The Netherlands won their sixth women's World Cup hockey crown
in Madrid of Spain on Sunday after the Dutch team defeated
Australia 3-1, Dutch media reported on Sunday.
The Dutch's victory stems from a second-half double from Maartje
Paumen and a classy finish from Sylvia Karres in the final of the
hockey World Cup in Madrid.
The thoroughly deserved victory broke a run of two final defeats
for the Dutch in the last two editions of the tournament and
allowed them to claim their first World Cup since 1990.
The Dutch were given further reason to celebrate when captain
Minke Booij was named World Player of the Year after the match.
Earlier, Argentina, who beat the Dutch after a penalty shoot-out
in the 2002 final, won the bronze medal when they trounced hosts
Spain 5-0.
Australia and the Netherlands played some fluent hockey in the
opening minutes at the Club de Campo but neither side was able to
create a clear threat on goal as the two defences stood firm.
The Netherlands stepped up a gear after a quarter of an hour and
Kim Lammers almost deflected a shot in at the near post, while
Eefke Mulder sent a powerful shot just wide moments later.
The Dutch were in control for the rest of the half and appeared
to take the lead just before halftime but the video umpire ruled
out the goal when it was decided a long-range shot from Mulder had
deflected off an Australian defender rather than Karres.
The Netherlands eventually broke the deadlock when Paumen sent a
fierce shot fizzing low into the net past keeper Rachel Imison from
a penalty corner five minutes after the break.
Australia got back on level terms seven minutes later when
Rebecca Sanders fired home a penalty stroke after Dutch defender
Janneke Schopman blocked a goal-bound shot on the line with her
leg.
However, the Netherlands kept up their relentless pressure and
Karres restored their lead with a brilliant reverse-stick finish
after bursting into the "D" 20 minutes into the second half. She
finished as tournament top scorer with six goals.
Paumen then made sure of victory with her second three minutes
from the final whistle, an expertly taken penalty stroke that was
awarded after an Australian defender had blocked a Karres shot on
the line with her body.
(Xinhua News Agency October 9, 2006)