1995 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy

1995 Women's Hockey
Champions Trophy
Tournament details
Host country Argentina
City Mar del Plata
Teams 6
Top three teams
Champions  Australia (4th title)
Runner-up  South Korea
Third place  United States
Tournament statistics
Matches played 18
Goals scored 50 (2.78 per match)
Top scorer(s) Australia Michelle Andrews
South Korea Cho Eun-jung (4 goals)
1993 (previous) (next) 1997

The 1995 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy was the 5th edition of the Hockey Champions Trophy for women. It was held between 9–17 September 1995 in Mar del Plata, Argentina.

Australia won the tournament for the third consecutive time after defeating South Korea 4–3 in the final on penalty strokes after a 1–1 draw.

Teams

The participating teams were determined by International Hockey Federation (FIH):

Squads

Results

All times are Argentina Time (UTC−03:00)

Pool

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Australia 5500113+810
 South Korea 5401118+38
 Germany 522278−15
 United States 512258−34
 Argentina 511357−23
 Spain 5005611−50
     Advanced to final
9 September 1995
09:30
Germany  1–2  South Korea
Ernsting-Krienke  42' Report Cho Eun-jung  52'
Chang Eun-jung  70'
Umpires:
Michele Arnold (AUS)
Christianne Asselman (BEL)

9 September 1995
12:00
United States  0–2  Australia
Report Morris  15'
Annan  61'
Umpires:
Laura Crespo (ARG)
Ute Lowenstein (GER)

9 September 1995
15:00
Argentina  2–1  Spain
MacKenzie  26'
Castelli  32'
Report Dorado  33'
Umpires:
Miriam van Gemert (NED)
Janice MacDonald (SCO)

10 September 1995
11:00
Australia  2–0  Germany
Andrews  40', 46' Report
Umpires:
Renee Cohen (NED)
Kazuko Yasueda (JPN)

10 September 1995
13:30
South Korea  2–1  Spain
Lee Eun-young  8'
Lee Ji-young  17'
Report Barea  39'
Umpires:
Jean Buchanan (USA)
Laura Crespo (ARG)

10 September 1995
16:00
United States  0–0  Argentina
Report
Umpires:
Janice MacDonald (SCO)
Michele Arnold (AUS)

12 September 1995
13:30
Spain  0–1  Australia
Report Annan  37'
Umpires:
Christianne Asselman (BEL)
Ute Lowenstein (GER)

12 September 1995
16:00
Argentina  1–2  South Korea
MacKenzie  52' Report Chang Eun-jung  12'
Lee Eun-kyung  25'
Umpires:
Kazuko Yasueda (JPN)
Miriam van Gemert (NED)

13 September 1995
13:30
Germany  1–1  United States
Hentschel  12' Report Werley  65'
Umpires:
Jean Buchanan (RSA)
Michele Arnold (AUS)

13 September 1995
16:00
Australia  4–2  South Korea
Morris  43'
Pereira  45', 59'
Andrews  70'
Report Lee Ji-young  18'
Cho Eun-jung  35'
Umpires:
Renee Cohen (NED)
Janice MacDonald (SCO)

14 September 1995
13:30
United States  3–2  Spain
James  15'
Fuchs  30'
Madl  50'
Report Tellería  49', 70'
Umpires:
Kazuko Yasueda (JPN)
Laura Crespo (ARG)

14 September 1995
16:00
Germany  2–1  Argentina
Ernsting-Krienke  35'
Dickenscheid  70'
Report Oneto  10'
Umpires:
Christianne Asselman (BEL)
Jean Buchanan (RSA)

16 September 1995
09:30
Spain  2–3  Germany
Dorado  41'
Feito  63'
Report Ernsting-Krienke  11'
Hentschel  37'
Keller  49'
Umpires:
Michele Arnold (AUS)
Miriam van Gemert (NED)

16 September 1995
12:00
South Korea  3–1  United States
Lee Ji-young  8'
Kwon Chang-sook  28'
Cho Eun-jung  68'
Report Marois  50'
Umpires:
Renee Cohen (NED)
Ute Lowenstein (GER)

16 September 1995
14:30
Argentina  1–2  Australia
Masotta  24' Report Farrell  48'
Pereira  69'
Umpires:
Christianne Asselman (BEL)
Janice MacDonald (SCO)

Classification

Fifth and sixth place

17 September 1995
16:00
Argentina  1–2  Spain
Oneto  40' Report Barea  29', 68'
Umpires:
Renee Cohen (NED)
Ute Lowenstein (GER)

Third and fourth place

17 September 1995
13:30
Germany  0–0  United States
Report
Penalties
Becker
Kauschke
Hentschel
1−4 Fuchs
Lyness
Lucas
Fillat
Umpires:
Jean Buchanan (USA)
Kazuko Yasueda (JPN)

Final

17 September 1995
16:00
Australia  1–1  South Korea
Andrews  7' Report Cho Eun-jung  13'
Penalties
Morris
Andrews
Annan
Starre
Haslam
4−3 Cho Eun-jung
Kwon Soo-hyun
Oh Seung-shin
Kim Myung-ok
Lee Ji-young
Umpires:
Laura Crespo (ARG)
Miriam van Gemert (NED)

Final standings

  1.  Australia
  2.  South Korea
  3.  United States
  4.  Germany
  5.  Spain
  6.  Argentina

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.