2011
15:00
Cuba  3–4  Chile
Sarduy Gomez  9'
Blanco Hernandez  52', 55'
Report Zarhi  19'
Zirpel  23'
Richter  32'
Berczely  69'
Umpires:
Diego Barbas (ARG)
Constantine Soteriades (USA)

Gold medal match

29 October 2011
17:30
Canada  1–3  Argentina
Tupper  25' Report Bergner  45'
Ibarra  49'
L. Vila  53'
Umpires:
John Wright (RSA)
Grant Hundley (USA)

Final standings

  1.  Argentina
  2.  Canada
  3.  Chile
  4.  Cuba
  5.  United States
  6.  Mexico
  7.  Trinidad and Tobago
  8.  Barbados

Medalists

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men  Argentina (ARG)
Juan Manuel Vivaldi
Ignacio Bergner
Matías Vila
Pedro Ibarra
Lucas Argento
Lucas Rey
Rodrigo Vila
Matías Paredes
Lucas Cammareri
Lucas Vila
Fernando Zylberberg
Juan Martín López
Manuel Brunet
Federico Bermejillo
Agustín Mazzilli
Lucas Rossi
 Canada (CAN)
Philip Wright
Scott Tupper
Jesse Watson
Richard Hildreth
Ken Pereira
Keegan Pereira
Jagdish Gill
David Jameson
Rob Short
Adam Froese
Mark Pearson
Iain Smythe
Gabbar Singh
Matthew Guests
David Carter
Antoni Kindler
 Chile (CHI)
Mathias Anwandter
Andrés Fuenzalida
Jose Zirpel
Adrián Henríquez
Jaime Zarhi
Esteban Krainz
Juan Cristobal Rodriguez
Thomas Kannegiesser
Martin Hernan Rodriguez
Alexis Berczely
Sebastián Kapsch
Fernando Fernández
Fernando Binder
Raúl Garcés
Jan Christian Richter
Sven Richter

References

  1. "2011 Pan American Games (Men)". Panamhockey.org. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  2. 1 2 Hockey technical manual
  3. "2010 South American Championship". Panamhockey.org. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  4. "2010 CAC Games (Men)". Panamhockey.org. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  5. Budeisky, Alberto “Coco”. "2011 Pan American Games - Qualifying Procedure". Panamhockey.org. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  6. "FIH Men's World Rankings–4 January 2011" (PDF). International Hockey Federation. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  7. "2011 Pan American Games (Men)–Officials". Panamhockey.org. Retrieved 11 May 2013.
  8. "2011 Pan American Games (Women)". panamhockey.org. Retrieved 2011-05-07.
  9. 1 2 "2011 Pan American Games: Technical Manual" (PDF). panamhockey.org. Retrieved 2011-05-07.
  10. Preliminary round summary
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.