1982 Hockey World Cup|
| Host country | India |
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| City | Bombay |
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| Dates | 29 December 1981 – 12 January 1982 |
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| Teams | 12 (from 4 confederations) |
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| Venue | BHA Stadium |
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| Champions | Pakistan (3rd title) |
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| Runner-up | West Germany |
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| Third place | Australia |
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| Matches played | 42 |
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| Goals scored | 216 (5.14 per match) |
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| Top scorer(s) | Kaleemullah Khan
Rajinder Singh Sr.[1] (12 goals) |
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| ← 1978 (previous) |
(next) 1986 → |
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The 1982 Men's Hockey World Cup[2] was the fifth edition of the Hockey World Cup, the quadrennial world championship for men's national field hockey teams organized by the FIH. The event took place from 29 December 1981 to 12 January 1982 in Mumbai (Bombay), India.
12 teams competed in the tournament that Pakistan won for the third time by defeating West Germany 3–1 in the final. Pakistan remained unbeaten throughout the tournament, while the only defeat for the other finalist, West Germany, came at the hands of Pakistan in their pool match.[3]
Pools
Pools for the 1982 Men's Hockey World Cup as announced by the International Hockey Federation (FIH) were:
Results
All times are Indian Standard Time (UTC+05:30).
Preliminary round
Pool A
Source:
Pool B
Source:
(H) Hosts
India
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6–2
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Malaysia
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Fernandis 12', ?' Singh Sr. 37', 43', 63' Sodhi ?'
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Seong 20' Murugesan 30'
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Ninth to twelfth place classification
Cross-overs
Eleventh and twelfth place
Ninth and tenth place
Fifth to eighth place classification
Cross-overs
Seventh and eighth place
Fifth and sixth place
First to fourth place classification
Semi-finals
Third and fourth place
Final
Attendance: 35,000 Umpires: A. Renaud (FRA) H. Servetto (ARG)
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Final standings
Pakistan
West Germany
Australia
Netherlands
India
Soviet Union
New Zealand
Poland
England
Malaysia
Spain
Argentina
References
|
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| Tournament | |
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| Squads |
- 1998
- 2002
- 2006
- 2010
- 2014
- 2018
- 2023
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| Finals | |
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| Qualifier(s) |
- Rome 1977
- Kuala Lumpur 1981
- Barcelona 1985
- Madison 1989
- Poznán 1993
- Kuala Lumpur 1997
- Edinburgh 2001
- Changzhou 2006
- Lille–Invercargill–Quilmes 2009
- Rotterdam–Johor Bahru 2013
- London–Johannesburg 2017
- Cardiff 2021
- Santiago–Ismailia 2026
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