Review Women's Water Polo: Spain beat Australia 8-6 for Gold Medal at Home
Review Women's Water Polo: Spain beat Australia 8-6
On Friday evening Spain beat Australia 8-6 to become the first host country to win WCh gold in Women's Water Polo.
Spain's best WCh final rank before this year's final was a seventh place in 2007.
Spain's best WCh final rank before this year's final was a seventh place in 2007.
London 2012 Olympic Games silver medal winners Spain now join a select group of countries who have won either gold or silver at both the Olympics and the World Championships. They are Australia, Greece, Italy, Netherlands and the United States.
Australia also improved on their London 2012 performance. They claimed bronze at the 2012 Olympics and now seize the silver medal at Barcelona 2013.
For Australia this silver medal is their best achievement since claiming silver at the 2007 World Championships.
Earlier today Hungary beat Russia in the bronze medal match to collect their fourth WCh medal in women's water polo and their first since 2005 when they won gold.
Spain completed the business it did not quite finish last year at the London Olympic Games by defeating Australia 8-6 in the gold-medal final of the FINA Women’s Water Polo World Championships at the Bernat Picornell Pool.
It was silver behind United States of America in London while Australia claimed bronze. Tonight it was a well-deserved gold as the best team at these championships and now the top nation on the planet for women’s water polo.
It was victory for head coach Miki Oca and his resolve and faith in his players, led by the indefatigable Jennifer Pareja, voted the championship’s Most Valuable Player.
Throw is a startling 11-save effort by goalkeeper Laura Ester and she was undoubtedly the best in her class in Barcelona.
Spain was confident from the start and managed to out-defend the Aussie Stingers who looked nervous and times and never got into high-scoring mode.
Australia lost star Rowena Webster on three majors before the third break and others followed in a match where both teams received 15 major fouls apiece. Australia had a penalty blocked by Ester and an unexpected unforced error by Stingers goalkeeper Kelsey Wakefield — who was pushing Ester for the best in Barcelona — proved critical when just one behind. Roser Tarrago shot from near halfway and Wakefield tried unsuccessfully to collect with one hand.
Never mind, the Spanish defence proved the winner, disrupting Australia at every stage of the match.
In the bronze-medal clash, played as the second match of the first session, Hungary won the first medal for its country (the men will play Montenegro in the men’s final on Saturday) with a 10-8 margin over Russia, who led 3-1 during the first quarter.
Hungary started shooting go-ahead goals late in the second period, meaning Russia had to play catch-up water polo. Hungary kept 19-goal Ekaterina Prokofyeva scoreless and Russia kept 18-goal Barbara Bujka off the scoresheet. Her back-up centre forward, though, Ildiko Toth, struck three times.
In the play-off for fifth and sixth, scheduled as the curtain-raiser for the gold-medal final, Olympic and World Cup champion United States of America beat outgoing world champion Greece 15-12 in a penalty shootout after the match was tied at 10-10 by fulltime and 11-11 after two extra periods.
USA sent in all four shots in the shootout while Greece missed two. The pair played in the same group and USA won that encounter 12-8. USA stretched its lead over Greece in World Championship play to seven and the win was one place better that Shanghai 2011 when it lost by five goals to Australia.
In the play-off for seventh and eighth, Netherlands turned a 5-1 opening quarter into a 12-9 victory with Lieke Klaassen scoring three penalty goals to become the championship’s highest goal-scorer with 25. It was a rematch of the 7-8 classification match at Shanghai 2011, which the Dutch also won.
Immediately after the match, Dutch gold medallists from the Beijing Olympics — Iefke van Belkum and Biurakn Hakhverdian — announced their retirements. This leaves just goalkeeper Ilse van de Meijden and Smit as the remaining gold medallists.
The Media All Star team was named with the championship’s Most Valuable Player, Jennifer Pareja (ESP), leading the group. She was joined by the best goalkeeper, Spain’s Laura Ester, centre forward Barbara Bujka (HUN) and field players Rita Keszthelyi (HUN), Lieke Klaassen (NED), Jennifer Pareja (ESP), Ekaterina Prokofyeva (RUS) and Rowena Webster (AUS).
Final classifications:
1. Spain
2. Australia
3. Hungary
4. Russia
5. United States of America
6. Greece
7. Netherlands
8. Canada
9. China
10. Italy
11. Kazakhstan
12. New Zealand
13. Great Britain
14. Brazil
15. South Africa
16. Uzbekistan
Awards (as selected by media representatives):
Most Valuable Player: Jennifer Pareja (ESP).
Best Goalkeeper: Laura Ester (ESP).
Highest goal-scorer: Lieke Klaassen (NED) 25
Media All Star Team:
1. Spain
2. Australia
3. Hungary
4. Russia
5. United States of America
6. Greece
7. Netherlands
8. Canada
9. China
10. Italy
11. Kazakhstan
12. New Zealand
13. Great Britain
14. Brazil
15. South Africa
16. Uzbekistan
Awards (as selected by media representatives):
Most Valuable Player: Jennifer Pareja (ESP).
Best Goalkeeper: Laura Ester (ESP).
Highest goal-scorer: Lieke Klaassen (NED) 25
Media All Star Team:
Goalkeeper: Laura Ester (ESP)
Centre Forward: Barbara Bujka (HUN)
Field Players: Rita Keszthelyi (HUN)
Lieke Klaassen (NED)
Jennifer Pareja (ESP)
Ekaterina Prokofyeva (RUS)
Rowena Webster (AUS)
Centre Forward: Barbara Bujka (HUN)
Field Players: Rita Keszthelyi (HUN)
Lieke Klaassen (NED)
Jennifer Pareja (ESP)
Ekaterina Prokofyeva (RUS)
Rowena Webster (AUS)
Highlights from the women’s water polo medal winners’ press conference staged at the Bernat Picornell Pool on Saturday night:
SPAIN:
Jennifer Pareja (ESP):
"We know that we could not let go this final, that we had to play our best. For me the key is that we enjoy playing and all of us wanted to win. Playing here at home is the best atmosphere.
"I have played the last World Championship (in Barcelona) in 2003 and now and it has been really different. Women's water polo has changed a lot. In the past there was a huge difference between men's water polo and women's water polo and now they're in the same level. In BCN 2003 I was really young and I enjoyed it a lot. Now, in 2013, what we get is awesome.” Miki Oca (ESP Head Coach):
"It's a great happiness getting the World Championship at home with such a wonderful team. We have an amazing generation of players, all of them working together. What we did this championship we practised in training every day. Although most of our players are young, they are mature and confident. We've won this championship just thanks to the work they do every day. In Shanghai, we started working and it was a part of the way. We have a talented group with a winning mentality.”
AUSTRALIA:
Bronwen Knox (AUS):
“It´s been very hard to play with this crowd cheering so loudly, it made our communication more difficult. But it´s so nice to compete in this environment. We have not seen such a big crowd since the Olympics. We are not used to it. We only became a complete team in April. We have many new girls, although we are very pleased with the silver medal, there is a lot to be worked on and built for future challenges.”
HUNGARY:
Andras Meresz (HUN Head Coach):
“This if the first bronze medal for the Hungary women´s water polo team so I am definitely not disappointed. We are working step by step to progress in the future. I am very happy with bronze.”
SPAIN:
Jennifer Pareja (ESP):
"We know that we could not let go this final, that we had to play our best. For me the key is that we enjoy playing and all of us wanted to win. Playing here at home is the best atmosphere.
"I have played the last World Championship (in Barcelona) in 2003 and now and it has been really different. Women's water polo has changed a lot. In the past there was a huge difference between men's water polo and women's water polo and now they're in the same level. In BCN 2003 I was really young and I enjoyed it a lot. Now, in 2013, what we get is awesome.” Miki Oca (ESP Head Coach):
"It's a great happiness getting the World Championship at home with such a wonderful team. We have an amazing generation of players, all of them working together. What we did this championship we practised in training every day. Although most of our players are young, they are mature and confident. We've won this championship just thanks to the work they do every day. In Shanghai, we started working and it was a part of the way. We have a talented group with a winning mentality.”
AUSTRALIA:
Bronwen Knox (AUS):
“It´s been very hard to play with this crowd cheering so loudly, it made our communication more difficult. But it´s so nice to compete in this environment. We have not seen such a big crowd since the Olympics. We are not used to it. We only became a complete team in April. We have many new girls, although we are very pleased with the silver medal, there is a lot to be worked on and built for future challenges.”
HUNGARY:
Andras Meresz (HUN Head Coach):
“This if the first bronze medal for the Hungary women´s water polo team so I am definitely not disappointed. We are working step by step to progress in the future. I am very happy with bronze.”