| Tournament details | |
|---|---|
| Teams | 42 (from 5 confederations) | 
| Venue(s) | 10 (in 10 host cities) | 
| Final positions | |
| Champions |  South Korea  India  Spain | 
| Tournament statistics | |
| Matches played | 130 | 
| Goals scored | 801 (6.16 per match) | 
The 2018–19 Women's Hockey Series was the inaugural season of the Hockey Series, a field hockey championship for women's national teams. The tournament started in June 2018 and finished in June 2019.[1]
Format
The Hockey Series was open to national teams that were not playing in the Pro League.
The Hockey Series took place in two rounds, the Open and the Finals. The nine highest-ranked teams in the FIH World Rankings (as of 9 June 2017) skipped the Open and advanced directly to the Finals. All other national teams played in the Hockey Series Open, which features six regional events with up to six teams each. Fifteen teams qualified from the Hockey Series Open to the Hockey Series Finals, for a total of 24 teams in the Finals. Those teams played in three events, with eight teams per event (three automatic qualifiers and five that advanced from the Open).[2]
The top two placed teams in each of the Finals events qualified for the 2019 FIH Olympic Qualifiers.[3] In this qualification event, they were joined by the top four placed teams from the Pro League, and the two highest ranked teams not already qualified. The teams were drawn and played a two-legged tie to determine six qualified nations for the Olympic Games.
Schedule
Open events
| Dates | Location | Teams | Hockey series finals quotas | Hockey series finals qualifier(s) | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5–10 June 2018 | Salamanca, Mexico | .svg.png.webp) Canada  Guatemala  Mexico  Panama  Puerto Rico | 2 | .svg.png.webp) Canada  Mexico | 
| 23 June – 1 July 2018 | Singapore |  Hong Kong  Indonesia  Kazakhstan  Malaysia  Singapore  Thailand | 2 |  Malaysia  Thailand | 
| 6–8 July 2018 | Wattignies, France |  Austria  Belarus  France  Russia | 3 |  Belarus  France  Russia | 
| 13–18 August 2018 | Port Vila, Vanuatu |  Fiji  Solomon Islands  Tonga  Vanuatu | 1 |  Fiji | 
| 21–26 August 2018 | Vilnius, Lithuania |  Czech Republic  Lithuania  Turkey  Ukraine  Wales | 3 |  Czech Republic  Ukraine  Wales | 
| 18–23 September 2018 | Santiago, Chile | .svg.png.webp) Bolivia  Brazil  Chile  Paraguay  Peru  Uruguay | 2 |  Chile  Uruguay | 
| 7–9 December 2018 | Bulawayo, Zimbabwe |  Namibia  Zambia  Zimbabwe | 1 |  Namibia | 
| 1 |  Singapore | |||
| Total | 15 | |||
Finals events
The pools and venues were announced on 23 October 2018 with one team from Africa still to qualify.[4]
| Dates | Location | Teams Qualified | Olympic Qualification Events Quotas | Olympic Qualification Event Qualifiers | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| By Ranking | From Hockey Series Open | ||||
| 8–16 June 2019 | Banbridge, Ireland |  Ireland  South Korea  Scotland |  Czech Republic  France  Malaysia  Singapore  Ukraine | 2 |  Ireland  South Korea | 
| 15–23 June 2019 | Hiroshima, Japan |  India  Japan[lower-alpha 1]  Poland |  Chile  Fiji  Mexico  Russia  Uruguay | 1[lower-alpha 2] |  India | 
| 19–27 June 2019 | Valencia, Spain |  Italy  Spain  South Africa |  Belarus .svg.png.webp) Canada  Namibia  Thailand  Wales | 2 | .svg.png.webp) Canada  Spain | 
| Total | 5 | ||||
Notes
- ↑ Japan cannot qualify for the Olympic Qualifiers because they have already qualified as hosts and winners of the Asian Games.
- ↑ Because Japan finished in the top two and cannot qualify for the Olympic Qualifiers only one team qualified.
References
- ↑ "Pakistan and Vanuatu to host Hockey Series Open events". FIH.ch. Retrieved 18 May 2018.
- ↑ Hockey Series Q&A
- ↑ Olympic qualification system
- ↑ "Pools and venues confirmed for 2019 FIH Series Finals". fih.ch. International Hockey Federation. 23 October 2018. Retrieved 23 October 2018.