Hyderabad, Telangana – The Indian women’s hockey team survived a massive scare on Monday night, fighting back twice to earn a 2-2 draw against a fearless Scotland side in the FIH Hockey World Cup 2026 Qualifiers at G.M.C. Balayogi Hockey Ground. The result keeps India top of Pool B with four points from two matches, but the manner of the performance has raised fresh questions about the team’s ability to handle pressure against lower-ranked opponents.
India now lead the group only on goal difference, with both teams locked on four points. Scotland, ranked 17th in the world – 11 places below India – showed they belong on the same pitch.
Scotland Strike First, India Stumble Early
The tone was set in the sixth minute. A rare lapse in India’s defensive line gifted Scotland a penalty corner, and Heather McEwan made no mistake, calmly deflecting past Bichu Devi Khari to silence the home crowd.
India looked rattled. Their usual high press was missing. Passes went astray. For the first 15 minutes, Scotland dictated play with confidence that belied their ranking.
Navneet and Sunelita Flip the Script
The hosts finally woke up in the second quarter.
Navneet Kaur, playing with the weight of a nation on her shoulders, produced a moment of pure class in the 18th minute. After another penalty corner broke down, the ball fell loose in the circle. Navneet didn’t panic. She took one touch, spun, and hammered it past Jessica Buchanan to make it 1-1.
Eleven minutes later, 19-year-old Sunelita Toppo announced herself again. A penalty corner rebound struck the post, rolled across the goal-line, and Toppo was quickest to react – sliding in to poke home and send the stadium into raptures. India led 2-1 at halftime.
Sunelita now has three goals in two qualifier matches. The teenager from Odisha is rapidly becoming India’s most dangerous weapon.
Scotland Refuse to Fold
If India thought the job was done, Scotland had other ideas.
Just three minutes into the third quarter, Heather McEwan turned provider. Her perfectly weighted pass found Fiona Burnet unmarked at the far post, and the Scottish captain finished with composure that would have made any top team proud.
From that moment, Scotland seized control. They won possession battles, pressed high, and restricted India to scraps. For long spells, the hosts were chasing shadows.
India managed to win four penalty corners in quick succession late in the third quarter, but poor execution and brilliant goalkeeping from Buchanan kept the score level.
Late Drama, No Winner
The final quarter was end-to-end chaos.
Baljeet Kaur made a sensational run from midfield in the 55th minute, beating three defenders before firing a reverse shot that Buchanan somehow kept out. Two minutes later, India earned their ninth penalty corner of the night – but again, the Scottish defence stood firm.
India attempted 18 circle entries in the second half. Only two produced shots on target.
When the final whistle blew, the players sank to the turf – some in exhaustion, others in frustration. This felt less like a point gained and more like two points dropped.
Current Pool B Standings
| Team | Played | Won | Draw | Lost | GF | GA | GD | Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| India | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 6 | 3 | +3 | 4 |
| Scotland | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 5 | 3 | +2 | 4 |
| Wales | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 | -2 | 0 |
| Poland | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 4 | -3 | 0 |
India’s next match is against Wales on Wednesday at 7:30 PM IST. A win would almost certainly secure their place in the knockout stage – but after Monday’s display, nothing can be taken for granted.
The Scotland draw is a wake-up call. This Indian team has talent in abundance – Navneet’s experience, Sunelita’s fearlessness, Savita Punia’s leadership from the bench – but they are yet to find consistency against teams that refuse to be intimidated by reputation.
For the thousands who filled the Balayogi Stadium and millions watching at home, one thing is clear: the road to World Cup 2026 qualification just got a lot bumpier.
What did you make of that performance? Was it a valuable point earned against a brave Scotland side, or a missed opportunity that exposes deeper problems? Drop your thoughts below – the Indian team needs to hear from you right now.
