Brent Livermore

Brent James Livermore OAM (born 5 July 1976 in Grafton, New South Wales) is a field hockey midfielder from Australia. He was first selected in the Australian team in 1997, and was awarded the Kookaburras player of the year award in 2001. He was also nominated of the FIH Player of the Year awards in 2002 and 2005. He has played over 300 matches for the Australian team, and has scored 30 international goals. He plays for the NSW Waratahs in the Australian Hockey League.[1]

Brent Livermore
Medal record
Men’s field hockey
Representing  Australia
Olympic Games
2004 AthensTeam
2000 SydneyTeam
World Cup
2002 Kuala LumpurTeam
2006 MönchengladbachTeam
Champions Trophy
1999 BrisbaneTeam
2005 ChennaiTeam
2009 MelbourneTeam
1997 AdelaideTeam
2001 RotterdamTeam
2003 AmstelveenTeam
2007 Kuala LumpurTeam
1998 LahoreTeam
Commonwealth Games
2002 ManchesterTeam
2006 MelbourneTeam

Brent Livermore won the gold medal with the Kooraburras at the 2004 Olympics, but was omitted from the 2008 Olympic squad that placed third in Beijing.[2]

In the World Series Hockey organized by the Indian Hockey Federation and Nimbus Sport, Brent Livermore captains the Chennai Cheetahs, a Chennai-based Hockey team.[3]

After a brief hiatus from the sport, Livermore returned to coach the NSWIS male team, the U21 NSW Men's team, and the NSW Waratahs team at their respective tournaments. He has returned to the pitch, as the captain-coach of team NSWIS at the ripe age of 42, in the exhibition match against Odisha. The team lost the first match 5–1.

International tournaments

  • 1997 – Champions Trophy, Adelaide (2nd place)
  • 1998 – Commonwealth Games, Kuala Lumpur (1st place)
  • 1998 – Champions Trophy, Lahore (3rd place)
  • 1999 – Champions Trophy, Brisbane (1st place)
  • 2000 – Champions Trophy, Amstelveen (5th place)
  • 2000 – Olympic Games, Sydney (3rd place)
  • 2001 – Champions Trophy, Rotterdam (2nd place)
  • 2002 – World Cup, Kuala Lumpur (2nd place)
  • 2002 – Commonwealth Games, Manchester (1st place)
  • 2002 – Champions Trophy, Cologne (5th place)
  • 2003 – Champions Trophy, Amstelveen (2nd place)
  • 2004 – Olympic Games, Athens (1st place)
  • 2005 – Champions Trophy, Chennai (1st place)
  • 2006 – Commonwealth Games, Melbourne (1st place)
  • 2006 – Champions Trophy, Terrassa (4th place)
  • 2006 – World Cup, Mönchengladbach (2nd place)
  • 2007 – Champions Trophy, Kuala Lumpur (2nd place)
  • 2009 – Champions Trophy, Kuala Lumpur (1st place)
  • 2018 – 2018 ODISHA XI vs NSWIS XI - Exhibition Tournament, Odisha (2nd place)
gollark: Sounds like a weird thing to be its own subject though. Wouldn't it be basically just statistics?
gollark: Or... whatever qualification you do, I guess?
gollark: Data science is an A-level?
gollark: Oh, you do computer science? I picked that as my A-level option for next year, not very sure if it's actually a good/sensible, er, course, though.
gollark: I would probably just go for "make a library and stick that in every program", but this works to.

References

  1. "Hockey Australia: Brent Livermore, OAM". Hockey.org.au. Archived from the original on 24 February 2011. Retrieved 2011-02-17.
  2. staff writers (11 July 2008). "Brent Livermore vows he won't retire". Herald Sun. Retrieved 17 February 2011.
  3. Keerthivasan, K. (7 March 2012). "Bend it like Brent". The Hindu. Chennai, India.
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