Mohammed Hussain
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Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's field hockey | ||
Representing India | ||
Olympic Games | ||
1936 Berlin | Team | |
Western Asiatic Games | ||
1934 Delhi |
Sayed Mohammed Hussain (1 October 1911 – 28 February 1977) was an Indian
He was described by Krishan Datta in the
He was a member of the Indian field hockey team, which won the gold medal. His position was full-back. He played four matches (of five matches played in total) including both the semifinal match against France and final match against Germany. He was then 24 years old.
He was mentioned a lot of times in the book The World's Hockey Champions 1936 by Mirza Masood, a teammate. He was the captain of the Prince of Manavadar's Team which toured New Zealand in 1938.
Practice matches for the Olympics
Practice matches in Northern India
India played her first game of the Indian tour against Delhi Select XI. India lost 1–4, even though Delhi XI was never considered a great team. The unexpected win is sometimes blamed on Sardar Mohammed Hussain for playing as inside-right, a position in which he had never played before. India won the next two matches against Jhansi Heroes and Bhopal State XI easily.
Practice matches in Northern India
India won the three matches against Madras Indians, All Madras and Bangalore without any problem. Hussain played in all these matches.
Pre-Olympic practice matches in Germany
India played eight practice matches before the Olympics. Hussain played in five of those matches. India remained undefeated.
Olympic matches
Hussain played against Hungary. He was rested in the next match against the US. India had easy wins against Japan and France later. He was part of both the matches. After the match he and the team were guests of the Berlin Mosque Committee with an invitation to take tea with the members. A long speech tracing the history of the Olympic Games and India's part therein was given by the President, and translated afterwards into the German and Arabic languages. India won the final against Germany's team 8–1.
After the Olympics
In his book The World's Hockey Champions 1936,
References
- ^ a b "The World's Hockey Champions 1936". bharatiyahockey.org.
- ^ "December 2007 Bulletin". bharatiyahockey.org.
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 19 January 2012.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "VSA".
External links
- Mohammed Hussain at databaseOlympics.com (archived)
- Mohammed Hussain at Olympics at Sports-Reference.com (archived)
- Mohammed Hussain at Olympedia
- The World's Hockey Champions 1936
- Munich and Leipzig