2011 Men's Hockey Champions Trophyofficial logo |
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Host country | New Zealand |
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City | Auckland |
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Teams | 8 |
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Venue(s) | North Harbour Hockey Stadium |
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Champions | Australia (12th title) |
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Runner-up | Spain |
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Third place | Netherlands |
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Matches played | 24 |
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Goals scored | 124 (5.17 per match) |
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Top scorer(s) | Jamie Dwyer (7 goals) |
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Best player | Santi Freixa |
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The 2011 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy, officially known as the Owen G Glenn FIH Men's Champions Trophy, was the 33rd edition of the Champions Trophy men's field hockey tournament. The International Hockey Federation (FIH) confirmed India as the host country,[1] and announced New Delhi as the host city on February 4, 2011. The tournament dates were December 3 to December 11, 2011.[2] However, on September 6, 2011, the FIH announced that India would no longer host the tournament due to a governance issue,[3] and announced Auckland, New Zealand, as the new host on September 13, 2011 with the same time schedule.[4] The tournament was held at North Harbour Hockey Stadium.
Australia won the title for the fourth consecutive and twelfth time total by defeating Spain 1–0 in the final.[5]
Host city change
For the 33rd edition of the Hockey Champions Trophy, India was elected to host the tournament by the FIH on February 4, 2011. But due to an ongoing governance issue with the Indian Hockey Federation, the FIH announced that India would no longer host the competition, instead; Auckland, New Zealand hosted the tournament. New Zealand businessman Owen Glenn was instrumental in gaining the hosting rights for New Zealand. He funded Hockey New Zealand to gain the hosting rights.
The tournament was expected to have a television audience of approximately 38 million people. It being the largest hockey event in New Zealand's history. Auckland's mayor Len Brown said: "this event should inject around $1 million of new money into New Zealand's economy. The teams and officials directly involved in the event should generate over 4,000 visitor nights alone."[6]
Qualification
The new qualification criteria were determined by International Hockey Federation (FIH), as follows:[7]
Results
All times are New Zealand Daylight Time (UTC+13:00)
First round
Pool A
Source:
FIHRules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Matches won; 3) Goal difference; 4) Goals for; 5) Head-to-head result.
Umpires: Hamish Jamson (ENG) Germán Montes de Oca (ARG)
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Umpires: Murray Grime (AUS) Satoshi Kondo (JPN)
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Umpires: Kim Hong-lae (KOR) Germán Montes de Oca (ARG)
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Umpires: Nathan Stagno (GIB) Satoshi Kondo (JPN)
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Pool B
Source:
FIHRules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Matches won; 3) Goal difference; 4) Goals for; 5) Head-to-head result.
Umpires: Murray Grime (AUS) Peter Wright (RSA)
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Umpires: Nathan Stagno (GIB) Gareth Greenfield (NZL)
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Umpires: Nathan Stagno (GIB) Haider Rasool (PAK)
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Umpires: Hamish Jamson (ENG) Gareth Greenfield (NZL)
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Umpires: Peter Wright (RSA) Hamish Jamson (ENG)
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Second round
Pool C
Source:
FIHRules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Matches won; 3) Goal difference; 4) Goals for; 5) Head-to-head result.
Umpires: Germán Montes de Oca (ARG) Nigel Iggo (NZL)
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Umpires: Kim Hong-lae (KOR) Murray Grime (AUS)
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Umpires: Hamish Jamson (ENG) Kim Hong-lae (KOR)
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Umpires: Nathan Stagno (GIB) Germán Montes de Oca (ARG)
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Pool D
Source:
FIHRules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Matches won; 3) Goal difference; 4) Goals for; 5) Head-to-head result.
Umpires: Satoshi Kondo (JPN) Peter Wright (RSA)
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Umpires: Haider Rasool (PAK) Gareth Greenfield (NZL)
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Umpires: Murray Grime (AUS) Gareth Greenfield (NZL)
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Umpires: Satoshi Kondo (JPN) Haider Rasool (PAK)
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Classification
Seventh and eighth place
Umpires: Peter Wright (RSA) Gareth Greenfield (NZL)
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Fifth and sixth place
Third and fourth place
Umpires: Nathan Stagno (GIB) Germán Montes de Oca (ARG)
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Final
Umpires: Hamish Jamson (ENG) Kim Hong-lae (KOR)
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Awards
Statistics
Final standings
As per statistical convention in field hockey, matches decided in regular time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws.
Goalscorers
There were 124 goals scored in 24 matches, for an average of 5.17 goals per match.
7 goals
5 goals
4 goals
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal
Source: FIH
References
External links