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Malaysia women's national field hockey team

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Summary

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FieldValue
nameMalaysia
imageFlag of Malaysia.svg
imagesize125px
associationMalaysian Women's Hockey Association (MWHA)
confederationAHF (Asia)
coachNasihin Ibrahim
managerSiti Othman
captainJuliani Din
rank
Regional nameAsian Games
Regional cup apps7
Regional cup first1982
Regional cup best3rd (1982)
2ndRegional nameAsia Cup
2ndRegional cup apps9
2ndRegional cup first1985
2ndRegional cup best3rd (1985)
typewomen

The Malaysia women's national field hockey team represents Malaysia in international field hockey competitions. As of Jan 2023, the team is ranked 19th in the FIH World Rankings. The team is part of the Asian Hockey Federation.

Malaysia achieved 5th place in the 2007 Women's Hockey Asia Cup. The team won a bronze medal in the 1982 Asian Games and came 4th in 1986.

History

In 2010, the women's national team is invited to play in Malaysia Junior Hockey League as preparation match before the World Cup qualifier.

The following season, the women's national team joined with Bandar Penawar Sports School to enter as a team in Division 2 of MHJL.

The women's national hockey team created a world record with their 36–0 thrashing over Cambodia during a group match in 2013 Southeast Asian Games, Yangon. It is a new world record for the highest score in an international match, last held by Argentina after they defeated Peru 26–0 at the South American Women's Championships in Santiago, Chile, in 2003.

Tournament records

World CupYearHost cityPosition
1974Mandelieu, FranceDNQ
1976Berlin, West GermanyDNQ
1978Madrid, SpainDNQ
1981Buenos Aires, ArgentinaDNQ
1983Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaDNQ
1986Amsterdam, NetherlandsDNQ
1990Sydney, AustraliaDNQ
1994Dublin, IrelandDNQ
1998Utrecht, NetherlandsDNQ
2002Perth, AustraliaDNQ
2006Madrid, SpainDNQ
2010Rosario, ArgentinaDNQ
2014The Hague, NetherlandsDNQ
2018London, EnglandDNQ
Asian GamesYearHost cityPosition
1982New Delhi, India3rd
1986Seoul, South Korea4th
1990Beijing, ChinaDNQ
1994Hiroshima, JapanDNQ
1998Bangkok, ThailandDNQ
2002Busan, South KoreaDNQ
2006Doha, Qatar5th
2010Guangzhou, China5th
2014Incheon, South Korea5th
2018Jakarta, Indonesia5th
2022Hangzhou, China5th
Asia CupYearHost cityPosition
1985Seoul, South Korea3rd
1989Hong KongDNQ
1993Hiroshima, JapanDNQ
1999New Delhi, India6th
2004New Delhi, India6th
2007Hong Kong5th
2009Bangkok, Thailand5th
2013Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia5th
2017Kakamigahara, Gifu, Japan5th
2022Muscat, Oman5th
2025Hangzhou, China5th
Asian Champions TrophyYearHost cityPosition
2013Kakamigahara, Japan3rd
2016Singapore5th
2018Donghae, South Korea4th
2021Donghae, South KoreaWithdrew
2023Ranchi, india5th
2024Rajgir, india4th
World LeagueYearHost cityPosition
2012–13New Delhi, India17th
2014–15Rosario, Argentina22nd
2016–17Auckland, New Zealand20th
Hockey Nations Cup 2YearHost cityPosition
2024–25Wałcz, Poland7th
Commonwealth GamesYearHost cityPosition
1998Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia6th
2002Manchester, England8th
2006Melbourne, Australia5th
2010New Delhi, India10th
2014Glasgow, Scotland7th
2018Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia8th
Southeast Asian GamesYearHost cityPosition
1993Singapore2nd
1995Chiang Mai, Thailand2nd
1997Jakarta, Indonesia1st
1999Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei1st
2001Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia1st
2007Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand1st
2013Naypyidaw, Myanmar1st
2015Singapore City, Singapore1st
2017Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia1st
2023Phnom Penh, Cambodia1st

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Junior team

Women's Junior Asia CupYearHost cityPosition
1992Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia5th
1996Shirane, Japan5th
2000Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia6th
2004Hyderabad, IndiaDNQ
2008Seremban, Malaysia5th
2012Bangkok, Thailand5th
2016Bangkok, Thailand5th

References

References

  1. "World Ranking".
  2. "Captain Nadia on board". Malay Mail.
  3. Singh, Ajitpal. (14 April 2010). "Mission impossible". New Straits Times.
  4. "World Cup".
  5. "Asia Cup".
  6. "History: Women". Malaysia Hockey.
  7. "Women's Junior Asia Cup". Asia Hockey.
  8. "6th Junior Women's Asia Cup". The Fans of Hockey.
Wikipedia Source

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