2009_Women's_Hockey_Junior_World_Cup

2009 Women's Hockey Junior World Cup

2009 Women's Hockey Junior World Cup

Add article description


The 2009 Women's Hockey Junior World Cup was the sixth tournament of the Women's Hockey Junior World Cup. It was held from August 3 to August 16, 2009, in Boston, United States.

Quick Facts Tournament details, Host country ...

The Netherlands won the tournament for the second time after defeating Argentina 3–0 in the final. Defending champions South Korea won the third-place match by defeating England 2–1.[1]

Qualification

Each continental federation got a number of quotas depending on the FIH World Rankings for teams qualified through their junior continental championships. Along with the host nation, 16 teams competed in the tournament.[2][3]

More information Dates, Event ...
^1 Egypt withdrew from participating. As the first reserve team was previously assigned to the European Federation, France took their place as winners of the 2012 EuroHockey Junior Nations Trophy.
^2 Australia and New Zealand qualified automatically due to the lack of other competing teams in the Oceania qualifier.[4]

Squads

Results

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC−04:00)[5]

Preliminary round

Pool A

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: FIH
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) head-to-head result.
More information Chile, 1–6 ...
More information England, 5–0 ...

More information South Korea, 2–2 ...
More information France, 0–2 ...

More information South Korea, 4–1 ...
More information England, 2–0 ...

Pool B

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: FIH
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) head-to-head result.
More information Argentina, 1–2 ...
More information South Africa, 3–2 ...

More information Lithuania, 0–4 ...
More information Germany, 4–2 ...

More information Germany, 5–1 ...
More information South Africa, 0–5 ...

Pool C

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: FIH
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) head-to-head result.
More information New Zealand, 3–1 ...
More information China, 3–0 ...

More information Spain, 0–4 ...
More information Netherlands, 2–1 ...

More information Spain, 0–5 ...
More information China, 3–0 ...

Pool D

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: FIH
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) head-to-head result.
More information India, 3–2 ...
More information United States, 3–1 ...

More information India, 6–0 ...
More information Australia, 2–1 ...

More information Australia, 7–0 ...
More information United States, 4–2 ...

Medal round

Pool E

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: FIH
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) head-to-head result.
More information England, 1–0 ...
More information Australia, 1–0 ...
More information South Korea, 2–1 ...

More information India, 3–1 ...
More information South Korea, 2–4 ...
More information United States, 2–3 ...

More information South Korea, 3–2 ...
More information Australia, 1–1 ...
More information United States, 4–0 ...

Pool F

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: FIH
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) head-to-head result.
More information China, 5–0 ...
More information Germany, 1–1 ...
More information Argentina, 1–2 ...

More information Netherlands, 7–0 ...
More information New Zealand, 2–5 ...
More information Germany, 2–2 ...

More information New Zealand, 3–2 ...
More information Germany, 0–1 ...
More information China, 2–4 ...

Non-medal round

Pool G

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: FIH
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) goals scored; 4) head-to-head result.
More information Lithuania, 4–3 ...
More information Spain, 6–0 ...

More information Belarus, 2–3 ...

More information Spain, 5–2 ...

More information Lithuania, 1–2 ...

More information Belarus, 1–3 ...

Fifth to sixteenth place classification

Fifteenth and sixteenth place

More information Lithuania, 2–4 ...

Thirteenth and fourteenth place

More information Spain, 2–2 (a.e.t.) ...

Eleventh and twelfth place

More information Chile, 0–4 ...

Ninth and tenth place

More information India, 2–0 ...

Seventh and eighth place

More information United States, 2–8 ...

Fifth and sixth place

More information Australia, 5–2 ...

First to fourth place classification

Semifinals

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
14 August 2009
 
 
 Netherlands5
 
16 August 2009
 
 South Korea0
 
 Netherlands3
 
14 August 2009
 
 Argentina0
 
 England0
 
 
 Argentina (a.e.t.)1
 
Third place
 
 
16 August 2009
 
 
 South Korea2
 
 
 England1
More information Netherlands, 5–0 ...

More information England, 0–1 (a.e.t.) ...

Third and fourth place

More information South Korea, 2–1 ...

Final

More information Netherlands, 3–0 ...

Awards

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

Statistics

Final ranking

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

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: FIH

Goalscorers

There were 255 goals scored in 58 matches, for an average of 4.4 goals per match.

12 goals

8 goals

7 goals

6 goals

5 goals

4 goals

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

Source: FIH


References

  1. "Netherlands claim BDO Junior World Cup title". 2009-08-17. Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  2. "BDO Hockey Junior World Cup Women, Boston (USA) – 03/16 Aug 2009" (PDF). FIH. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 May 2011. Retrieved 28 July 2009.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article 2009_Women's_Hockey_Junior_World_Cup, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.