- 1990 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy
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The 1990 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy took place from November 17 to November 25, 1990 in the State Hockey Centre in Melbourne, Australia. Participating nations were: titleholders Australia, Great Britain, Netherlands, Pakistan, Soviet Union and West Germany.
Results
Netherlands 5–0 Great Britain Pakistan 6–3 West Germany Australia 2–1 Soviet Union
West Germany 1–0 Great Britain Netherlands 1–0 Soviet Union Australia 3–0 Pakistan
Netherlands 4–4 West Germany Australia 4–0 Great Britain Pakistan 4–1 Soviet Union
Australia 3–2 Netherlands Great Britain 2–1 Pakistan West Germany 3–0 Soviet Union
Netherlands 2–1 Pakistan Soviet Union 2–1 Great Britain West Germany 3–2 Australia Final standings
Team Pts Pld W D L GF GA GD Australia 8 5 4 0 1 14 6 +8 Netherlands 7 5 3 1 1 14 8 +6 West Germany 7 5 3 1 1 14 12 +2 Pakistan 4 5 2 0 3 12 11 +1 Soviet Union 2 5 1 0 4 4 11 –7 Great Britain 2 5 1 0 4 3 13 –10 1990 Men's Champions Trophy Winners
Australia
Fifth titleAwards
Topscorer Gijs Weterings (NED) (9 goals) International field hockey FIH · Men's World Cup · Women's World Cup · Men's Junior World Cup · Women's Junior World Cup · Champions Trophy · Champions Challenge I · Champions Challenge II · Olympics · Commonwealth Games · All-Africa Games · Asian Games · Pan American Games · TeamsAsia ASHF – Asia CupAfrica AFHF – African Cup for NationsAmericas PAHF – Pan American CupOceania OHF – Oceania CupEurope Hockey Champions Trophy Men's Lahore 1978 · Karachi 1980 · Karachi 1981 · Amstelveen 1982 · Karachi 1983 · Karachi 1984 · Perth 1985 · Karachi 1986 · Amstelveen 1987 · Lahore 1988 · Berlin 1989 · Melbourne 1990 · Berlin 1991 · Karachi 1992 · Kuala Lumpur 1993 · Lahore 1994 · Berlin 1995 · Madras 1996 · Adelaide 1997 · Lahore 1998 · Brisbane 1999 · Amstelveen 2000 · Rotterdam 2001 · Cologne 2002 · Amstelveen 2003 · Lahore 2004 · Chennai 2005 · Terrassa 2006 · Kuala Lumpur 2007 · Rotterdam 2008 · Melbourne 2009 · Mönchengladbach 2010 · Auckland 2011 · Australia 2012 · Argentina 2014Women's Amstelveen 1987 · Frankfurt 1989 · Berlin 1991 · Amstelveen 1993 · Mar del Plata 1995 · Berlin 1997 · Brisbane 1999 · Amstelveen 2000 · Amstelveen 2001 · Macau 2002 · Sydney 2003 · Rosario 2004 · Canberra 2005 · Amstelveen 2006 · Quilmes 2007 · Mönchengladbach 2008 · Sydney 2009 · Nottingham 2010 · Amstelveen 2011 · Rosario 2012 · India 2014This field hockey competition-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.