Tokyo 2020: Newark's Shona McCallin and GB's hopes of defending their Olympic hockey title are over

they were beaten 5-1 by the Netherlands in the Semi Final

Shona McCallin in Rio in 2016
Author: PA, Tokyo, Julie CastonPublished 4th Aug 2021
Last updated 4th Aug 2021

Great Britain's reign as Olympic women's hockey champions ended at the semi-final stage in Tokyo as they were crushed 5-1 by Holland.

The Dutch emphatically avenged defeat in the 2016 Rio final, when Team GB goalkeeper Maddie Hinch's heroics during a penalty shoot-out ensured gold medal glory.

The last-four clash at Oi Hockey Stadium was their second meeting of the Tokyo tournament, with Holland having posted a 1-0 pool win six days ago.

And Hollie Pearne-Webb's team once again came unstuck as Holland never looked back following two goals in just over a minute during the second quarter when Felice Albers and Marloes Keetels struck.

Albers and Maria Verschoor added further goals during the third quarter, leaving Britain reeling from conceding four times in 19 damaging minutes, before Giselle Ansley netted a consolation, but Frederique Matla added a fifth late on.

It means that Hinch and company will play for the bronze medal at Oi Hockey Stadium on Friday, against Argentina or India.

Britain are a much-changed outfit since their success in Brazil - only Hinch and five others who were part of that triumph have made the trip to Japan - and the aim now is another podium finish.

Whether they can bounce back in 48 hours from such a drubbing, though, remains to be seen.

Chances proved few and far between during a cagey first quarter, with neither goalkeeper forced into a save until the closing seconds.

Hinch then reacted sharply from a penalty corner, twice blocking shots as it ended 0-0 following the opening 15 minutes.

Holland, though, rocked their opponents through a blistering start to the second quarter as they scored twice in rapid succession.

Albers pounced for the opener, applying a clinical finish that left Hinch stranded, then before Britain could regroup their opponents struck again when Keetels found the target from distance.

It was a huge double setback for the defending champions and, although they finished the second quarter strongly in terms of possession and territory, they faced a sizeable task to claw things back after trailing 2-0 at half-time.

Britain had to score next, but they fell further behind just two minutes after the restart.

The Dutch forced a penalty corner, and the ball was neatly deflected beyond Hinch's reach by Verschoor to give Holland a 3-0 lead.

It had all unravelled with indecent haste for the 2016 gold medallists, and confidence appeared to drain from them in the morning heat as Holland exerted a vice-like grip on the game.

Albers then scored her second goal, finishing brilliantly after losing her marker and leaving Britain 4-0 behind, before Ansley pulled one back entering the final quarter.

The damage had been done, with hopes of a successful title defence shattered beyond repair, although a podium finish can still be claimed

Meanwhile Shona McCallin wins her 100th international cap. The Team will fight for bronze on Friday 6 August, with their opponent to be decided after second semi-final at 11:00 BST.

Here's a list of the medal winners so far:

Jason Kenny - Gold

Jason Kenny became the most decorated Olympic cyclist of any nation, with gold in the men's keirin, taking his Olympic total to seven gold and two silver medals

Joe Choong - Gold

Joe Choong won gold in the modern pentathlon

Lauren Price - Gold

Lauren Price won gold in the Women's middleweight boxing

Galal Yafai - Gold

Birmingham's Galal Yafai celebrates after winning gold in the flyweight boxing at the Tokyo Olympics

Kate French - Gold

Team GB's Kate French wins gold in the modern pentathlon

Laura Kenny and Katie Archibald - Gold

Scottish cyclist Katie Archibald has claimed a gold medal winning the women's Madison at Tokyo 2020 alongside Laura Kenny who becomes the first woman in British history to win gold at three consecutive games. It also makes Kenny Team GB's most decorated female athlete, with six medals overall.

Matt Walls - Gold

Matt Walls won a gold in the track cycling, He won the Omnium event

Ben Maher - Gold

Ben Maher took gold on his horse in the Individual jumping

Hannah Mills and Eilidh McIntyre - Gold

Team GB's Hannah Mills and Eilidh McIntyre have won Gold in sailing's 470-class at the Tokyo Olympics.

Sailing - Gold & Silver

Team GB took home two golds and a silver within a few hours in the 3rd August. Giles Scott successfully defended his Gold from Rio in the Finn class, Stuart Bithell and Dylan Fletcher took gold in the 49er class and Anna Burnet and John Gimson took silver in the Nacra

Individual eventing - Silver

On the same day Tom McEwan won gold in team eventing, he also won a silver in the individual event!

Team Eventing - Gold

Laura Collett (pictured), Tom McEwen and Oliver Townend take Gold in the equestrian team eventing.

Charlotte Worthington - Gold

Charlotte Worthington from Chorlton in Manchester won the gold medal in the BMX freestyle in Tokyo - landing a historic trick in the final. She completed 360-degree flip in her second run - the first ever by a woman in competition.

Mixed 4x100 metres medley relay - Gold

Kathleen Dawson. James Guy (pictured), Adam Peaty and Anna Hopkin stormed to victory in the inaugural mixed 4x100 metres medley relay final in a new world record time at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre.

Max Whitlock - Gold

Max Whitlock's successful defence of his Olympic pommel horse title meant he took home the Gold

Mixed Triathlon relay - Gold

Jess Learmonth, Jonathan Brownlee, Georgia Taylor-Brown and Alex Yee took Gold in the Mixed Triathlon relay

Bethany Shriever - Gold

Bethany Shriever won Gold as she took the women's BMX racing title for Team GB. This is the first year Team GB has won any medals in the sport since it was introduced to the games in 2008.

Men's 4x200m Freestyle Relay - Gold

Duncan Scott, Matthew Richards, James Guy and Tom Dean convincingly won the Men's 4x200m Freestyle Relay for Team GB.

Tom Pidcock - Gold

Tom Pidcock, from Leeds, won gold in the cross country mountain biking.

Tom Daley & Matty Lee - Gold

Tom Daley, from Plymouth, and Leeds' Matty Lee also added to Team GB's medal count with gold in the ten-metre-synchronised diving, Daley finally winning Olympic gold after two bronze medals.

Tom Dean - Gold

Maidenhead's Tom Dean produced the performance of his life in the final of the men's 200 metres freestyle, clocking a national record time of one minute and 44.22 seconds to pip Tokyo 2020 flatmate Duncan Scott in a historic one-two for Team GB.

Adam Peaty - Gold

The first gold Team GB won was for Adam Peaty, from Uttoxeter, who created history by becoming the first British swimmer to retain an Olympic title.

Men's Madison - Silver

Ethan Hayter and Matthew Walls take silver in the Men's Madison

Men's 4x100m relay - Silver

There was only a hundredth of a second separating Team GB and the Gold medal, which went to Italy. Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake, Richard Kilty, Chijindu Ujah, Zharnel Hughes were in the team in the final. This medal could be set to be lost though as CJ Ujah's sample was found to have a banned substance in it, which could mean disqualification for Team GB.

Keely Hodkinson - Silver

Wigan's Keely Hodgkinson claimed a stunning 800 metres silver medal at the Olympics as the rising star smashed Kelly Holmes' British record. The 19-year-old clocked one minute 55.88 seconds to finish behind winner Athing Mu of the USA in Tokyo.

Ben Whittaker - Silver

Team GB's Benjamin Whittaker has won Silver in boxing's light heavyweight division at the Tokyo Olympics.

Men's Team Sprint - Silver

Jack Carlin, Jason Kenny and Ryan Owens took Silver in the Men's team sprint. It leaves Jason Kenny as the most decorated British Olympian of all time alongside Sir Bradley Wiggins.

Pat McCormack - Silver

Pat McCormack took Silver in the men's welterweight boxing

Team pursuit - Silver

Team GB broke a world record to get to the final of the women's team pursuit but couldn't quite beat the German team, who also broke the world record again 10 minutes after the Brits.

Weightlifting - Silver

Emily Campbell is the first British female weightlifter to win an Olympic medal - she got a silver in the women's +87 kg event.

Men's 4 × 100 m medley relay - Silver

Luke Greenbank, James Guy, Duncan Scott, Adam Peaty won Silver in the men's 4x100m medley relay. It made Duncan Scott has become one of Britain's most successful Olympians of all time taking four medals at a single Olympic Games.

Swimming 200m Individual Medley - Silver

Duncan Scott won his third medal of the Olympics in the 200m Individual Medley, taking Silver.

BMX Racing - Silver

Kye Whyte from London made BMX history for Great Britain on Friday morning as he won our first-ever medal in the BMX events. Moments after he won Silver, Beth Shriever took gold in her BMX race event

Georgia Taylor-Brown - Silver

Manchester's Georgia Taylor-Brown overcame a puncture to win silver for Great Britain in a wet women's triathlon at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.


Taylor-Brown went into the race as the reigning world champion and one of the favourites for the title but had to play catch-up on the 10 kilometres run after getting a flat tyre on the last lap of the bike leg.

Men's Quadruple Sculls Team - Silver

Harry Leask, Angus Groom, Tom Barras and Jack Beaumont celebrate Team GB's first rowing medal at Tokyo 2020. They won silver in the Men's Quadruple Sculls.

Mallory Franklin - Silver

Windsor canoeist Mallory Franklin won Team GB's 18th medal after taking silver in the women's single slalom, also known as the women's C1 event

Lauren WIlliams - Silver

Lauren Williams, from Blackwood in Wales, won Silver in Taekwondo at Tokyo 2020.

Bradley Sinden - Silver

Bradley Sinden, from Doncaster, won Silver for his Taekwondo performance at Tokyo 2020.

Duncan Scott - Silver

Duncan Scott became Scotland's first medallist as he got the silver in the men's 200 metres freestyle narrowly missing out to teammate Tom Dean for the gold

Alex Yee - Silver

Lewisham's Alex Lee won silver in triathlon at Tokyo 2020

Josh Kerr - Bronze

Josh Kerr took home bronze in the men's 1500 metres

Tom Daley - Bronze

Tom Daley diving in the final of the 10m platform at the Tokyo Olympics. The 27-year-old from Plymouth won the bronze.

Women's 4 × 100 metres relay - Bronze

Asha Philip, Imani-Lara Lansiquot, Dina Asher-Smith and Daryll Neita took bronze in the women's 4 × 100 metres relay

Jack Carlin - Bronze

Jack Carlin took Bronze in the Men's cycling sprint

Holly Bradshaw - Bronze

A Bronze medal for Holly Bradshaw in the Pole Vault

Women's Hockey - Bronze

Team GB's Hockey team took the Bronze

Sky Brown - Bronze

13-year-old Sky Brown won Bronze for Team GB in the skateboarding park event.

Liam Heath - Bronze

Team GB's Liam Heath has won Bronze in the final of the men's 200m kayak.

Jack Laugher - Bronze

Jack Laugher, gold and silver medallist in Rio took home the bronze in Tokyo after coming third in the men's 3m springboard diving.

Declan Brooks - Bronze

Declan Brooks won a bronze in the BMX freestyling

Frazer Clarke - Bronze

Team GB's Frazer Clarke celebrates after winning bronze in the Men's Super Heavy (+91kg) boxing.

Karriss Artingstall - Bronze

Karriss Artingstall won Bronze in the women's featherweight boxing

Emma Wilson - Bronze

Emma Wilson took Bronze in the Sailing in the women's RS:X

Mens Eight Rowing - Bronze

Great Britain won the bronze medal in the men's eight final at the Tokyo Olympics. The crew made up of Josh Bugajski, Jacob Dawson, Oliver Wynne-Griffith,Tom George, Mohamed Sbihi, Charles Elwes, James Rudkin and Tom Ford came third, behind gold medallists New Zealand, with Germany taking second.

200m Backstroke - Bronze

Luke Greenbank won bronze for Team GB in the Mens 200m Backstroke finals at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre.

Bryony Page - Bronze

Team GB's Bryony Page came third in the final of the women's trampolining. She won Bronze.

Matthew Coward-Holley - Bronze

Matthew Coward-Holley from Chelmsford won a Bronze for Team GB in the Men's trap shooting.

Charlotte Dujardin - bronze

By taking bronze in the individual dressage event Charlotte Dujardin has become Britain's most successful female Olympian. She now has six Olympic medals across three games

Dressage team - bronze

Charlotte Dujardin from Leighton Buzzard has claimed her 5th Olympic Medal today. She earned a bronze in the team final alongside Carl Hester from Guernsey and Charlotte Fry.

Women’s team gymnastics - bronze

Great Britain claimed the first women's team gymnastics medal since 1928 as they delivered an extraordinary bronze at the Tokyo Olympics.
The team included Slough gymnast 18-year-old Amelie Morgan, 16-year-old twins Jennifer and Jessica Gadirova, from Aylesbury and Alice Kinsella who was born in Essex but lives in Birmingham.

Bianca Walkden - Bronze

Bianca Walkden from Liverpool claimed a bronze in Taekwondo at Tokyo 2020

Chelsee Giles - Bronze

Chelsee Giles, from Coventry, won Team GB's first medal for Judo. She won Bronze.

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