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'Defending penalty corners has become art, not easy for drag flickers': Former Hockey star Rupinder

Rupinder Pal Singh was part of India's Bronze medal winning team in Tokyo Olympics 2021. He retired after the tournament.

Reported By : PTI Edited By : Varun Malik
New Delhi
Published on: January 22, 2023 16:32 IST
Rupinder Pal Singh opens on penalty corner defence
Image Source : GETTY Rupinder Pal Singh opens on penalty corner defence

India's former Hockey star Rupinder Pal Singh opened up on the art of defending penalty corners in recent times in Hockey. The Indian star, who was part of India's Bronze medal winning team, has stated that defending penalty corners has improved as there are various analyses to study the opponents.

"Defending penalty corners has become an art in recent years. Every team now has video analysis to study how the opponents take their PCs. They will analyse how the drag flickers of the opposition team flick and how they use variations and accordingly train to prevent goals," Rupinder told PTI on phone from his home in Punjab.

"It is the same in the case of India. We are also very good at defending penalty corners as we saw against England (in this World Cup). Our first rushers, Amit Rohidas and Manpreet Singh are very quick to rush out and close the angle," said Rupinder who formed a potent pair of drag flickers in the Tokyo Olympics, along with current India captain Harmanpreet Singh.

India have scored three goals from penalty corners out of the 16 they earned in the ongoing World Cup, which is less than one-fifth of the total goals. Overall, 43 goals have been scored from PCs in this World Cup out of a total of 130 goals scored from 24 matches at the end of the pool stages.

"It's a World Cup, not any international tournament or bilateral Test. Every team will try to score the most from PCs and, at the same time, they will try to defend the PCs the best they can," the 32-year-old said. Rupinder said that apart from the video analysis of opposition teams, better quality equipment, such as knee and mouth guards, gloves and head guards have made rushers fear the drag flick less than in the past, and so they can defend better now.

"So, we cannot say the effectiveness of drag flickers has gone down in hockey because the decrease in conversion rate is due to better defending of PCs than before. You can't help it and it is the way it is. "But it is not that drag-flickers are not going to score goals. They will score. It is about timing, if there is coordination between the injector, stopper (of the ball) and drag-flicker, then goals will be scored."

Harmanpreet, one the most dreaded drag-flickers in the world, has had a quiet tournament so far, having scored just one goal from PCs -- against Wales in India's final pool match on Thursday. But Rupinder advised the Indian drag-flickers to just stay calm and positive, saying that goals should come from their sticks. "It happens in high-pressure situations, they should remain calm and positive. I think they have not done anything wrong and they should not have negative thoughts."

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