This story is from January 31, 2023
Hockey World Cup: Comeback kings Germany rewrite history
BHUBANESWAR: Last summer, in the run-up to the FIH World Cup, when most other countries were busy working out strategies and tactics, German coach Andre Henning and his men were enjoying some downtime on a hidden island in Sweden.
Mats Grambusch and his men will go down in history as the comeback kings. For three consecutive matches, starting with the quarterfinals, they snatched victories after being down 0-2. What makes this outstanding achievement astonishing is the fact that the team does not have a regular central training programme. Since most of the players are busy with club commitments, work or college, they don't train together often.
"Germany is one of the few countries which does not have a centralised training system. We have the league and a few camps, following which I don't see the boys for three months. So, they are training individually and have to be self-motivated," said the 39-year-old Henning.
Henning, a former freelance journalist, said the writing was on the wall, but the perfect execution was carried out by men who thrive as much on physical energy as on camaraderie.
Germany ended Belgium's dominance in global hockey in the last 5 years as they made yet another stunning comeback from a 2-goal deficit to beat the defending champions.
With the win in penalty shootout, Germany clinched the FIH Hockey Men's World Cup for a third time.
The two sides were locked 3-3 at the end of regulation time of the thrilling final. In the shootout, the Germans prevailed 5-4 in sudden death in front of a packed Kalinga Stadium.
Niklas Wellen (29th), Gonzalo Peillat (41st) and captain Mats Grambusch (48th) scored for Germany in the regulation time while Florent van Aubel Florent (10th), Tanguy Cosyns (11th) and Tom Boon (59th) found the target for Belgium.
This was the third time in the tournament that Germany had won after trailing 0-2 and their mental strength and never-say-die attitude came to the fore again as they denied the Belgians to defend their title.
The earlier two matches were against England in the quarterfinals and Australia in the semifinals.
Germany joined Australia and Netherlands to have clinched the World Cup title three times. Their earlier triumphs had come in 2002 and 2006.
Only Pakistan have won the event four times.
A day before the summit clash, head coach Andre Henning had said that Germany have given massive focus on their defence but a two-minute Belgium blitzkrieg left them in daze.
"Back home, we had a big sheet of paper in our meeting room, which read, 'We are going to write a story or history'. Before the tournament all the players signed on it and indeed they have written history," said the coach who is often compared to Liver-pool manager Jurgen Klopp and Bayern Munich manager Julian Nagelsmann for his show of emotions on the sidelines.
In Germany's modern hockey history, for two decades between 1992 and 2012, they were world beaters at the Olympics, World Cup and European championships. But their graph plummeted after the 2012 London Olympics gold.
The Die Honamas' redefined resilience at the Kalinga stadium on more than a few occasions over the past three weeks. They now hope their gritty feat will mark the beginning of another glorious chapter in Germany's fabled hockey culture.
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