Field hockey at the 2011 Pan American Games – Men's tournament

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Men's field hockey at the 2011 Pan American Games
Tournament details
Host countryMexico
CityGuadalajara
Dates20–29 October
Teams8 (from 1 confederation)
Venue(s)Estadio Panamericano de Hockey
Final positions
Champions Argentina (8th title)
Runner-up Canada
Third place Chile
Tournament statistics
Matches played20
Goals scored136 (6.8 per match)
Top scorer(s)Mexico
Argentina Ignacio Bergner
Canada Scott Tupper (9 goals)
2007 (previous) (next) 2015

The men's field hockey tournament at the 2011 Pan American Games was held in Guadalajara, Mexico at the Pan American Hockey Stadium from October 20–29.[1][2]

Argentina won their eighth gold medal by defeating the defending champions Canada 3–1 in the final. Chile won the bronze medal by defeating Cuba 4–3.

Qualification[]

A National Olympic Committee may enter one men's team for the field hockey competition. Mexico, the host nation along with seven other countries qualified through regional competitions.[2]

Dates Event Location Quotas Qualified
Host nation 1  Mexico
3–11 April 2010 2010 South American Championship[3] Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 2  Argentina
 Chile
22–31 July 2010 2010 Central American and Caribbean Games[4] Caguas, Puerto Rico 2  Trinidad and Tobago
 Barbados
7–15 March 2009 2009 Pan American Cup Santiago, Chile 2  Canada
 United States
3–6 February 2011 Qualifier for 2011 Pan American Games Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 1  Cuba
Total 8
  • Cuba played a three match series against the men's country that would have qualified as the eighth country (Brazil, who finished in the third qualifying position from the 2009 Pan American Cup), as Cuba did not enter the Central American and Caribbean Games.[5]

Pools[]

Pools were based on the current world rankings (January 4, 2011). Teams ranked 1, 4, 5 and 8 would be in Pool A, while teams ranked 2, 3, 6 and 7 would be in Pool B.[6]

Pool A Pool B

Umpires[]

Twelve officials were appointed by Pan American Hockey Federation to officiate matches.[7]

  • John Wright (RSA)
  • Lim Hong Zhen (SIN)
  • Diego Barbas (ARG)
  • Jamar Springer (BAR)
  • Chris Wilson (CAN)
  • Martín Vatter (CHI)
  • Daniel López Ramos (URU)
  • Arturo Vázquez Serrano (MEX)
  • Grant Hundley (USA)
  • Constantine Soteriades (USA)
  • Maximiliano Scala (ARG)
  • Devin Hooper (GUY)

Competition format[]

Eight teams competed in both the men's and women's Pan American Games hockey tournaments with the competition consisting of two rounds.[8] In the first round, teams were divided into two pools of four teams, and play followed round robin format with each of the teams playing all other teams in the pool once. Teams were awarded three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss.[9]

Following the completion of the pool games, teams placing first and second in each pool advanced to a single elimination round consisting of two semifinal games, and the bronze and gold medal games. Remaining teams competed in classification matches to determine their ranking in the tournament. During these matches, extra time of 7½ minutes per half was played if teams were tied at the end of regulation time. During extra time, play followed golden goal rules with the first team to score declared the winner. If no goals were scored during extra time, a penalty stroke competition took place.[9]

Results[]

All times are Central Daylight Time (UTC−5)[10]

Preliminary round[]

Pool A[]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  Canada 3 3 0 0 21 2 +19 9 Semi-finals
2  Chile 3 2 0 1 12 6 +6 6
3  Trinidad and Tobago 3 1 0 2 14 11 +3 3
4  Barbados 3 0 0 3 2 30 −28 0
Source: PAHF
20 October 2011
09:00
Canada  7–2  Trinidad and Tobago
Guest Goal 2'37'46'
Tupper Goal 26'
Smythe Goal 29'30'
Goal 62'
Report Goal 1'
Browne Goal 35'
Umpires:
Constantine Soteriades (USA)
Diego Barbas (ARG)
20 October 2011
11:00
Chile  9–1  Barbados
Goal 3'13'22'50'
Rodríguez Goal 8'
Goal 51'67'
Goal 53'
Goal 68'
Report Goal 42'
Umpires:
Maximiliano Scala (ARG)
Arturo Vazquez Serrano (MEX)

22 October 2011
14:00
Trinidad and Tobago  11–1  Barbados
Browne Goal 3'16'
Pierre Goal 6'36'
Goal 23'68'
Goal 27'42'
Goal 37'
Goal 39'
Goal 60'
Report Goal 9'
Umpires:
Grant Hundley (USA)
Devin Hooper (GUY)
22 October 2011
16:00
Chile  0–4  Canada
Report Tupper Goal 15'49'56'
Short Goal 61'
Umpires:
Daniel Lopez Ramos (URU)
Diego Barbas (ARG)

24 October 2011
09:00
Canada  10–0  Barbados
Froese Goal 3'
Pereira Goal 7'
Guest Goal 10'16'62'
Tupper Goal 25'35'46'
Pearson Goal 49'
Short Goal 54'
Report
Umpires:
Constantine Soteriades (USA)
Maximiliano Scala (ARG)
24 October 2011
11:00
Trinidad and Tobago  1–3  Chile
Goal 36' Report Goal 15'
Goal 51'
Rodríguez Goal 65'
Umpires:
Grant Hundley (USA)
John Wright (RSA)

Pool B[]

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  Argentina 3 3 0 0 20 1 +19 9 Semi-finals
2  Cuba 3 2 0 1 7 13 −6 6
3  Mexico (H) 3 1 0 2 4 12 −8 3
4  United States 3 0 0 3 4 9 −5 0
Source: PAHF
(H) Host
20 October 2011
14:00
Argentina  8–0  Mexico
Paredes Goal 4'53'
Cammareri Goal 29'
Bergner Goal 35'48'51'
L. Vila Goal 52'
López Goal 58'
Report
Umpires:
Chris Wilson (CAN)
Daniel Lopez Ramos (URU)
20 October 2011
16:00
United States  2–4  Cuba
Goal 35+'38' Report Goal 19'49'
Goal 53'
Goal 56'
Umpires:
John Wright (RSA)
Lim Hong Zhen (SIN)

22 October 2011
09:00
Mexico  1–2  Cuba
Goal 53' Report Goal 61'
Goal 63'
Umpires:
Jamar Springer (BAR)
Martin Vatter (CHI)
22 October 2011
11:00
United States  0–2  Argentina
Report Bergner Goal 34'
López Goal 52'
Umpires:
Chris Wilson (CAN)
John Wright (RSA)

24 October 2011
02:00
Argentina  10–1  Cuba
Bergner Goal 23'27'34'
Ibarra Goal 25'50'62'63'
Rossi Goal 37'
R. Vila Goal 67'
M. Vila Goal 69'
Report Goal 13'
Umpires:
Martin Vatter (CHI)
Lim Hong Zhen (SIN)
24 October 2011
16:00
Mexico  3–2  United States
Goal 7'
Goal 18'
Goal 20'
Report Goal 3'
Goal 29'
Umpires:
Devin Hooper (GUY)
Daniel Lopez Ramos (URU)

Fifth to eighth place classification[]

 
5–8th place semi-finalsFifth place
 
      
 
27 October
 
 
 Mexico10
 
29 October
 
 Barbados0
 
 Mexico0
 
27 October
 
 United States6
 
 Trinidad and Tobago0
 
 
 United States2
 
Seventh place
 
 
29 October
 
 
 Barbados1
 
 
 Trinidad and Tobago9

5–8th place semi-finals[]

27 October 2011
17:30
Mexico  10–0  Barbados
Goal 16'22'40'42'45'49'56'
Goal 20'
Goal 46'
Goal 66'
Report
Umpires:
Davin Hooper (GUY)
Constantine Soteriades (USA)

27 October 2011
19:30
Trinidad and Tobago  0–2  United States
Report Goal 33'63'
Umpires:
Jamar Springer (BAR)
Maximiliano Scala (ARG)

Seventh and eighth place[]

29 October 2011
09:00
Barbados  1–9  Trinidad and Tobago
Goal 45' Report Goal 8'20'52'67'69'
Goal 13'39'68'
Browne Goal 16'
Umpires:
Daniel Lopez Ramos (URU)
Arturo Vazquez Serrano (MEX)

Fifth and sixth place[]

29 October 2011
11:30
Mexico  0–6  United States
Report Goal 2'43'
Goal 12'
Goal 29'
Goal 45'
Goal 64'
Umpires:
Maximiliano Scala (ARG)
Lim Hong Zhen (SIN)

Medal round[]

 
Semi-finalsGold medal match
 
      
 
27 October
 
 
 Canada3
 
29 October
 
 Cuba2
 
 Canada1
 
27 October
 
 Argentina3
 
 Argentina7
 
 
 Chile1
 
Bronze medal match
 
 
29 October
 
 
 Cuba3
 
 
 Chile4

Semi-finals[]

27 October 2011
11:30
Canada  3–2  Cuba
Guest Goal 1'
Tupper Goal 6'
Singh Goal 21'
Report Goal 14'
Goal 49'
Umpires:
Grant Hundley (USA)
Diego Barbas (ARG)

27 October 2011
15:00
Argentina  7–1  Chile
Bergner Goal 7'
L. Vila Goal 27'65'
Rey Goal 33'
Ibarra Goal 34'
M. Vila Goal 49'69'
Report Goal 60'
Umpires:
Chris Wilson (CAN)
Lim Hong Zhen (SIN)

Bronze medal match[]

29 October 2011
15:00
Cuba  3–4  Chile
Goal 9'
Goal 52'55'
Report Goal 19'
Goal 23'
Goal 32'
Goal 69'
Umpires:
Diego Barbas (ARG)
Constantine Soteriades (USA)

Gold medal match[]

29 October 2011
17:30
Canada  1–3  Argentina
Tupper Goal 25' Report Bergner Goal 45'
Ibarra Goal 49'
L. Vila Goal 53'
Umpires:
John Wright (RSA)
Grant Hundley (USA)

Final standings[]

  1.  Argentina
  2.  Canada
  3.  Chile
  4.  Cuba
  5.  United States
  6.  Mexico
  7.  Trinidad and Tobago
  8.  Barbados

Medalists[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men  Argentina (ARG)
Juan Manuel Vivaldi
Ignacio Bergner
Matías Vila
Pedro Ibarra

Lucas Rey
Rodrigo Vila
Matías Paredes
Lucas Cammareri
Lucas Vila
Fernando Zylberberg
Juan Martín López
Manuel Brunet

Agustín Mazzilli
Lucas Rossi
 Canada (CAN)

Scott Tupper


Ken Pereira
Keegan Pereira
Jagdish Gill
David Jameson
Rob Short
Adam Froese
Mark Pearson
Iain Smythe
Gabbar Singh

David Carter
Antoni Kindler
 Chile (CHI)








Martín Rodríguez






References[]

  1. ^ "2011 Pan American Games (Men)". Panamhockey.org. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Hockey technical manual Archived July 28, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "2010 South American Championship". Panamhockey.org. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  4. ^ "2010 CAC Games (Men)". Panamhockey.org. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  5. ^ Budeisky, Alberto “Coco”. "2011 Pan American Games - Qualifying Procedure". Panamhockey.org. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  6. ^ "FIH Men's World Rankings–4 January 2011" (PDF). International Hockey Federation. Retrieved 2011-04-10.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ "2011 Pan American Games (Men)–Officials". Panamhockey.org. Retrieved 11 May 2013.
  8. ^ "2011 Pan American Games (Women)". panamhockey.org. Retrieved 2011-05-07.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b "2011 Pan American Games: Technical Manual" (PDF). panamhockey.org. Retrieved 2011-05-07.
  10. ^ Preliminary round summary[dead link]
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