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Execution and consistency will be the key for Indian Hockey Teams for podium finish in Tokyo Olympics: V Baskaran

V Baskaran, the captain of the Indian Team that won the Gold in 1980 Moscow Olympic Games, believes execution is the key for the podium finish for any team at the Olympic Games.

Execution and consistency will be the key for Indian Hockey Teams for podium finish in Tokyo Olympics: V Baskaran

New Delhi, July 22: V Baskaran, the captain of the Indian Team that won the Gold in 1980 Moscow Olympic Games, believes execution and consistency is the key for any team to finish on the podium on a big stage like the Olympics.

The legendary hockey player has advised every member of the current Indian side to at least give their 80 per cent on the field at the sporting extravaganza to secure a medal in Tokyo.

In a Hockey India release, Baskaran - who has coached and mentored several Indian players - said the consistency of every single player in the side is going to be the key for Manpreet Singh and band in the quadrennial event next year.

'Give a minimum 80 per cent'

"To achieve this kind of result, every single player needs to give his minimum 80 per cent if not 100. Every team at the Olympics come to win and they will do everything they can to stop you from giving your 100 per cent. Podium finishes cannot happen with just 4-5 players giving their 80 per cent and the rest giving their 60 per cent.

"Every single player needs to be consistent and for the Indian Men's team the Chief Coach Graham Reid has pointed this out several times. While playing the in Hockey Pro League against top teams it will set good momentum ahead of the Olympic Games, my advice is that the team should not read too much into the results. Olympics will be a very different stage compared to the Hockey Pro League and each player will be playing about 200 minutes of play on average with back to back matches," said 69-year-old Baskaran.

Women's Team can achieve success too

The legendary hockey player and the former coach of the national side also expects good run from the Indian eves in the showpiece event. Baskaran believes the Rani Rampal-led side has the potential to do well.

"Since I have watched this Women's Team closely too, I feel they have great potential to do well. They have shown good results against top teams in these past few years and they can surely be the dark horse in the tournament. I feel for both Men and Women's Team, execution is the key. They have the talent, they need to execute to perfection. If they do, they can surely finish on the podium," he said further.

Baskaran, who led the Indian Team to a Gold Medal in the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games after 16 years, credits the young but formidable team that included greats like Mohd Shahid, Zafar Iqbal, MM Somaya, Davinder Singh, MK Kaushik among others who went on to attain great stardom in Indian Hockey.

'Sam Manekshaw's words inspired the team'

"I remember when the team for the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games was announced, Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw who was heading the All India Council of Sports paid us a visit in Bangalore. His confidence-oozing talk remained with me all through the Olympic Games. He had said, 'You look tough and you have a fire in your belly. Pass this on to your teammates. They are young and can play with speed. Play well and you will finish on the podium,'" Baskaran reminisced.

"We were a very young squad and the media had particularly been quite critical of this fact. Barring Bir Bahadur Chhetri and myself, no one else in that team had played at the Olympics before. In fact, up until then, many had not even taken a flight much like the Indian cricket team from 1970. I agree we were raw and there was no follow up after the 1978 Asian Games where we had a solid team," he added further.

Young but formidable

Baskaran also claimed that it was a formidable group of 16 players which went on rewriting history in Moscow.

"But when I look back, I am filled with pride about my team. We had picked the best 16 players out of the 24-25 who were selected for the Camp in Bangalore. We had a formidable starting 11 with Davinder Singh as our penalty corner specialist, Sylvanus Dung Dung and Rajinder Singh joined him at the back. Right half was Gurmail Singh, Centre Half Ravinder Pal Singh who was just 19 years old from Uttar Pradesh Sports Hostel, Left half was myself, Left-wing was Zafar Iqbal, Mohd Shahid centre forward, MK Kaushik and Amarjit Singh Rana the other two forwards.

"Allen Schofield from Bangalore, Mervyn Fernandis, Surinder Singh Sodhi, MM Somaya and Charanjit Kumar were brilliant in their roles. Balakrishna Singh was our Coach and Dayanand from Kerala was our Manager. What brings me pride is that 7-8 players from this squad went on to play for India for another 8-10 years. They became the stars of Indian Hockey," the Tamil Nadu player said.

Draw against Spain, the turning point

Talking about the turning point for India in that tournament, Baskaran claims it was the draw against Spain which gave them the confidence as the campaign didn't start as expected.

"Our campaign in Moscow didn't begin too well. After an 18-0 win against Tanzania, we had drawn 2-2 against Poland. We could have won that match had we not missed the last-minute chances and I had missed a penalty stroke. In the next match, we drew 2-2 again but this was against Spain, the European Champions that year.

"This I believe was the turning point of our campaign. During the long walk back to the athletes' village from the hockey venue, I had a chat with the boys and convinced them that a 2-2 draw against the European Champions is a good result. I had to build that self-belief in them and Spain was a fantastic team with one of the best Coaches in the world. They had a great forward line and holding them actually made me feel this team had it in them to win."

Recalling the semi-final match against hosts Russia, Baskaran recalls the Indians looked like tiny tots in front of their big-built opponents. He even visited the Games Village library to get a video cassette recording of the Russian's previous game to analyse their style of play.

"We were playing Russia in the Semi-Final and they were a good side with really big-built players. We looked like tiny tots in front of them. Unlike today, we never had video analysts back in the day. I would visit the Games Village library before the match against Russia and would record their other games on a video cassette and come back, play it to the team and analyse. One thing I always told the team was. "play your best, play your skill, defend well and don't concede early."

"The Bombay lads were the game changers in the team. They had the right experience from the club culture in Mumbai, playing for TATAS and the Mahindras almost full-time made them very sharp. They were smart on the field, clever and tactical. They played a lot of football too and had great knowledge of the game and positioning. Zafar from Delhi, I was playing for Railways, Allen from Bangalore and Davinder from Punjab Police, we had developed a strong connection as a team."

The 69-year-old revealed how his team stunned the Russian team as well as the 12000-strong audience in the stadium and later defeated the European Champions Spain in the final.

"Our forward line had shocked the Russians who were backed by a strong 12,000-odd people on the stands. Going into the Final, the boys were very motivated. We took a 2-0 lead at half time and went one up in the early second half. Though Spain bounced back, we beat them 4-3 to win the Gold Medal," he signed off.

Story first published: Wednesday, July 22, 2020, 15:01 [IST]
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