2000 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup

The 2000 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup was the tenth edition of field hockey tournament the Sultan Azlan Shah Cup held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Pakistan won their successive second title after beating South Korea 1-0 with a late minute goal by Kamran Ashraf in the final becoming the first side to retain the Azlan Shah Cup since its inaugural edition. Pakistan's captain and goalkeeper Ahmed Alam was voted as player of the tournament.

2000 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup
Tournament details
Host countryMalaysia
CityKuala Lumpur
Teams7
Venue(s)Azlan Shah Stadium
Final positions
Champions Pakistan (2nd title)
Runner-up South Korea
Third place India
Tournament statistics
Matches played24
Goals scored95 (3.96 per match)
Top scorer(s)South Korea Yeo Woon-kon (7 goals)
Best playerSouth Korea Yeo Woon-kon
Best young playerMalaysia Ibrahim Suhaimi
1999 (previous) (next) 2001

Participating nations

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Seven countries participated in the tournament:[1]

Results

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Preliminary round

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Standings

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1   South Korea 6 5 1 0 17 8 +9 16 Final
2   Pakistan 6 5 1 0 15 8 +7 16
3   Malaysia (H) 6 3 0 3 16 14 +2 9 Third place match
4   India 6 3 0 3 10 10 0 9
5   Germany 6 2 1 3 10 14 −4 7 Fifth place match
6   New Zealand 6 0 2 4 8 16 −8 2
7   Canada 6 0 1 5 8 14 −6 1
Source: Field Hockey Canada
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) head-to-head result.
(H) Hosts

Fixtures

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16 February 2000
16:05
India   1–2   Germany
Pillay   18' Report Wein   1'
Bechmann   9'
16 February 2000
18:05
Malaysia   3–1   Canada
Ibrahim   2'29'69' Report Milkovich   32'
16 February 2000
20:05
New Zealand   1–4   South Korea
Russ   3' Report Yeo   39'53'
Song   60'68'

17 February 2000
16:05
Germany   1–2   Malaysia
Bechmann   39' Report Kuhan   33'67'
17 February 2000
18:05
South Korea   1–1   Pakistan
Yeo   16' Report Bashir   33'
17 February 2000
20:05
Canada   1–1   New Zealand
Short   20' Report Reynolds   35'

18 February 2000
18:05
Pakistan   2–1   India
Raza   7'
Jawwad   28'
Report Baljit   52'

19 February 2000
16:05
New Zealand   2–4   Malaysia
Archibald   19'
Russ   68'
Report Chairil   3'7'
Saiful   43'
Ibrahim   53'
19 February 2000
18:05
India   3–2   Canada
Pillay   7'37'
Deepak   33'
Report Short   6'
Kullar   53'
19 February 2000
20:05
Germany   0–3   South Korea
Report Song   13'50'
Kang Ky.   25'

20 February 2000
18:05
New Zealand   1–3   Pakistan
Parag   12' Report Raza   23'
Bashir   29'
Yousuf   33'
20 February 2000
20:05
Germany   3–2   Canada
Bechmann   7'
Domke   43'53'
Report Short   18'
Kullar   51'

21 February 2000
18:05
India   1–2   South Korea
Baljit   53' Report Ji   25'
Yeo   42'
21 February 2000
20:05
Malaysia   2–3   Pakistan
Chua   58'
Kuhan   60'
Report Yousuf   5'63'
Ashraf   13'

22 February 2000
16:05
South Korea   2–1   Canada
Kim Ky.   5'
Hwang   8'
Report Milkovich   24'
22 February 2000
18:05
Germany   2–2   New Zealand
Domke   50'
Kunz   61'
Report Leaver   7'
Burrows   46'
22 February 2000
20:05
Malaysia   1–2   India
Ibrahim   11' Report Baljit   19'
Deepak   32'

23 February 2000
18:05
Pakistan   4–2   Germany
Ashraf   15'
Jawwad   29'
Yousuf   54'
Bashir   57'
Report Kunz   7'
Crone   52'

24 February 2000
16:05
Canada   1–2   Pakistan
Campbell   25' Report Yousuf   34'
Sarwar   50'
24 February 2000
18:05
South Korea   5–4   Malaysia
Yeo   10'33'67'
Seo J.   25'
Kang Ke.   51'
Report Kuhan   19'21'
Chairil   48'56'
24 February 2000
20:05
New Zealand   1–2   India
Parag   22' Report Deepak   26'
Pillay   28'

Classification round

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Fifth and sixth place

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26 February 2000
08:05
Germany   3–2 (a.e.t.)   New Zealand
Witthaus   20'
Emmerling   56'
Keller   85'
Report Burrows   32'
Smith   52'

Third and fourth place

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26 February 2000
17:05
Malaysia   1–4   India
Kuhan   3' Report Baljit   6'67'
Pillay   17'
Tirkey   54'

Final

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26 February 2000
19:35
South Korea   0–1   Pakistan
Report Ashraf   70'
Umpires:
Marcello Servetto (ARG)
Blaise Monteiro (IND)

Awards

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The following awards were presented at the conclusion of the tournament:

Top Goalscorer Player of the Tournament Player of the Final Fair Play Trophy Most Promising Player
  Yeo Woon-kon   Yeo Woon-kon   Ahmed Alam   India   Ibrahim Suhaimi

Final standings

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As per statistical convention in field hockey, matches decided in regular time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Final result
1   Pakistan 7 6 1 0 16 8 +8 19 Gold medal
2   South Korea 7 5 1 1 17 9 +8 16 Silver medal
3   India 7 4 0 3 14 11 +3 12 Bronze medal
4   Malaysia (H) 7 3 0 4 17 18 −1 9
5   Germany 7 3 1 3 13 16 −3 10
6   New Zealand 7 0 2 5 10 19 −9 2
7   Canada 6 0 1 5 8 14 −6 1
Source: Field Hockey Canada
(H) Hosts

Goalscorers

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There were 95 goals scored in 24 matches, for an average of 3.96 goals per match.

7 goals

6 goals

5 goals

4 goals

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

References

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  1. ^ "Previous winners". azlanshahcup.com. Archived from the original on 6 March 2013. Retrieved 17 March 2013.
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