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Home / Northern Advocate / Sport

World awakens to Black Sticks' style

Northern Advocate
5 Aug, 2012 11:01 PM4 mins to read

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Of all Mark Hager's achievements as the Black Sticks women's coach, perhaps his greatest has been putting the team back on the map.

The team, in strong contention for a spot in the Olympic semifinals, have risen from 12th to sixth in the world over the past two years.

Yet it is the manner in which this has been achieved that has been most meritorious, with a blend of style and success.

Over the previous decade, New Zealand women's hockey was often pretty stodgy fare. They worked hard, defended stoutly and scrapped for goals. New Zealand would struggle to combat the flair of teams like Argentina and rarely competed with the well-drilled hockey superpowers like Holland and Germany. The Beijing Olympics campaign was a disaster in 2008. New Zealand lost all five matches and finished 12th of 12 teams.

Hager took over the following year and rebuilt the team. He oversaw the emergence of a generation of young talent like the Harrison sisters, Charlotte and Sam, Gemma Flynn and 2011 FIH young player of the year Stacey Michelsen.

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This team, with an average age of just over 23, has belief and spirit. Hager has revolutionised the style and approach of the Black Sticks women, and the hockey world has noticed.

"They play a lot like Mark used to play," Argentine coach Carlos Retegui said. "They have flair, skill and pace. New Zealand has become a very dangerous opponent."

"Four years ago, I didn't know [what] style New Zealand played," says Natascha Keller, Germany's flag bearer at these games and the most capped female player in history. "The last two or three years they play like the Australian girls. They are very fast, they run and they make a lot of goals. We [have] noticed that they are not easy to play against now."

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"They have grown a lot and made a big step," says Dutch star Naomi van As, who won gold in Beijing. "They have become more attacking and their skills are much better than before."

That is the crux of the Hager makeover.

He has built a speedy, super-fit team and put the emphasis on positive attacking hockey. He expects this team will peak in the next couple of years. Hager is loyal to his players but has been careful to create a competitive environment.

In December, Hager identified five players who were certainties for his London squad. A few days later he asked if we could leave that part of the interview out of the story, as he didn't want anyone in his team getting complacent, thinking that they had already made it. He also doesn't suffer fools, and is not afraid to read the riot act.

At the end of the disappointing Champions Trophy campaign in Argentina earlier this year, he questioned the team's mental toughness.

"We are not tough enough at the moment," Hager said. "We get in front, but we can't hold it and it is an issue we have to address going forward.

"Mental toughness comes from within. It comes from digging deep; the will to win, and win every one-on-one contest," Hager, who scored a record 179 goals for Australia, said.

"At the moment we have players who do that, but I don't think collectively as a team we are doing it well enough. We'll have to dig deep when we get home and they'll be put through the wringer."

The former Australian striker, who scored a record 179 goals for his country, retains the ability to see what might unfold before most of the players. His halftime talks are incisive and passionate. He has also turned his players into students of the sport, with an increased focus on their foes.

"With [previous coaches], it was very planned and structured, but it was mostly about us," says veteran striker Krystal Forgesson. "Mark is very good at keeping up with what other teams are doing and we are always learning about them. He is always on our case about looking on YouTube and websites to follow what other teams are doing."

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