The Black Sticks rode their luck, used some get out of jail
free cards, and eventually sneaked home 5-4 over South Africa
in a shoot-out to claim ninth place at the hockey World Cup
in India last night.
Again, the victory posed more questions for coach Shane
McLeod than providing him with the answers he was looking
for.
Down a goal inside three minutes and still trailing by that
at halftime, New Zealand got back to 1-1 four minutes in the
second spell and took the lead within two minutes before
surrendering that advantage. Again, they hit back quickly to
lead 3-2.
The goal-fest continued as South Africa scored again in a
frantic 11-minute burst to level 3-3 before further turning
the screws in going ahead with 14 minutes to play.
For all but the last few seconds they were rarely troubled in
holding on.
With the clock running down, the Black Sticks won a penalty
corner. With the end-of-match hooter having already been
blown, Andy Hayward stepped forward and slotted for 4-4 with
his third drag flick of the half.
Sent to two periods of sudden death extra time, Hayward had a
near miss on the hooter and the game went to a penalty stroke
shoot-out.
The score went to 2-2 after misses from both sides, and then
4-4 before Black Sticks goalkeeper Kyle Pontifex denied the
South Africans a 5-4 lead. Stand-in captain Dean Couzins then
fired one low and hard to beat Erasmus Pieterse for a 5-4
win.
Despite the win McLeod was far from happy.
"We have standards which we fell short of today," he said.
"Some players did not perform to the standard we were
expecting. We have to give the South Africans some credit for
that.
"They play a hustle and bustle style which is not easy to
counter but, more importantly, they came in the game
determined to finish ninth, which would have been a
creditable effort. As much as I don't like to admit, there
was a hint of complacency among our players and it showed.
"It is not ideal in having to play catch up, but we should be
good enough to do it."
While refusing to make excuses, McLeod again reiterated how
difficult it had been for his team in playing without
strikers Simon Child and Phil Burrows.
"It meant a player like Nick Wilson, at just 19 years of age,
had to step up as our senior striker. That is a big ask and I
thought he responded to the challenge magnificently."
He was not so glowing in looking elsewhere, admitting he was
now prepared to make "the hard calls" in naming his next
squad.
"We will freshen our squad now. It would be a crime if we
didn't introduce new players. That process has already
started.
"We have the opportunity at a four-nation tournament in
Nottingham in July to have a look at these players," McLeod
said.
New Zealand will now likely climb one place to seventh in
world rankings.
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