There are 19,000 security personnel and 200 commandos in and around the World Cup Hockey centre in Delhi, India.
http://www.foxsports.com.au/story/0,8659,26788180-23218,00.html
The draw for the World Cup of Hockey consists of two pools of six teams with the results with one round to play are as follows:
http://www.thegeekserver.com/blog/2010/03/01/hockey-world-cup-2010-fixtures-and-results.html/353
Pool 1 -
Round 1
England 3 – Australia 2
India 3 – Pakistan 2
Spain 4 – South Africa 2
Round 2
England 6 – South Africa 4
Pakistan 2 – Spain 1
Australia 5 – India 2
Round 3
Australian 12 – South Africa 0
England 5 – Pakistan 2
Spain 5 – India 2
Round 4
Australia 2 – Spain 0
South Africa 4 – Pakistan 3
England 3 – India 2
Although there remains one round to play with Spain playing England, Pakistan meets Australia and India plays South Africa, England and Australia are through to the semi-final round.
Pool 2
Round 1
Germany 2 – South Korea 2
Netherlands 3 – Argentina 0
New Zealand 3 – Canada 2
Round 2
Germany 6 – Canada 0
South Korea 2 – Argentina 1
Netherlands 3 – New Zealand 1
Round 3
New Zealand 2 – South Korea 1
Netherlands 6 – Canada 0
Germany 4 – Argentina 3
Round 4
South Korea 9 – Canada 2
Argentina 1 – New Zealand 0
Netherlands 2 – Germany 2
With one round to play, New Zealand meets Germany, Netherlands clash with Korea and Canada plays Argentina. The mathematics has the Netherlands through to the semi-final round with the second team in the pool still up for grabs, between New Zealand, Germany and Korea.
Baptist minister Mark Tronson, the author of five books on field hockey says that his article on the 2008 Beijing Olympic Kookaburra Bronze Medallist Andrew Smith was ranked within the top 25 articles of the decade published in Christian Today Australia.
http://au.christiantoday.com/article/andrew-smith-gets-an-olympic-bronze/7414.htm