IN MEMORIAM: ‘WE HAVE LOST A GEM’
Pakistan hockey’s legendary goalkeeper Olympian Mansoor Ahmed passed away on May 12 at a hospital not so far from the ground he used to practice and play at.
There had been a lot of reports about his deteriorating condition for weeks before his passing. Mansoor was admitted to the National Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases and was in need of a heart transplant. There was some talk of him receiving a mechanical heart in Pakistan soon, but he wanted to go to India for a normal heart transplant.
He had also, some time ago, received a pacemaker for his heart. Doctors had implanted stents to help open up his blood vessels.
After receiving support from the Shahid Afridi Foundation, an NGO run by the cricketer, his family was going to apply to the Indian Embassy for a visa earlier this week, but Mansoor suffered heart failure before it could happen. He had turned 50 in January.
Mansoor Ahmed, who passed away on May 12, was one of the finest goalkeepers in the history of field hockey. Eos looks back at his career and talks to some of his colleagues about his life and sporting achievements
Mansoor started playing hockey as a little kid. Playing at the YMCA ground, he was soon spotted and picked up by the Pakistan Customs Department. It didn’t take him long to become a part of the national junior hockey team. A fine show at the third Men’s Junior Hockey World Cup in Vancouver in 1985 and other events, including the next one in Ipoh (1989), opened place for him in the national team.
As a part of the national team, he featured in the Seoul (1988), Barcelona (1992) and Atlanta (1996) Olympics, three World Cups — London (1986), Lahore (1990) and Sydney (1994) — besides playing in several editions of the Champions Trophy, Asia Cup, Indira Gandhi Gold Cup and Azlan Shah Hockey tournament. All in all, he played 338 international matches. He was declared the best goalkeeper of the 1994 World Cup by the International Hockey Federation (FIH) and was selected in the FIH World XI after the feat.
For his contributions to Pakistan hockey, Mansoor was presented with the President Award in 1988 and the President’s Pride of Performance in 1994.
Just last year, the Pakistan Hockey Federation (PHF) also nominated him as manager of the Pakistan junior hockey team for the Muscat tour.
EXPERT PENALTY STROKE STOPPER
“A young death is tragic as it is, but this young man was a national hero,” says Olympian Rashid ul Hasan while sharing his thoughts on the late goalkeeper with Eos.
“He did not seem well when I saw him three or four months ago. We had met over lunch and something was off. I asked him if he was okay, since he also sounded different, and he told me that he had a chest infection. I didn’t delve on the subject any further then out of politeness,” he says.