Field hockey at the 2004 Summer Olympics – Women's tournament

The women's field hockey tournament at the 2004 Summer Olympics was the 7th edition of the field hockey event for women at the Summer Olympic Games. It was held over an eleven-day period beginning on 16 August, and culminating with the medal finals on 26 August. All games were played at the hockey centre within the Hellinikon Olympic Complex in Athens, Greece.

Women's field hockey
at the 2004 Summer Olympics
Victory ceremony
Tournament details
Host countryGreece
CityAthens
Dates14 – 26 August
Teams10
Venue(s)Hellinikon Olympic Hockey Centre
Final positions
Champions Germany (1st title)
Runner-up Netherlands
Third place Argentina
Tournament statistics
Matches played29
Goals scored105 (3.62 per match)
Top scorer(s)Netherlands Mijntje Donners
South Africa Jennifer Wilson (5 goals)
2000 (previous) (next) 2008

Germany won the gold medal for the first time after defeating the Netherlands 2–1 in the final. Argentina won the bronze medal by defeating China 1–0.[1]

Qualification

edit

Each of the continental champions from the five federations received an automatic berth. Along with the five teams qualifying through the Olympic Qualification Tournament, ten teams competed in this tournament.[2]

Dates Event Location Qualifier(s)
5–11 October 2002 2002 Asian Games   Busan, South Korea   China
25–31 May 2003 2003 Oceania Cup   Melbourne, Australia
  Auckland and Whangārei, New Zealand
  Australia
3–13 August 2003 2003 Pan American Games   Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic   Argentina
1–13 September 2003 2003 EuroHockey Nations Championship   Barcelona, Spain   Netherlands
7–17 October 2003 2003 All-Africa Games   Abuja, Nigeria   South Africa
19–28 March 2004 Olympic Qualification Tournament   Manukau, New Zealand   Japan
  Spain
  New Zealand
  Germany
  South Korea

Although the host nation would have qualified automatically as well, the International Hockey Federation (FIH) and the International Olympic Committee (IOC) refused to give them an automatic berth due to the standard of hockey in Greece. Greece appealed the decision to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), however it was turned down. Greece's first option to gain a place at the Olympics was by qualifying for the EuroHockey Nations Championship held in 2003. As they did not qualify for this tournament their last option was to beat Russia, the last ranked team of the Olympic Qualification Tournament in a best of three play-off competition. Russia would have kept its place in the Qualifier regardless of whether it won or lost against Greece. There would, however, have been four places at stake at the tournament if Greece had qualified, rather than five. Eventually Greece withdrew from participating in the 11-14 March 2004 play-off competition in Auckland, New Zealand , due to "explicit financial reasons".[3]

Umpires

edit
  •   Chieko Akiyama (JPN)
  •   Renée Cohen (NED)
  •   Marelize de Klerk (RSA)
  •   Jean Duncan (GBR)
  •   Sarah Garnett (NZL)
  •   Gina Spitaleri (ITA)
  •   Julie Ashton-Lucy (AUS)
  •   Ute Conen (GER)
  •   Carolina de la Fuente (ARG)
  •   Lyn Farrell (NZL)
  •   Soledad Iparraguirre (ARG)
  •   Minka Woolley (AUS)

Rosters

edit

Results

edit

All times are Eastern European Time (UTC+2)

Preliminary round

edit

Pool A

edit
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   China 4 4 0 0 11 2 +9 12 Semi-finals
2   Argentina 4 3 0 1 12 4 +8 9
3   Japan 4 2 0 2 5 7 −2 6
4   New Zealand 4 1 0 3 3 9 −6 3
5   Spain 4 0 0 4 3 12 −9 0
Source: FIH
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Matches won; 3) Goal difference; 4) Goals for; 5) Head-to-head result.
14 August 2004
10:30
China   3–0   Japan
Fu   7'
Tang   39'
Chen Qi.   67'
Report
Umpires:
Marelize de Klerk (RSA)
Renee Cohen (NED)
14 August 2004
20:00
Argentina   4–0   Spain
Stepnik   11'
Rognoni   25'
González Oliva   28'
Oneto   69'
Report
Umpires:
Julie Ashton-Lucy (AUS)
Ute Conen (GER)

16 August 2004
08:30
Japan   1–3   Argentina
Komazawa   27' Report Arrondo   19'
García   37'
Di Giacomo   58'
Umpires:
Minka Woolley (AUS)
Lyn Farrell (NZL)
16 August 2004
18:00
New Zealand   0–2   China
Report Ma   16'
Tang   41'
Umpires:
Jean Duncan (GBR)
Soledad Iparraguirre (ARG)

18 August 2004
08:30
China   3–0   Spain
Tang   14'
Fu   35'
Gao   58'
Report
Umpires:
Sarah Garnett (NZL)
Minka Woolley (AUS)
18 August 2004
20:00
Japan   2–0   New Zealand
Komori   18'52' Report
Umpires:
Carolina de la Fuente (ARG)
Gina Spitaleri (ITA)

20 August 2004
10:30
New Zealand   0–3   Argentina
Report Aymar   8'
Oneto   38'
García   53'
Umpires:
Chieko Akiyama (JPN)
Julie Ashton-Lucy (AUS)
20 August 2004
20:00
Spain   1–2   Japan
Termens   67' Report Morimoto   5'
Komazawa   34'
Umpires:
Jean Duncan (GBR)
Ute Conen (GER)

22 August 2004
10:30
Spain   2–3   New Zealand
Goikoetxea   21'40' Report Provan   21'
Roberts-Lang   30'
Igasan   50'
Umpires:
Chieko Akiyama (JPN)
Julie Ashton-Lucy (AUS)
22 August 2004
18:00
Argentina   2–3   China
Aymar   17'34' Report Ma   9'
Fu   16'
Tang   47'
Umpires:
Renee Cohen (NED)
Minka Woolley (AUS)

Pool B

edit
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   Netherlands 4 4 0 0 14 5 +9 12 Semi-finals
2   Germany 4 2 0 2 6 10 −4 6
3   South Korea 4 1 1 2 9 8 +1 4
4   Australia 4 1 1 2 6 5 +1 4
5   South Africa 4 1 0 3 5 12 −7 3
Source: FIH
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Matches won; 3) Goal difference; 4) Goals for; 5) Head-to-head result.
14 August 2004
08:30
Netherlands   6–2   South Africa
Donners   6'19'37'
Boomgaardt   15'
Moreira de Melo   23'
Scheepstra   25'
Report Wilson   7'53'
Umpires:
Lyn Farrell (NZL)
Gina Spitaleri (ITA)
14 August 2004
18:00
Australia   1–2   Germany
Towers   58' Report Ernsting-Krienke   21'
Müller   34'
Umpires:
Soledad Iparraguirre (ARG)
Chieko Akiyama (JPN)

16 August 2004
10:30
South Africa   0–3   Australia
Report Towers   28'
Faulkner   34'
Gallagher   59'
Umpires:
Sarah Garnett (NZL)
Ute Conen (GER)
16 August 2004
20:00
South Korea   2–3   Netherlands
Kim Ji.   19'
Park J.   57'
Report Van der Vaart   26'35'
Booij   40'
Umpires:
Caroline de la Fuente (ARG)
Julie Ashton-Lucy (AUS)

18 August 2004
10:30
Netherlands   4–1   Germany
Scheepstra   7'
Boomgaardt   19'
Van Geenhuizen   21'
Karres   29'
Report Ernsting-Krienke   40'
Umpires:
Chieko Akiyama (JPN)
Marelize de Klerk (RSA)
18 August 2004
18:00
South Africa   0–3   South Korea
Report Ko   17'
Lee S.   35'
Kim Y.   46'
Umpires:
Jean Duncan (GBR)
Renee Cohen (NED)

20 August 2004
08:30
South Korea   2–2   Australia
Park M.   31'
Kim S.   46'
Report Dobson   6'
Powell   43'
Umpires:
Soledad Iparraguirre (ARG)
Marelize de Klerk (RSA)
20 August 2004
18:00
Germany   0–3   South Africa
Report Wehmeyer   4'
Coetzee   45'
Wilson   56'
Umpires:
Lyn Farrell (NZL)
Sarah Garnett (NZL)

22 August 2004
08:30
Germany   3–2   South Korea
Kühn   11'
Gude   30'
Casaretto   59'
Report Park M.   32'
Kim S.   70'
Umpires:
Carolina de la Fuente (ARG)
Soledad Iparraguirre (ARG)
22 August 2004
20:00
Australia   0–1   Netherlands
Report Donners   47'
Umpires:
Marelize de Klerk (RSA)
Gina Spitaleri (ITA)

Classification round

edit

Ninth and tenth place

edit
27 August 2004
09:00
Spain   3–4 (a.e.t.)   South Africa
Ybarra   23'
Feito   49'
Termens   60'
Report Coetzee   29'
Pholo   33'
Wilson   47'73'
Umpires:
Lyn Farrell (NZL)
Minka Woolley (AUS)

Fifth- to eighth-place classification

edit
 
CrossoverFifth place
 
      
 
24 August 2004
 
 
  South Korea2
 
27 August 2004
 
  New Zealand (a.e.t.)3
 
  New Zealand0
 
24 August 2004
 
  Australia3
 
  Japan1
 
 
  Australia3
 
Seventh place
 
 
27 August 2004
 
 
  South Korea3
 
 
  Japan1
Crossover
edit
24 August 2004
08:30
South Korea   2–3 (a.e.t.)   New Zealand
Kim Y.   44'
Park M.   46'
Report Roberts-Lang   4'
Muirhead   8'
Walton   80'
Umpires:
Ute Conen (GER)
Jean Duncan (GBR)

24 August 2004
11:00
Japan   1–3   Australia
Komori   15' Report Gallagher   27'
Faulkner   33'
Powell   37'
Umpires:
Sarah Garnett (NZL)
Carolina de la Fuente (ARG)
Seventh and eighth place
edit
27 August 2004
08:30
South Korea   3–1   Japan
Oh.   12'18'
Kim Ji.   19'
Report Miura   35+'
Umpires:
Carolina de la Fuente (ARG)
Julie Ashton-Lucy (AUS)
Fifth and sixth place
edit
27 August 2004
11:00
New Zealand   0–3   Australia
Report Towers   14'
Powell   42'67'
Umpires:
Chieko Akiyama (JPN)
Gina Spitaleri (ITA)

First- to fourth-place classification

edit
 
Semi-finalsGold-medal match
 
      
 
24 August 2004
 
 
  Netherlands (pen.)2 (4)
 
26 August 2004
 
  Argentina2 (2)
 
  Netherlands1
 
24 August 2004
 
  Germany2
 
  China0 (3)
 
 
  Germany (pen.)0 (4)
 
Bronze-medal match
 
 
26 August 2004
 
 
  Argentina1
 
 
  China0
Semi-finals
edit
24 August 2004
18:00
Netherlands   2–2 (a.e.t.)   Argentina
Karres   41'
Donners   45'
Report García   17'
Aicega   68'
Penalties
Schopman  
Boomgaardt  
Donners  
Van Kessel  
4–2   Margalot
  Rognoni
  Aymar
  Stepnik
Umpires:
Lyn Farrell (NZL)
Minka Woolley (AUS)

24 August 2004
20:30
China   0–0 (a.e.t.)   Germany
Report
Penalties
Fu  
Gao  
Mai  
Tang  
Zhou  
3–4   Rinne
  Klecker
  Bachmann
  Keller
  Gude
Umpires:
Marelize de Klerk (RSA)
Soledad Iparraguirre (ARG)
Bronze medal match
edit
26 August 2004
18:00
Argentina   1–0   China
Aymar   70' Report
Umpires:
Renee Cohen (NED)
Ute Conen (GER)
Gold-medal match
edit
26 August 2004
20:30
Netherlands   1–2   Germany
Scheepstra   38' Report Kühn   6'
Gude   20'
Umpires:
Marelize de Klerk (RSA)
Soledad Iparraguirre (ARG)

Statistics

edit

Final ranking

edit
Pos Grp Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Final result
1 B   Germany 6 3 1 2 8 11 −3 10 Gold medal
2 B   Netherlands 6 4 1 1 17 9 +8 13 Silver medal
3 A   Argentina 6 4 1 1 15 6 +9 13 Bronze medal
4 A   China 6 4 1 1 11 3 +8 13
5 B   Australia 6 3 1 2 12 6 +6 10
6 A   New Zealand 6 2 0 4 6 14 −8 6
7 B   South Korea 6 2 1 3 14 12 +2 7
8 A   Japan 6 2 0 4 7 13 −6 6
9 B   South Africa 5 2 0 3 9 15 −6 6
10 A   Spain 5 0 0 5 6 16 −10 0
Source: FIH

Goalscorers

edit

There were 105 goals scored in 29 matches, for an average of 3.62 goals per match.

5 goals

4 goals

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

Source: FIH

References

edit
  1. ^ "Hockey at the 2004 Athens Summer Games: Women's Hockey". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 21 October 2019.
  2. ^ "Qualification for Athens 2004 Olympic Games clarified". Planet Field Hockey. 2003-10-20. Archived from the original on 2008-07-19. Retrieved 2012-07-03.
  3. ^ "Greece Withdraws from Women's Qualification Play-Off Series". Planet Field Hockey. 2004-04-24. Archived from the original on 2013-03-31. Retrieved 2012-08-12.
edit