2019 Women's FIH Olympic Qualifiers
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| Tournament details | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Dates | 25 October – 3 November | ||
| Teams | 14 (from 4 confederations) | ||
| Venue(s) | 7 (in 7 host cities) | ||
| Tournament statistics | |||
| Matches played | 14 | ||
| Goals scored | 46 (3.29 per match) | ||
| Top scorer(s) | |||
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The 2019 Women's FIH Olympic Qualifiers was the final stage of the qualification for the women's field hockey event at the 2020 Summer Olympics. It was held in October and November 2019.
Originally, twelve teams were to take part in the Olympic qualifying events. These teams were to be drawn into six pairs; each pair playing a two-match, aggregate score series. The winner of each series qualified for the Olympics. As Japan won the 2018 Asian Games (thereby qualifying twice, once as host and once as Asian champions), there instead were 14 teams, seven of whom qualified.[1] The seven Olympic qualifiers each featured two nations playing two back-to-back matches, with nations drawn to play each other based on their rankings at the end of the 2018 / 2019 Continental Championships. The qualifiers were held in October and November 2019 with the matches hosted by the higher-ranked of the two competing nations.[2]
Qualification
The participating teams were confirmed on 29 August 2019 by the International Hockey Federation.[3]
| Dates | Event(s) | Location | Quota | Qualifier(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 26 January – 29 June 2019 | 2019 FIH Pro League | 2[a] | ||
| 8–16 June 2019 | 2018–19 FIH Series Finals | 2 | ||
| 15–23 June 2019 | 1 | |||
| 19–27 June 2019 | 2 | |||
| 8 September 2019 | FIH World Rankings | 7[a] | ||
| Total | 14 | |||
Seeding
The seeding was announced on 8 September 2019.[3][4]
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Overview
The first legs were played on 25 October or 1 and 2 November 2019, and the second legs on 26 October or 2 and 3 November 2019.[5]
| Team 1 | Agg. | Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia |
9–2 | 4–2 | 5–0 | |
| China |
2–2 (2–1 p.s.o.) |
0–2 | 2–0 | |
| Spain |
4–1 | 2–1 | 2–0 | |
| India |
6–5 | 5–1 | 1–4 | |
| Germany |
9–0 | 2–0 | 7–0 | |
| Great Britain |
5–1 | 3–0 | 2–1 | |
| Ireland |
0–0 (4–3 p.s.o.) |
0–0 | 0–0 |
Matches
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Australia won 9–2 on aggregate.
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2–2 on aggregate. China won 2–1 after penalty-shootout.
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Spain won 4–1 on aggregate.
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India won 6–5 on aggregate.
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Germany won 9–0 on aggregate.
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Great Britain won 5–1 on aggregate.
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0–0 on aggregate. Ireland won 4–3 after penalty-shootout.
Goalscorers
There were 46 goals scored in 14 matches, for an average of 3.29 goals per match.
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal
Amy Lawton
Sophie Taylor
Jill Boon
Stephanie Vanden Borre
Fernanda Villagran
Gu Bingfeng
Liang Meiyu
Hannah Gablać
Pia Maertens
Lena Micheel
Tessa Howard
Hannah Martin
Isabelle Petter
Anna Toman
Laura Unsworth
Sharmila Devi
Navneet Kaur
Lilima Minz
Rani Rampal
Alina Khalimova
Bogdana Sadovaia
Jang Hee-sun
Begoña García Grau
Belén Iglesias
Erin Matson
Alyssa Parker
Kathleen Sharkey
Source: FIH