HOCKEY: ON CENTRE [FORWARD] STAGE
Is it safe now to dream of glory for Pakistan in field hockey with the former captain and legendary centre forward Hasan Sardar in the position of head coach and manager?
Who can forget Sardar’s feat of scoring one goal after another in the field which helped Pakistan win the Hockey World Cup in 1982 and the Olympic gold in 1984. But can he translate those feats of glory to his role as a coach? This remains to be seen.
Sardar himself is quite positive about his new assignment even though critics point out that he has no previous coaching experience, even at the domestic level.
Assisting him in his coaching work will be former forward Rehan Butt and midfielder Mohammad Saqlain. “The boys are going to benefit from their presence as Rehan and Saqlain have played new hockey even if they may not have had a taste of success like we did in our day,” Sardar smiles. “They have also served with the junior team and the Pakistan Whites. They are younger with current knowledge of the game, too,” he adds.
Legendary hockey player Hasan Sardar has been appointed the new head coach/manager of the national side. Does he have a plan to turn Pak hockey’s fortunes around?
“For the building up of a strong team, I may also bring in extra hands in the form of a professional foreign coach,” he says.
“See,” he says, “Here coaching is taken rather casually. We volunteer our services if we have the time to do it. But there those people take it very seriously. For them it is a career.”
Taking examples of the players he played against during the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics such as Ric Charlesworth and Jim Irvine, he says that they took up professional coaching after retiring from active sport.
“It is a well-paid respectable job. Charlesworth also coached their women’s hockey team,” he says.
Asked if he is thinking of bringing in someone from Australia then, Sardar shrugs and says that he has not made up his mind as yet but he has his eye on a few people there. “The thing is that our style of playing hockey is similar to the Australian way,” he points out. “They also have a good hockey base,” he says.