1990 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy

The 1990 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy ' was the 12th edition of the Hockey Champions Trophy, an international men's field hockey tournament organized by the FIH. It took place from 17 to 25 November 1990 in Melbourne, Australia.

1990 Men's Hockey
Champions Trophy
Tournament details
Host countryAustralia
CityMelbourne
Dates17–25 November
Teams6 (from 3 confederations)
Final positions
Champions Australia (5th title)
Runner-up Netherlands
Third place Germany
Tournament statistics
Matches played15
Goals scored61 (4.07 per match)
Top scorer(s)Netherlands Gijs Weterings (9 goals)
1989 (previous) (next) 1991

The hosts, Australia won a record-extending fifth title and their second title in a row by finishing first in the round-robin tournament.

Tournament edit

All times are Australian Eastern Daylight Time (UTC+11:00)

Pool edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
    Australia (C, H) 5 4 0 1 14 6 +8 8
    Netherlands 5 3 1 1 14 8 +6 7
    Germany 5 3 1 1 14 12 +2 7
4   Pakistan 5 2 0 3 12 11 +1 4
5   Soviet Union 5 1 0 4 4 11 −7 2
6   Great Britain 5 1 0 4 3 13 −10 2
Source: FIH
(C) Champions; (H) Hosts

Results edit

17 November 1990
13:30
Netherlands   5–0   Great Britain
17 November 1990
15:30
Pakistan   6–3   Germany

18 November 1990
13:30
Australia   2–1   Soviet Union
18 November 1990
15:30
Germany   1–0   Great Britain

19 November 1990
16:00
Netherlands   1–0   Soviet Union
19 November 1990
18:00
Australia   3–0   Pakistan

21 November 1990
16:00
Netherlands   4–4   Germany
21 November 1990
18:00
Australia   4–0   Great Britain

22 November 1990
16:00
Pakistan   4–1   Soviet Union
22 November 1990
18:00
Australia   3–2   Netherlands

24 November 1990
13:00
Great Britain   2–1   Pakistan
24 November 1990
15:00
Germany   3–0   Soviet Union

25 November 1990
11:30
Netherlands   2–1   Pakistan
25 November 1990
13:30
Great Britain   1–2   Soviet Union
25 November 1990
15:30
Australia   2–3   Germany

Statistics edit

Winners edit

 1990 Men's Champions Trophy winners 
 
Australia
Fifth title

Final standings edit

  1.   Australia
  2.   Netherlands
  3.   Germany
  4.   Pakistan
  5.   Soviet Union
  6.   Great Britain

Winning Squad edit

  Australia

External links edit