Hanif sacked as Pakistan hockey coach after league flop

Published July 15, 2013
Former Pakistani hockey player and coach Hanif Khan gestures as he speaks to media representatives in Karachi on September 24, 2006. – AFP Photo
Former Pakistani hockey player and coach Hanif Khan gestures as he speaks to media representatives in Karachi on September 24, 2006. – AFP Photo

LAHORE: Pakistan sacked their hockey coach Monday over the national team's poor finish in the World Hockey League, which raised fears they will not qualify for next year's World Cup.

Hanif Khan, a gold medalist from the 1984 Olympics, served as coach during this month's League in Malaysia where Pakistan dropped to seventh after topping the group phase.

“We have replaced Khan with Tahir Zaman, our consultant, as coach while Akhtar Rasool will remain the head coach and manager,” Pakistan Hockey Federation (PHF) secretary Asif Bajwa told reporters.

The top three teams – Germany, Argentina and England – from the league qualified for the World Cup, to be held in the Netherlands next year.

Pakistan now must win next month's Asia Cup – also scheduled in Malaysia – to earn a berth in the World Cup, an event introduced to field hockey in 1971.

“We took into account manager's report as Khan failed to achieve an easy task,” said Bajwa of the League, where Pakistan lost to South Korea in the quarter-finals.

Zaman, a member of Pakistan's last World Cup win in 1994 is a certified coach of the International Hockey Federation.

Khan lashed out at the decision to sack him. “For the past two months there were efforts to displace me,” he told AFP. “I will hold a press conference to tell everyone about the politics in the PHF and of reasons for my ouster.”

Pakistan have won three Olympic gold medals in hockey and been world champions four times but have slumped at international level in the last few years.

They finished at their worst 12th and last in the 2010 World Cup held in India and were eighth and seventh respectively in the last two Olympics.

India, who also failed to qualify for the World Cup from a separate round of the league in the Netherlands, sacked their Australian coach Michael Nobbs earlier this month.

Besides Pakistan and India, South Korea, China, Malaysia and Japan will feature in the Asia Cup.

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