Harpal Singh Bedi
Ace striker and two- time Olympian Jagbir Singh has exuded confidence that Manpreet Singh-led Indian hockey side will do at Tokyo Games what the previous teams couldn’t do at the last nine Olympics.
“I am very optimistic that this team can do what the previous teams couldn’t do. Firstly, this team has its own style of play, and to name a few, be it Manpreet, be it Mandeep, Dilpreet, or Surender in the defence or Sreejesh under the bar, they all have very different qualities compared to any other team.
So, the variety of talent in this current Indian team is applaudable, and they are far fitter than any other team in the world,” he said.
Writing for Hockey India’s Flashback Series, Jagbir Singh said “To the men’s team, I would like to say that this is your chance, go grab it!. Don’t get over-excited about playing the Semi-Finals or Final, but go match-by-match,”
“I have a message for the women’s team also- We all are proud of you that you have been playing the second consecutive Olympics after a gap of so many years.
“Take one match at a time, and you have the capabilities to do wonders. All the very best to both the teams, stay safe, please take care, do follow all the protocols, and bring back the glory!” he opined.
Going down memory lane Jagbir Singh reflected on India’s topsy-turvy campaign at the 1988 Seoul Olympics and the remarkable fightback to the top six after finishing at the bottom of the table in the 1986 World Cup.
“It was an excellent turnout in the end because we were back in the top six. In our career’s first Olympic Games, we learnt so much as a youngster that it could have taken 100 international matches to learn that”
“It could have taken 100 international matches to learn what we learnt in the 1998 Olympics.” he opined
“One can imagine as a youngster when selected for the Olympic Games, how excited all of us would have been!
For me, it was a dream come true being an Olympian. Secondly, facing the major task of coming back into the top six because India, unfortunately, had finished at the bottom of the table in the 1986 World Cup, and people also started writing us off.
So, the big challenge was to bring that confidence among us and also to bring India back where it belongs,”
“This very spirit was inculcated in all of us, right from day one, when we started training at the SAI Campus, Bengaluru. People around us were not just Coaches, they were more like parents.
“MP Ganesh was team Coach, Jaman Lal Sharma was the Manager. We were to train like wild horses, to be prepared for the Olympics. We were told that your aim is to finish among the top six and then see how it goes. The main objective was to play the Semi-Final,” .
MM Somaya-led India kickstarted their 1988 Olympics campaign with a 0-1 loss to Russia in the opening game and held Germany to 1-1 in the second match before registering convincing victories against South Korea and Canada respectively.
Recollecting that campaign, he said “After losing our opening game, it seemed as if it may not work for us in this Olympics. But again, we knew what we are here for. We might have been in the Olympics village, but I still don’t remember having gone anywhere else or having been involved in any other fun activity at the village because we knew we were there for the given task.”
“On the way, we had a couple of good games, we beat Canada and Korea, and played a draw against Germany. We had not conceded more than one goal in each of the league matches we played before the last match against Great Britain, so what we had to do was to play at least a draw and qualify for the Semi-Finals.”
India went down 3-0 against Great Britain and were placed in the 5-8 placings bracket. “We were shattered, we knew where we went wrong. One mistake, not obeying to what the Coach had said cost us a spot in the Semi-Finals.
“We didn’t know where to go because we had lost to a team, which we knew we could beat. We only had to play a draw, and the outcome of the Games could have been different because GB went on to become the Olympic Champions,” Jagbir recalled.
“We played very good hockey in the first half, and the score line was 0-0. It was just about handling 35 minutes more, but we failed, and let go of things that were in our hands. Nobody wanted to go back to the room, and no one spoke about what happened because we couldn’t handle those 35 minutes,” he added.
He reminisced that the only three senior players , Shahid, M.M.Somaya and Mervyn Fernandes, were one of the key reasons behind India’s nervy win over Argentina in the first play-off match, which went down to the sudden-death tie-breaker.
“I would say the best part of the team was that seniors like Shahid, Somaya and Mervyn Fernandes, not for once, let the youngsters feel left behind, they used to keep motivating us, and this was one of the key reasons, we could beat Argentina in the next game (first play-off match of 5-8 placings),” said the Agra-born player.
However, India lost to Pakistan in the second play-off match and finished sixth at the 1988 Seoul Games.
The lesson learnt were to stick to your aim. Second, to keep that aggression right from the first minute till the end in each and every match, until the tournament finishes. Third, was the attitude as a player that you are the best, and let the teams know because, after the 1986 World Cup, people were not even counting India.
“I think all the credit goes to Ganesh and Jaman Lalji, who made us that much capable. At every step, if our heads were down, immediately their one hand could come on our shoulders, and the other hand on the chin, raising it while giving a pat on the back,” he added