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1999 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup


FieldValue
tournament1999 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup
countryMalaysia
cityKuala Lumpur
venuesNational Hockey Stadium
teams6
champions
second
third
count1
matches18
goals86
top_scorerSohail Abbas
top_scorer_goals12
previous_year1998
previous_tournament1998 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup
next_year2000
next_tournament2000 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup
dates2 April - 10 Aprilconfederations=4

The 1999 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup was the ninth edition of field hockey tournament the Sultan Azlan Shah Cup held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Pakistan won their maiden title defeating South Korea 3-1 in the final after having finished runner-ups in four out of their last eight appearances. Sohail Abbas was the competition's top scorer with 12 goals.

Participating nations

Six countries participated in the year's tournament:

Results

Preliminary round

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
155002610+1615Final
253021814+49
353021412+29Third Place Match
452031116-56
552031016-66Fifth Place Match
65005718-110

Fixtures







Classification round

Fifth and sixth place

Third and fourth place

Final

Statistics

Final standings

PositionTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsResult
66002911+1818Champions
63031917+29Runner-up
64021714+312Third place
462041319-66
56105919-102
662041118-76

Goalscorers

There were 86 goals scored in 18 matches for an average of 4.78 goals per match

  • Yeo Woon-kon
  • Muhammad Sarwar
  • Bevan Hari|2 goals=* Stefan Saliger
  • Christian Wein
  • Sascha Reinelt
  • Song Seung-tae
  • Ken Pereira
  • Sean Campbell
  • Peter Milkovich|1 goal=* Lee Young Hwang
  • Lee Jeon-seon
  • John Radonovich
  • Chairil Anwar Abdul Aziz
  • Ibrahim Suhaimi
  • Naveed Asim
  • Kim Min-sik
  • Andrew Buckley
  • Kim Yong-bae
  • David Yule
  • Muhammad Saqlain
  • Frank Gemmerig
  • Wayne Fernandes
  • Saiful Azli bin Abdul Rahman
  • Bradly Apted
  • Ian Bird
  • Paul Wettlaufer
  • Jan-Peter Tewes
  • Kim Kyung-seok
  • Benjamin Kopp
  • Tibor Weibenbor|5 goals=* Muhammad Shahbaz
  • Kang Keon-wook|3 goals=* Jeon Jong-ha
  • Andrew Griffiths|12 goals=* Sohail Abbas|7 goals=* Björn Michel|6 goals=* Kuhan Shanmuganathan
  • Atif Bashir}}

References

References

  1. "Previous winners". azlanshahcup.com.
Wikipedia Source

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