FEATURE | HOCKEY
The Netherlands’ Lidewij Welten takes on South Korea’s Cheon Eun-bi at the Riverbank Arena at London 2012 as the Dutch head for Olympic gold
Australia’s Matthew Swann raises the Champions Trophy in Melbourne
Making hockey stick
wanted to put a qualification system in place for the World Cup and the Olympic Games and this is effectively that,” says Kelly Fairweather, the South African former International Olympic Committee (IOC) executive who since 2010 has been chief executive of the FIH. “The idea was all the countries of the world could participate, so it was accessible to everybody.” The World League has been devised to run in two-year cycles. The prize at the end of the inaugural edition is a place in the 2014 World Cup, which will be hosted by the Netherlands, while the next World League in 2014/15 will help decide the teams competing in the Rio 2016 Olympic hockey tournament. It is a significant change, complicated initially by the need to fit a new, multiround national team competition around existing FIH tournaments and commercial contracts. The first two World Leagues will by no means be the finished product, with Fairweather and the FIH currently working through the detail of a commercial overhaul for the 2015 to 2018 period. “We’re looking at a whole new strategy for the events cycle from 2015 to 2018,” confirms Sarah
Hockey took less than a week after the Olympics to launch its bold new attempt to raise and broaden the profile of the sport. By the time of the next World Cup in 2014, the International Hockey Federation hopes to have met the ambitious target of having fully integrated its new World League product into an equally fresh commercial structure and an already crowded international calendar. By David Cushnan
O
nly soccer and athletics, one the world’s most popular sport and the other the standout event in any Olympic Games, sold more tickets than hockey at London 2012 – 630,000 in total when the final numbers were totted up. Raucous crowds from Britain and further afield – notably a colourful mob from the Netherlands, one of the world’s hockey strongholds – made the long walk each day to the far end of London’s Olympic Park and the Riverbank Arena, a temporary venue but one which provided a striking backdrop to the tournament thanks to the combination of lurid pink London 2012 décor and a revolutionary bright blue field.
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It was all a bit different, less than a week after London’s Olympic flame had been gently extinguished, when Prague staged the first of the first-round tournaments in a new national team competition which hockey’s governing body hopes will lend a greater structure to the international game in between its major events. Like many sports on the Olympic programme, hockey benefits from an injection of interest every four years but has traditionally struggled to maintain the momentum when the Games are over. World Cup tournaments, slotted neatly in the middle of Olympic cycles, provide another focal point, as does the wellestablished annual Champions Trophy,
but the lack of a straightforward hierarchy of events or narrative in between its showpiece occasions has stifled the sport’s development for some time. The International Hockey Federation (FIH) believes its new World League might be the solution. August’s inaugural tournament, which featured the likes of the Czech Republic, Belarus, Poland and Ukraine, was the first, low-key instalment in a two-year competition, with an admittedly complex format, which will ultimately determine the qualifiers for the next hockey World Cup in both the men’s and women’s game. “Before I even arrived at the FIH, the current president Leandro Negre
Pakistan v India at the Champions Trophy: one of hockey’s great rivalries
Massey, the FIH’s head of events and strategic planning, “so that’s commercial strategy, event strategy, marketing, everything we’re doing. The first cycle of World League still falls into some of the incumbent deals, incumbent sponsors.” Changing the sport’s commercial model will extend beyond the World League, too. Rabobank, for example, acquired the title sponsorship rights for the 2014 World Cup in the Netherlands – the men’s and women’s tournaments will both be staged in The Hague at the same time – as part of a wider deal with the Dutch local organising committee (LOC). The FIH intends to bring those rights in-house by the time the next World Cups are staged in 2018. “We have the current situation where we have an LOC in Holland who run it,” Fairweather says of the 2014 tournament, “and we basically have given them the majority of the rights. For 2018 we’ll have a completely different model and we will look to retain the majority of those and exploit those.” The KNHB – the Dutch hockey federation, which is preparing for the major public launch of its plans for the World Cup – has an agreement with
the FIH entitling it to 70 per cent of the tournament’s sponsorship rights. The FIH keeps the remainder as well as the international media rights, with the KNHB allowed to sell media rights in the Netherlands. Johan Wakkie, the KNHB’s managing director, confirms that the federation has paid the FIH a fee for the rights, arguing that “we think we have more to offer our sponsors internationally than the FIH has for itself”, a belief which appears to jar somewhat with the FIH’s plan for further centralisation of sponsorship and media rights. “We advised them [the FIH] to keep part of their sponsor rights but help the other countries to have rights in their own region, so they have more possibility to organise a tournament and to have some income,” Wakkie continues. “I can imagine that every year of the four years after [the 2014 World Cup] they make a new plan with every country and what you try to achieve is the sponsors of the country having some advertising rights, otherwise it’s not interesting for a country to participate.” Playing the sport’s biggest event in a mature hockey market such as the Netherlands is essential as far as
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