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Zafar Iqbal (field hockey)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Indian field hockey player
For other people with the same name, seeZafar Iqbal (disambiguation).

Zafar Iqbal
Personal information
Born (1956-06-12)12 June 1956 (age 69)
Hargawan,Bihar Sharif,Bihar, India
Playing positionHalfback
National team
YearsTeamCapsGoals
1977–19??India

Zafar Iqbal (born 12 June 1956) is a former Indianfield hockey player and captain of theIndia national team.[1]

Early life

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Zafar Iqbal was born on 12 June 1956 to Mohammed Shahabuddin Ahmed, a professor in theAligarh Muslim University (AMU), and Najmun Nisa, as the third of their five children. He was born in Hargawan, a village inBihar Sharif, in the Indian State ofBihar. His family moved toAligarh,Uttar Pradesh where he was brought up.[2] Iqbal started out playingfootball as a child, before taking to hockey in 1969–70 encouraged by his father's colleague and hockey enthusiast, Professor Khan. He was mentored by Swami Jagan Nath, hockey coach of the AMU at the time and manager of the India national team during the1936 Berlin Olympics. Alongside hockey, Iqbal pursued a degree incivil engineering from AMU, graduating in 1978 with 74 percent marks.[3]

Professional career

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Iqbal was selected for the combined university trials after being selected on back of good performances during the inter-university games; Zafar playing for AMU. Iqbal good performances against the India national team which included scoring a goal againstLeslie Fernandez prompted his selection to the national team for its tour of Netherlands in 1977.[3][4] Iqbal till that point had always played in the left-in position, but was asked by coachKishan Lal to play left-out becauseSurinder Singh Sodhi played in the former.[3]

Iqbal played at theAsian Games in 1978 atBangkok and was the captain of the team at New Delhi in 1982, winning the silver medal in both. The crowning glory of his illustrious career in hockey came to him in 1980 when he represented India at the Moscow Olympics and brought home the gold medal after a long hiatus. Further, he had the honour of carrying theIndian Tricolour of the Indian squad at the opening ceremony of the Los Angeles Olympics 1984. He also won the bronze medal for the country at the Champion's Trophy 1982 in Holland and won many other tournaments against Pakistan, Malaysia, Australia, New Zealand, West Germany and other European nations.

Achievements

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His extraordinary game as “Left Out” in the Indian blue jersey with the number 11 embossed at the back is a glorious part of the history of Indian Hockey. After hanging his hockey sticks he immersed himself in coaching as the Chief National Coach, head Coach and National Selector for the Indian hockey squad. The team coached by him won the silver medal at the Asian Games in Hiroshima in 1994.

Mr. Zafar Iqbal is a strong proponent of hard work, team spirit, camaraderie and symbiotic partnership amongst team members. He stresses upon the adoption of modern innovations like sports physiology and psychology in Indian sports administration. He also believes that universities are the nurseries for talent, honing them to represent the country and he has contributed time and again to AMU, making it a nurturing ground for budding talent. Widely and rightly acknowledged by the print and electronic media as the ‘Gentleman of Hockey.

The country conferred Mr. Zafar Iqbal with the highest honour for a sportsman, the “Arjuna Award” in 1983. In 2012, the President of India honoured him with the “Padma Shri” for his invaluable services and the U. P. Government gave him the highest citizen award of the state, “Yash Bharti” in 1994. He was felicitated at the ‘Golden Greats’ platform by ‘Hockey India’ along with 34 other Olympic Gold Medalists in 2012. In recognition of his indispensable services to the nation, Aligarh Nagar Nigam has befittingly named a road after him and in 2013, in honour of his commitment to the revival of hockey at AMU, the university presented him with the D.Litt. Honoris Causa at its 60th Annual Convocation.

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Padma Shri is a recognition for Indian hockey: Zafar". Top News. 25 January 2012. Archived fromthe original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved23 September 2013.
  2. ^Raipalli, Dr Manjunath Sahadevappa (14 April 2018).A Case Study on Contribution of Karnataka Hockey Players towards the Development of Indian Hockey. Lulu.com. p. 20.ISBN 978-1-387-71237-3. Retrieved27 May 2022.
  3. ^abcBhushan, Aditya (21 July 2021)."Zafar Iqbal: Olympic gold medalist, civil engineer and Indian Airlines executive director".Sportskeeda. Retrieved27 May 2022.
  4. ^Barua, Suhrid (4 August 2016)."Rio Olympics 2016: Ireland will be tough Test for India, feels former Indian hockey captain Zafar Iqbal".Sportskeeda. Retrieved27 May 2022.

External links

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Olympic Games
Preceded byFlagbearer for India
Los Angeles 1984
Succeeded by
India squads
Recipients ofPadma Shri in Sports
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
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