The World Cup was born in a time of war....
The move to have a competition at world level, in between the Olympic
years, was first initiated in 1969 through a joint proposal by India and Pakistan at an FIH Council meeting on March 30,
and approved by the FIH on October, 26, 1969.
The person who brought this concept to reality was Air Marshal Noor Khan, the then president of the Pakistan Hockey
Federation. He got a 61 cm. high trophy made of gold and silver, and
formally presented the trophy to the FIH on March 27, 1971.
On that very same day of March 27, 1971, another momentous event was
happening in East Pakistan. The military ruler of Pakistan, General Yahya
Khan, ordered an army crackdown, unleashing an orgy of looting, rape,
kidnappings and murder. Dhaka, the capital of East Pakistan, was in flames.
Pakistan was the original venue for the inaugural
World Cup, which was proposed to be held in October 1971. However,
at that time, war clouds hovered in the subcontinent. The
Pakistani cricketer Abdul Hafeez Kardar led a campaign against India's
participation in the hockey World Cup, threatening to burn down the stadium if
the Indian team played. An Indian Airlines Fokker Friendship aircraft was
hijacked to Lahore airport, where it was burnt.
With Pakistan unable to host
the tournament under such volatile conditions, the honour of organising the first World Cup
went to the city of
Barcelona, at the Real Club de Polo grounds.
Less than two months after the inaugural World Cup, war broke out in
the Indian subcontinent, Bangladesh was liberated, and Pakistan was
dismembered.
The landmasses of West Pakistan and East Pakistan, isolated from each other by more than 1000 miles of geography,
with no common linkages
throughout history, sharing neither language nor culture, would now be
countries in their own right. The 2-nation theory that religion alone
could be the basis for creating a country, was shattered for ever.
Eight-time Olympic champions India have won the World Cup only once, in
1975 at Kuala Lumpur. India came 3rd in the first World Cup, 2nd in the second World Cup
and 1st in the third World Cup. Since 1975, India has not won any medal in
the World Cup, failing to even reach the semi-finals, with one miserable
performance after another.In contrast, neighbouring Pakistan has gone from strength to strength, playing
in 6 finals of the 9 World Cup tournaments held so far, winning a record four times and coming
runners up twice.
The following pages will chronicle the saga of India in the World
Cup.