Dutch women dominate, while German men win a nail-bitter shoot-out in FIH Inclusion and Diversity Day

Dutch women come up with a dominating performance against New Zealand, on the other hand, German man clinches a thrilling win against the Netherlands
Dutch

(Hockey news) As usual, another day of top-class action as the FIH Hockey Pro League continued in Amsterdam. Each of the day’s matches began with the respective captains joining forces to read out a special statement in commemoration of the second edition of the FIH Inclusion and Diversity Day. 

The Dutch women generate another prevailing performance to exhilarate the home crow by claiming a comprehensive 4-1 victory over New Zealand to assume the top spot in the tournament standings above Argentina. There was no such joy for the Dutchmen, however, who started in commanding fashion but were then edged out 4-1 in a shoot-out after the match finished 1-1.

(Women’s) Netherlands vs New Zealand 4-1:

New Zealand was playing catch-up from early on after Frédérique Matla easily worked her way around the Kiwi defence to fire the ball into the right of the goal. Matla began the match level with Olivia Merry on the all-time FIH Hockey Pro League scorers list but the opener against the Black Sticks took her to the top with an impressive 29 goals.

The profuse Matla was also involved in the second goal when she worked her way into the circle and popped the ball through for Pien Dicke to pick it up and slot it in. The Dutch continued their dominance in the second quarter with Maria Verschoor weaving her way along the baseline and nudging it across for Marente Barentsen to tap it in to take her side into half-time 3-0 up.

There was more of the same after the break, a free hit on the edge of the circle finding Felice Albers who pulled it back for Marijn Veen to provide the finish for the fourth Dutch goal. The Black Sticks managed to pull one back off a counterattack with just under five minutes left in the match, Rose 

Tynan crossed it in for Hannah Cotter to find the deflection in the air.

Maria Verschoor was awarded Player of the Match and said: “I think we can be very happy. We had a lot of chances so maybe we could be a little more efficient in the D but for the rest, I’m very happy with the result. Of course, we didn’t want to have a goal against us but we are playing very forward and attacking so that’s the risk that we take. It’s fine, I think it’s a good result.”

(Men’s) Netherlands vs Germany 1-1 (SO: 1-4):

It was a hard-fought first quarter with both sides creating several scoring opportunities. With 30 seconds left to the first break, the home side finally found the back of the net. Tjep Hoedemakers handed it off to Thijs van Dam to cap off a great team goal.

The Dutch had the chance to double that lead in the second quarter when a long-range pass from Jonas de Geus found Thierry Brinkman in the circle, but his shot went wide and, despite the home side exerting all more pressure, the score remained 1-0 at half-time.

Gonzalo Peillat leveled matters for Germany soon after the break took hard on Dutchmen, dragging into the bottom left of the goal off a penalty corner. It was an action-packed third quarter, but the Dutch were denied another goal to break the deadlock, thanks in large part to the sterling efforts of German keeper Jean-Paul Danneberg.

Germany’s Justus Weigand missed a sitter in the dying minutes after Niklas Wellen had beaten the Dutch defence. The home side was then handed one final chance to win it when they were awarded a penalty corner with nine seconds remaining, but they couldn’t capitalise, sending the match into a shoot-out, which the Germans clinched 4-1. 

Jean-Paul Danneberg was named Player of the Match and said: “It was an unbelievable feeling to play in front of this crazy crowd and this weather but we managed it very well so it’s very nice… We focused more on the easy things and did our management a bit better and that was the main focus in the second half.”

Also read: Hockey India names senior men’s team core group ahead of ACT

SHARE:

Share The Article:

Leave A Reply

Related news