India-Pakistan to clash in high voltage opener in hockey World Cup

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated:

India will have to leave behind the controversies that marred their run up to the high profile FIH tournament and put up a united front.

Emotions will run high when India, after a tumultuous build-up, will take on arch-rivals Pakistan in a potential humdinger of the hockey World Cup, which gets underway amid watertight security here tomorrow.
    
India will have to leave behind the controversies that marred their run up to the high profile FIH tournament and put up a united front as stakes are high for the home team after the Olympic debacle.
    
Their eight Olympic gold notwithstanding, India have not won a major international title since their 1975 World Cup triumph in Kuala Lumpur.

Indian hockey has gone down considerably since then, evident from their result in the last couple of years.
    
After finishing a lowly 11th out of 12 teams in the last World Cup at Monchengladbach, Germany fours years ago, Indian hockey plunged to a new low in 2008 by missing out on an Olympic berth for the first time in 80 years.
    
After all these lows, this mega event brings with it an opportunity of a lifetime for Indian hockey to regain its lost glory in front of it's countrymen.
    
But achieving it is no mean task for the Rajpal Singh-led side and the first two matches-Pakistan and Australia-carry a lot of significance since result of these encounters would decide their fate in the tournament.

The match also gives Rajpal and his men an opportunity to avenge their 3-6 defeat at the hands of Pakistan in the semifinal of the Champions Challenge I tournament in Salta, Argentina.
   
The much-anticipated game carries a lot of importance for both the teams not only in the context of sporting ties between the two countries but also on the diplomatic front.

And expectedly emotions will run high in both the camps as for the first time after 26/11 Mumbai carnage, the two countries will be meeting each other on Indian soil.

India's chief coach Jose Brasa might be a Spaniard but he was smart enough to realise the high stakes associated with the game when he said his boys will have to control their emotions.
    
"It would be difficult to keep our players calm and quiet, but we have to keep the emotional part away against Pakistan. In Champions Challenge tournament at Salta we could not control our emotions. The players were too much excited.
    
"My advice to the boys would be to take the match against Pakistan as just another normal match," Brasa said.
    
How much pressure Pakistan is facing could be ascertained by the statement of their skipper Zeeshan Ashraf, who conceded that the fans back home would even excuse their flop show in the World Cup if they will beat India.

"The first match against India is very crucial. A win against India will give us psychological advantage going into the tournament", Zeeshan said.