Field_hockey_at_the_1999_Pan_American_Games
Field hockey at the 1999 Pan American Games
International sporting event
The Field Hockey Tournament at the 1999 Pan American Games was held on the pitch of the Kildonan East College near Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, from Saturday July 24 to Wednesday August 4. It served as a qualification tournament for the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia.
Participating nations
Umpires
Standings
More information Team, Points ...
Team | Points | G | W | D | L | GF | GA | Diff | |
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1. | Canada | 16 | 6 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 28 | 5 | +23 |
2. | Argentina | 16 | 6 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 29 | 7 | +22 |
3. | Cuba | 10 | 6 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 12 | 15 | –3 |
4. | Chile | 8 | 6 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 11 | 16 | –5 |
5. | United States | 5 | 6 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 11 | 12 | –1 |
6. | Trinidad and Tobago | 4 | 6 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 13 | 25 | –12 |
7. | Mexico | 0 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 6 | 6 | 30 | –24 |
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Results
More information United States, 1–1 ...
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More information Canada, 7–0 ...
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More information Mexico, 0–5 ...
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More information Trinidad and Tobago, 1–1 ...
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More information Canada, 2–0 ...
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More information Trinidad and Tobago, 2–4 ...
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More information Argentina, 3–3 ...
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More information Argentina, 4–1 ...
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More information Cuba, 0–6 ...
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More information Mexico, 0–6 ...
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More information Canada, 5–2 ...
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More information Cuba, 4–2 ...
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Bronze Medal Game
Gold Medal Game
More information Canada, 1–0 ...
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More information RANK, TEAM ...
RANK | TEAM |
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1. | Canada |
2. | Argentina |
3. | Cuba |
4. | Chile |
5. | United States |
6. | Trinidad and Tobago |
7. | Mexico |
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More information 1999 Pan American Games winners ...
1999 Pan American Games winners |
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Canada Third title |
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Topscorers
More information RANK, PLAYER ...
RANK | PLAYER | GOALS |
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1. | Peter Milkovich (CAN) | 9 |
2. | Santiago Capurro (ARG) | 7 |
Luis Lapera (CUB) | ||
Jorge Lombi (ARG) | ||
5. | Brian Garcia (TRI) | 5 |
Scott Mosher (CAN) | ||
7. | Juan Benavides (CUB) | 4 |
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Argentina
Máximo Pellegrino, Andrés Castelli, Mariano Chao (gk), Diego Chiodo (c), Jorge Lombi, Fernando Moresi, Fernando Zylberberg, Ezequiel Paulón, Santiago Capurro, Rodolfo Pérez, Carlos Retegui, Mariano Ronconi (gk), Gabriel Garreta, Tomás MacCormik, Rodrigo Vila, and Matias Vila. Head coach: Marcelo Garraffo.
Canada
Robin D'Abreo, Ian Bird, Alan Brahmst, Sean Campbell, Chris Gifford, Andrew Griffiths, Ronnie Jagday, Hari Kant (gk), Bindi Kullar, Mike Mahood (gk), Peter Milkovich (c), Scott Mosher, Ken Pereira, Rick Roberts, Rob Short and Paul Wettlaufer. Head coach: Shiaz Virjee.
Chile
Pablo Boetsch (c), Felipe Casanova, Alfredo Gantz, Rodrigo Hernández (gk), Walter Kramer, Sebastian Lüders, Raul Maffei, Cristian Montegu (gk), Luis Montegu, Jorge O'Ryan, Pablo O'Ryan, Sven Schonborn, Alan Stein, Gabriel Thiermann, Alfredo Urner, and Diego Wenz.
Cuba
Alexander Armas, Eduardo Aroche (gk),
Alain Bardaji, Juan Benavides, Yoandy Blanco, Puro Delgado, Ihosvany Hernández (gk), Ulises Lapera, Rolando Larrinaga, Yumay Oliva, Jorge Perez Hernández, Yuri Perez, Vladimir Reyes, José Rodríguez García, Yunier Rodriguez, and Victorio Valladares (c).
Mexico
Hugo Aguilera, Miguel Bautista, Enrique Castro, Jaime Eduardo Chávez, Víctor Coleman, Carlos Gónzalez Moreno, Oscar Hernández, Marcos Márquez, Gabriel Martínez (gk), Armando Molina, Hugo Enrique Tagle, Juan Apuleyo Huerta, Jesús López Molina (gk), Mario Antonio Rosales, Carlos Ernesto Morales, and Pablo Sandino Morales. Head coach: Jaime Chávez.
Trinidad and Tobago
Kwandwane Browne (c), Roger Daniel, Peter Edwards, Glen Francis (gk), David Francois, George Froix, Brian Garcia, Damian Golden, Aldon Jasper, Brian Lee Chow (gk), Albert Marcano, Anthony Marcano, Dean Nieves, Kurt Noriega, Dwain Quan Chan, and Nicholas Wren.
United States
Jang Badhesha, Rinku Bhamber, Randy Christie, Jeremy Cook, Patrick Cota, Steve Danielson, Andrew Duncan (gk), Shawn Hindy, Steve Jennings, Ryan Langford (c), Shawn Nakamura, Gus Reed, Mike Schanafelt, Brian Schledorn, John Voegtli (gk), and Scott Williams. Head coach: Shiv Jagday.
The competition consisted of two stages; a preliminary round followed by a classification round.
Participating nations
Final ranking
More information RANK, TEAM ...
RANK | TEAM |
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1. | Argentina |
2. | United States |
3. | Canada |
4. | Trinidad and Tobago |
5. | Cuba |
6. | Chile |
7. | Mexico |
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More information 1999 Pan American Games winners ...
1999 Pan American Games winners |
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Argentina Fourth title |
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Topscorers
More information RANK, PLAYER ...
RANK | PLAYER | GOALS |
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1. | Vanina Oneto (ARG) | 8 |
2. | Alejandra Gulla (ARG) | 5 |
Yagnelis Drake Torres (CUB) | ||
4. | Karen MacNeill (CAN) | 4 |
Karina Masotta (ARG) | ||
6. | Amy MacFarlane (CAN) | 3 |
Angulo Roque (CUB) |
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- Field Hockey Canada
- US Field Hockey Archived 2006-05-08 at the Wayback Machine