Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

2009 Men's Hockey Asia Cup

Field hockey competition


Field hockey competition

FieldValue
tournament2009 Men's Hockey Asia Cup
countryMalaysia
cityKuantan
dates9–16 May
teams7
confederations1
champions
second
third
count3
matches15
goals82
top_scorerKim Byung-hoon
top_scorer_goals6
best_playerYou Hyo-sik
previous_year2007
previous_tournament2007 Men's Hockey Asia Cup
next_year2013
next_tournament2013 Men's Hockey Asia Cup

The 2009 Men's Hockey Asia Cup was the eighth edition of the Men's Hockey Asia Cup, the quadrennial international men's field hockey championship of Asia organized by the Asian Hockey Federation. It was held from May 9 to May 16, 2009 in Kuantan, Pahang, Malaysia.

The tournament was originally awarded to Dubai, United Arab Emirates by the Asian Hockey Federation (AHF) in a 2008 meeting. However, it was swapped to Malaysia due to the hockey facility in Dubai Sports City not being completed on time. The tournament was sponsored by AirAsia with MYR 500,000. South Korea won their third title and qualified for the 2010 World Cup in New Delhi, India, after defeating Pakistan 1–0 in the final.

Teams

Only eight teams were to compete in this tournament, divided by two pools. However, Sri Lanka withdrew from the tournament few days before the commencement, having replaced Oman before the withdrawal. Although the tournament is reduced to seven teams, the format of the competition remains unchanged.

DatesEventLocationQuotasQualifier(s)Total7
Host1
31 August – 9 September 20072007 Asia CupChennai, India5
14–22 June 20082008 AHF CupSingapore1

Results

All times are local, MYT (UTC+8).

Preliminary round

Pool A

Anwaar Hussein (PAK) Tanaka
Suzuki
Nagasawa
Sakomoto Weng Haiqin (CHN)

Takayasu Lee Nam-yong Anwar Hussain (PAK) Azlan
Chua
Amin
Tengku
Ismail

Kim Byung-hoon
Nam Hyun-woo
Jin Kyung-min
You Hyo-sik Kevinder
Chua
Selvaraju |goals2=Furusato John Wright (RSA)

Pool B


Rajpal Abbas

Yu Yang

Fifth to seventh place classification

Seventh place

Hari
Arjun
Raghunath
S. V. Sunil
Rajpal
Sardara
Prabhjot

Fifth and sixth place

Sandeep
Tushar
Prabhjot

First to fourth place classification

|14 May||5||1 |14 May||4||2 |16 May||1||0 |16 May| (p.s.)|3 (7)||3 (6)

Semi-finals

You Hyo-sik
Guo Zhong-qiang Simon Taylor (NZL)

Ali
Khan Raghu Prasad (IND)

Third and fourth place

Jiang Xishang Chua
Nabil Fernando Gomez (ARG) Hu Huiren
Lu Fenghui
Liu Xiantang
Sun Tianjun Song Yi
Hu Huiren
Liu Xiantang
Sun Tianjun Nabil Jiwa Amin Kavinder Amin Jiwa Sukri Fiqri}}

Final

John Wright (RSA)

Winners

Statistics

Final standings

Awards

TopscorerBest PlayerBest GoalkeeperMan of the match (final)
South Korea Kim Byung-hoonSouth Korea You Hyo-sikMalaysia Kumar SubramaniamSouth Korea Hong Eun-seung

References

References

  1. Hussain, Khalid. (2009-03-22). "Pakistan mull new strategy as Asia Cup venue switched". International The News.
  2. (2009-05-01). "AirAsia chip in RM500,000 for Asia Cup". The Star.
  3. (2009-04-30). "Only Seven Teams For Asia Cup". Bernama.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 2009 Men's Hockey Asia Cup — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report