The Black Sticks have fought out their second successive draw
in the Champions Trophy, a tough 2-2 tie in oppressive
afternoon heat.
In the most dramatic finish possible, Korea scored what would
have been the winning goal off a penalty corner with time up
on the clock, only for the goal to be rubbed off by the video
umpire.
It caused great consternation among the crowd but was the
correct decision as the penalty strike had been made just
inside the circle.
With temperatures nudging 40 degrees Celsius, New Zealand
again failed to capitalise on a 2-0 halftime lead, allowing
the Koreans to come back into the match and grabbed a
deserved point.
Indeed, Korea could consider themselves unlucky not to win
the match; apart from their final chance they had earlier
overwhelmed the Black Sticks for long periods of the second
half and carved out a succession of gilt edged chances.
Coach Mark Hager had urged his troops to "make good
decisions'' in the second half but they were mostly unable to
retain possession and had few clear cut chances.
In oppressive, sweltering heat New Zealand made a tentative
start and Korea could have scored twice in the first six
minutes but failed to capitalise on good chances.
The Black Sticks made them pay four minutes later with a well
constructed goal. Charlotte Harrison split the Korean up the
middle, before releasing Katie Glynn. The midfielder showed
good composure to find Catherine Finlayson, who forced the
ball home on the second attempt.
It meant New Zealand, together with the Netherlands, are the
only teams to score the opening goal in both of their matches
so far.
The first half was end to end and the game very spread; not
ideal in the conditions, with the temperature over 35 degrees
Celsius and extreme humidity. The Black Sticks did not help
themselves with several needless turnovers in the middle of
the park, though you could not fault the effort.
Chances continued to flow with good opportunities to Gemma
Flynn, Glynn and Sam Charlton while Korea somehow contrived
to waste a golden two on one opportunity.
New Zealand then had three consecutive penalty corner chances
but could not find a clean strike. They were clearly
disappointed but doubled their lead soon afterwards in the
25th minute.
After an incisive dribble by Charlotte Harrison she found
Glynn, who smashed a backhand shot into the corner, her sixth
Champions Trophy goal, with the last three coming against the
Koreans.
Just before the half Bianca Russell, who had an excellent
match in the New Zealand goal, defused successive penalty
corners.
The second stanza was a nailbiter. Korea scored from their
fifth penalty corner of the match to guarantee a grandstand
finish.
At times they were under seige but the defence held strong;
at one stage the ball were virtually over the line, before
Stacey Michelsen defied the laws of physics to extract the
ball from the New Zealand goal.
There was an element of luck in the Korean equaliser, with
the ball appearing to loop off an outstretched stick and over
the stranded Russell, but it was no more than the Asian side
deserved after periods of extended dominance in the second
half.
In today's other matches, Great Britain held the fancied
Netherlands side to a 2-2 draw while China picked up their
first win of the tournament at the expense of the other Asian
nation, beating Japan 2-1, though the Japanese had the
consolation of scoring their first goal.
New Zealand's next match is against Germany on Wednesday
(NZT).
- Michael Burgess for APNZ in Rosario
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