China won the tournament for the second time, defeating India 5–3 in the final.[2]South Korea finished in third place after defeating Japan 4–3 in the third place playoff.[3]
The tournament served as a qualifier for the 2010 FIH World Cup, with the top two teams qualifying.[4]
Competition format
The teams were divided into Pool A and Pool B. The competition comprised a single round-robin format in each pool, with each team playing each other once. At the conclusion of the pool stage, the top two teams advanced to the medal round, while the remaining teams played off for classifications.
Teams
The following teams participated in the tournament:
Umpires: Amy Hassick (USA) Carolina de la Fuente (ARG)
6 November 2009 17:30
South Korea
2–3
India
Kim Eun-S. 62' Park M. 68'
Report
Jasjeet 8', 37' Rani 55'
Umpires: Elena Eskina (RUS) Liu Xiaoying (CHN)
Third and fourth place
8 November 2009 15:30
Japan
3–4
South Korea
Komazawa 1' Nakashima 24' Ozawa 34'
Report
Han 10' Lee So. 18', 67' Kim B. 30'
Umpires: Carolina de la Fuente (ARG) Liu Xiaoying (CHN)
Final
8 November 2009 18:00
China
5–3
India
Fu 13' Ma Y. 18', 47' Zhao 27' De 51'
Report
Surinder 8' Mamta 47' Deepika 54'
Umpires: Yumiko Yasuoka (JPN) Elena Eskina (RUS)
Final standings
As per statistical convention in field hockey, matches decided in extra time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws.
Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Status
China
6
5
1
0
33
4
+29
16
Qualified for 2010 FIH World Cup
India
6
3
2
1
36
9
+27
11
South Korea
7
5
1
1
65
8
+57
16
FIH World Cup Qualifiers
4
Japan
7
4
1
2
48
7
+41
13
5
Malaysia
6
4
1
1
15
6
+9
13
6
Kazakhstan
7
4
0
3
16
32
−16
12
7
Hong Kong
7
2
1
4
7
25
−18
7
8
Singapore
6
1
0
5
2
34
−32
3
9
Chinese Taipei
6
2
1
3
9
29
−20
7
10
Thailand (H)
6
1
0
5
4
31
−27
3
11
Sri Lanka
6
0
0
6
2
52
−50
0
Source: FIH (H) Host.
Goalscorers
There were 237 goals scored in 35 matches, for an average of 6.77 goals per match.
12 goals
Keiko Miura
Kim Jong-Eun
Cheon Seul-Ki
11 goals
Gulnari Mangalieva
9 goals
Rani Rampal
Park Mi-Hyun
7 goals
Ma Yibo
Rika Komazawa
Lee Soo-Kyung
6 goals
Saba Anjum
Mamta Kharab
Han Hye-Lyoung
5 goals
Jasjeet Kaur Handa
Ai Murakami
Mie Nakashima
Kim Da-Rae
4 goals
Song Qingling
Zhao Yudiao
Surinder Kaur
Mazuki Arai
Mika Imura
Siti Othman
Kim Eun-Sil
3 goals
Li Hongxia
Barbara Helen
Deepika Thakur
Misaki Ozawa
Masako Sato
Juliani Din
Kannika Lewwrungroj
2 goals
Fu Baorong
De Jiaojiao
Gao Lihua
Xing Qian
Li Shuang
Ma Wei
Ren Ye
Chen Hsiu-Chin
Lu Pei-Ling
Yang Wan-Wen
Sachimi Iwao
Kana Nagayama
Yelena Belynova
Vera Domashneva
Norbaini Hashim
Norfaraha Hashim
Nursabrina Banuh
Kim Bo-Mi
Eum Mi-Young
Tak Se-Hui
Kim Young-Ran
Dinesha Ameeta Perera
1 goal
Liao Jiahui
Chen Chen-Tzu
Chia Jung-Chen
Sung Ming-Fang
Nicole Emmett
Christie-Anna Ozorio
Nicola-Jane Sawyer
Yi Sui-Suet
Monika Malik
Ritu Rani
Binita Toppo
Miyuki Nakagawa
Guliya Baissarina
Chitra Arumugam
Nadia Rahman
Nuraini Rashid
Siti Ruhani
Yoo Jung-Mi
Kim Ok-Ju
Sukanya Ritngam
References
^"Women Field Hockey 7th Asia Championship 2009 Bangkok (THA)". todor66.com. Todor66. Retrieved 13 October 2020. CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
^"China wins Women's Asia Cup". fih.ch. International Hockey Federation. Retrieved 13 October 2020. CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
^"News for 09 November 2009". fieldhockey.com. Retrieved 13 October 2020. CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
^"Qualification Criteria, Men's and Women's World Cups, 2010" (PDF). International Hockey Federation. September 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 September 2014. Retrieved 13 October 2020. CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)