England claim first semi-final spot on day seven of hockey World Cup
England became the first team to qualify for the World Cup semi-finals with a 3-2 win over India in the Dhyan Chand Stadium, New Delhi.
The visitors looked home and dry at 3-0 when Ashley Jackson finished off a scrambled mess of a goal in the 48th minute to claim his second strike of the game. But what coach Jason Lee described as "poor execution" let India back into the match.
Gurwinder Singh Chandi turned in a cross from the right by Gurbaj Singh in the 54th minute. Three minutes later Rajpal Singh finished off a move started when England lost the ball on the Indian 25, to set up a nailbiting finish.
"On a better day we would be converting those opportunities into corners and goals," Lee said. Rajpal could also have equalised in the dying minutes, but failed to connect with a cross across the face of James Fair's goal.
England secured a 1-0 half-time lead with a James Tindall tap-in in the 16th minute and doubled the lead when Jackson put a rocket of a penalty corner into the top right corner in the 43rd minute.Jackson said, to some extent the pressure was off now the team had reached the semi-finals, as playing teams lower-ranked than you who you were expected to beat created its own kind of pressure.
"It's a one-off game, anything can happen, leave nothing on the pitch and hopefully we won't leave it until extra time this time," Jackson said, referring to England's golden goal win over the Netherlands in the European championships - a goal he turned in himself.
England play Spain on Monday, a loss will still mean a semi-final spot, but if Australia, as expected, beat Pakistan, then the Kookaburras will almost certainly finish top of the group thanks to the goal difference produced by their 12-0 thrashing of South Africa.
Earlier in the day, Spain showed the rest of the sides in New Delhi how to play against the Kookaburras. Astute aerials and balls into the corner to fast forwards continually turned the Aussies around and stifled their attacking drive. Australia's opener (Luke Doerner, PC, 20mins) came against the run of play. It was created when a superb Eddie Ockenden body swerve off the right foot wrong-footed the Spanish defence and produced an off-balance tackle.
The Aussies stepped up the on-the-ball pressure on the Spanish defence in the second half, and as a result stifled some of the earlier long passing.
The Spanish withsttod the pressure with their usual quick-fotted defence, but the yellow-carding Ramon Alegre in the 52nd minute (for attempting to fell Jamie Dwyer in full flight) tipped the balance in favour of the Kookaburras.
Glenn Turner then finished of a corner in the 60th minute. A few spirited attacks gave the Spanish some hope but Australia held out.
The battle of the cellar-dwellers in group B ended in a 4-3 win for South Africa over the higher-ranked Pakistan. The win came off a much-improved second-half performance by the African champions who trailed 1-0 at the break to a Rehan Butt field goal (5mins). SA's second half goals came from Gareth Carr (PC, 39mins), Ian Hayley (FG, 41), Taine Paton (FG, 46) and the admirable Marvin Harper (FG, 55).
Two late penalty corner goals - Muhammed Imran (68) and Waseem Ahmed(70) made the scoreline more flattering than Pakistan deserved in a game where they started well but then recaptured their appalling form from their opener against India.
Day Eight Preview
The big game in group B is leaders Netherlands taking on Germany in the third game - this match will probably end up deciding the 1/2 placings in the group. The opener, Korea v Cana will have no effect on the top placings. New Zealand are still in with an outside chance of a semi-final but they face the under-rated Argentinians who have already lost two heartbreakers - last minute against Korea 2-1 and a heroic 4-3 defeat by Germany.

Comments
BBC U-turn?
So the BBC are at last watching/listening and have allowed hockey to creep on to a red button channel (though not a Freeview one)! http://xrl.in/4pzm
By 2012 it might make it onto BBC4.
Let's see if they keep it up for the Women's world cup in the summer.
Commercial value counts
Or hopefully Zing and the Daily Telegraph will show hockey is a viable commercial TV product and we won't have to beg the BBC to use our licence fees to cover something...
Is it enough?
That would be the ideal situation but I suspect, like many sports, there just isn't enough money in hockey to pay its own way especially if it has to compete with football for airtime. Then again I have no idea of the figures involved with buying rights and screening sport so I could well be wrong.
I am not sure we have to 'beg' the BBC so much as keep pressing them as we do actually pay for them, we just don't have much of an option to take our business elsewhere (not that I would change that).
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