2004_Men's_Pan_American_Cup

2004 Men's Pan American Cup

2004 Men's Pan American Cup

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The 2004 Men's Pan American Cup was the second edition of the Men's Pan American Cup, the quadrennial men's international field hockey championship of the Americas organized by the Pan American Hockey Federation. It was held between 12 and 23 May 2004 in London, Ontario, Canada. The tournament doubled as the qualifier to the 2006 World Cup to be held in Mönchengladbach, Germany. The winner would qualify directly while the runner-up would have the chance to obtain one of five berths at the World Cup Qualifier in Changzhou, China.

Quick Facts Tournament details, Host country ...

Argentina won the tournament for the first time after defeating Canada 2–1 in the final, earning an automatic berth at the 2006 World Cup.[1]

Teams

Umpires

Below are the 13 umpires appointed by the Pan American Hockey Federation:

  • Gianluca Caredda (BRA)
  • Roberto Curti (ITA)
  • John Hrytsak (CAN)
  • Anthony Kelleher (ENG)
  • Jason King (BAR)
  • Daniel López (URU)
  • Andrew Mair (SCO)
  • Albert Marcano (TRI)
  • Javier Palomo (MEX)
  • Daniel Santi (ARG)
  • Steve Simpson (USA)
  • Gus Soteriades (USA)
  • Chris Wilson (CAN)

Results

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC−04:00)

First round

Pool A

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: PAHF
More information Argentina, 16–0 ...
More information Chile, 10–0 ...
More information United States, 10–1 ...

More information Venezuela, 1–6 ...
More information Puerto Rico, 1–11 ...
More information Brazil, 0–20 ...

More information Argentina, 2–0 ...
More information United States, 8–0 ...
More information Puerto Rico, 0–0 ...

More information United States, 1–6 ...
More information Chile, 12–1 ...
More information Venezuela, 4–5 ...

More information Chile, 2–1 ...
More information Brazil, 3–0 ...

More information Argentina, 14–0 ...

Pool B

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: PAHF
(H) Hosts
More information Canada, 3–0 ...
More information Mexico, 0–2 ...

More information Uruguay, 0–5 ...
More information Netherlands Antilles, 1–8 ...

More information Netherlands Antilles, 4–0 ...
More information Mexico, 2–5 ...

More information Trinidad and Tobago, 9–1 ...
More information Canada, 6–0 ...

More information Trinidad and Tobago, 4–1 ...
More information Uruguay, 0–7 ...

Ninth to eleventh place classification

 
7–9th place semi-finalNinth place
 
      
 
 
 
 
22 May
 
 
 Brazil1 (2)
 
20 May
 
 Uruguay (p.s.)1 (4)
 
 Venezuela1 (2)
 
 
 Uruguay (p.s.)1 (3)
 

7–9th place semi-final

More information Venezuela, 1–1 ...

Ninth place game

More information Brazil, 1–1 ...

Fifth to eighth place classification

 
5–8th place semi-finalsFifth place
 
      
 
21 May
 
 
 United States0
 
22 May
 
 Mexico2
 
 Mexico0
 
21 May
 
 Netherlands Antilles2
 
 Puerto Rico2
 
 
 Netherlands Antilles5
 
Seventh place
 
 
22 May
 
 
 United States11
 
 
 Puerto Rico0

5–8th place semi-finals

More information United States, 0–2 ...

More information Puerto Rico, 2–5 ...

Seventh place game

More information United States, 11–0 ...

Fifth place game

More information Mexico, 0–2 ...

First to fourth place classification

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
21 May
 
 
 Chile2
 
23 May
 
 Canada4
 
 Canada1
 
21 May
 
 Argentina2
 
 Argentina8
 
 
 Trinidad and Tobago1
 
Third place
 
 
23 May
 
 
 Chile2
 
 
 Trinidad and Tobago1

Semi-finals

More information Chile, 2–4 ...

More information Argentina, 8–1 ...

Third place game

More information Chile, 2–1 ...

Final

More information Canada, 1–2 ...

Statistics

Final standings

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: PAHF
(H) Host

Awards

More information Top Goalscorer, Player of the Tournament ...

Goalscorers

There were 240 goals scored in 35 matches, for an average of 6.86 goals per match.

26 goals

13 goals

  • Chile Felipe Montegu

11 goals

10 goals

9 goals

8 goals

6 goals

5 goals

  • Chile Jorge O'Rayn

4 goals

  • Chile Ian Koppenberger
  • Puerto Rico Pedro Lastra Serrano
  • Trinidad and Tobago Dwain Quan Chan
  • United States Ramandeer Sandhu
  • Venezuela Lucas Piccioli

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

  • Argentina Fernando Oscaris
  • Argentina Lucas Rey
  • Brazil Guillermo Berthold
  • Brazil Guido Hock
  • Brazil Oliver Hock
  • Brazil Leonardo Lemos
  • Canada Jeewanjot Bath
  • Canada Ravi Kahlon
  • Canada Michael Lee
  • Canada Ken Pereira
  • Canada Paul Wettlaufer
  • Chile Matias Amoroso
  • Chile Felipe Casanova
  • Chile Esteban Krainz
  • Chile Alfredo Thiermann
  • Mexico Jaime Chavez
  • Mexico Marcos Marquez
  • Netherlands Antilles Tjerk van de Braak
  • Netherlands Antilles Jasper de Gier
  • Netherlands Antilles Wouter Plantenga
  • Netherlands Antilles Dolph van Stapele
  • Trinidad and Tobago Dilet Gilkes
  • Trinidad and Tobago Atiba Whittington
  • Trinidad and Tobago Nicolas Wren
  • Uruguay Sebastien Castillo
  • Uruguay Juan Cornalino
  • Uruguay Jorge Perez
  • United States Jang Badhesha
  • United States Patrick Cota
  • United States Shawn Hindy
  • United States Daraspreet Kainth
  • United States Ian Scally
  • Venezuela Homero Pardi
  • Venezuela José Ignacio Puzo

Source: PAHF

See also


References

  1. "Argentina qualifies for the 2006 World Cup, Canada and Chile on the podium". PAHF. 2004-05-23. Retrieved 2012-11-04.

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