• Home
  • Other Sports
  • Wales Pair Sarah Jones And Leah Wilkinson Must Battle For Bronze As GB Skipper Admits: “We Didn’T Show Up”

Wales Pair Sarah Jones And Leah Wilkinson Must Battle For Bronze As GB Skipper Admits: “We Didn’t Show Up”

Olympic Rings. Pic: Alamy

Olympic Rings. Pic: Alamy

Sarah Jones and Leah Wilkinson’s dreams of helping Great Britain retain their Olympic women’s hockey title are over after they lost their semi-final to the Netherlands. The Welsh pair were aiming to repeat the gold medal triumph of the team in 2016, but in a re-run of the Rio final five years ago, the Dutch gained sweet revenge in Tokyo with a 5-1 victory. It means Wales’ all-time record cap holder Wilkinson and her partner Jones will fight for a bronze medal instead against either Argentina or India on Friday.

By Gareth James

Sarah Jones and Leah Wilkinson’s dreams of helping Great Britain retain their Olympic women’s hockey title are over after they lost their semi-final to the Netherlands.

The Welsh pair were aiming to repeat the gold medal triumph of the team in 2016, but in a re-run of the Rio final five years ago, the Dutch gained sweet revenge in Tokyo with a 5-1 victory.

It means Wales’ all-time record cap holder Wilkinson and her partner Jones will fight for a bronze medal instead against either Argentina or India on Friday.

The reigning world champions were at their brilliant best with two goals inside a minute giving them a 2-0 lead going into half-time.

It was a ruthless showing from the Dutch who had two more just eight minutes after the restart to put them firmly in the driving seat.

Though Giselle Ansley did bring one back for Great Britain – after Jones had surged powerfully forward to earn a penalty corner – the damage had already been done with the team falling to defeat as Frederique Matla ended any hopes of a late comeback.

GB skipper Hollie Pearne-Webb is keen to forget the heavy defeat as quicky as possible and lift the team ahead of their medal bid.

Embed from Getty Images

“We have had to show some resilience during this Olympic cycle and now we have to get over this quickly and move on,” she said.

“We’re a new group of players and we have a medal to play for. We have to get in the right frame of mind for the game on Friday and try and bring a medal home.

“It won’t be easy but we are used to being resilient and it’s our job to focus on that match and try and win a medal.

“It was not the morning we planned, so yeah we are disappointed.

“Especially after how we played in the pool stages against them. We showed we can match them across large parts of the game but we didn’t show up.

“They probably looked at the pool game and how they can tweak things against us. We are disappointed but at the same time we need to get over it quickly because we want to come away with a bronze.

“We need to wait and see who we’re playing, look at today and work out what went wrong and why our basics were a little bit off. And put them right the day after tomorrow.”

Jones joined the GB squad in 2017, a year after the Rio triumph, while Wilkinson was drafted in during 2019 to help clinch Olympic qualification.

Embed from Getty Images

Jones will be 35 when the Paris Olympic comes around, while Wilkinson will be 38, so Friday could prove their final opportunity to win an Olympic medal.

Goalkeeper Maddie Hinch said: “Their goals today were world class, and you sometimes have to just say ‘you know what, they were better than us today and that’s that’.

“We just weren’t quite there today. It just wasn’t from any lack of effort; it just wasn’t our day.

“We’ve got to be proud of why we’re here, why we’re fighting for a medal in the first place and believe we can do it.

“That’s one thing we learned from Rio. It’s the power of belief, the togetherness, and the ability for everyone to play their part to get there because whoever we play next, it’s going to be tough.

“Given the whole cycle, Covid-19, a change of coaches, there’s so much this group has been through so the bronze would be massive for us.”

 

Related News

Gerwyn Price. Pic. Alamy

Fires Still Burning Brightly For Iceman Gerwyn Price

Gerwyn Price may not have returned to the very top, but has proved he still has it in him to threaten the two men currently dominating darts, as Ian Mitchelmore reports.

Ian Mitchelmore | Nov 17, 2025
Elfyn Evans, of Toyota GR Yaris Rally1, during the 2025 Rally Japan. Pic: Alamy

Elfyn Evans Still Calm But World Title Bid Will go Right to the Wire

Elfyn Evans insists “everything is still to play for” after a thrilling Rally Japan left the World Rally Championship title fight wide open heading into the final round in Saudi Arabia.

Gareth James | Nov 11, 2025
Caleb McDuff of Team Brit. Pic: Peter Markwick

Meet Caleb McDuff . . . The Welsh Racer Who Turned Silence Into Speed

At just 17-years-old, Welsh racing driver Caleb McDuff is already breaking barriers in British motorsport, as James Townley reports.

James Townley | Nov 07, 2025
Anna Morris (centre) powers her way to victory. Pic: Alamy

Golden Week for Welsh Cycling as Josh Tarling, Anna Morris, and Emma Finucane Shine on the World Stage

It was a week that will go down as one of the finest in Welsh cycling history with triumphs at the Track Cycling World Championships.

Gareth James | Oct 27, 2025
Welsh Sports Hall of Fame new inductees - Joe Erskine (daughter Sonia pictured far left), Laura Deas, Victoria Thornley, Dai Greene and Tori James. Pic: Huw Evans Picture Agency.

Winter Olympics Heroes Among New Inductees Into Welsh Sports Hall of Fame

The Welsh Sports Hall of Fame celebrated the 35th anniversary of its ‘Roll of Honour' at The Parkgate Hotel this week by inducting its 200th member.

Rob Cole | Oct 25, 2025
Great Britain's Emma Finucane. Pic. Alamy

Welsh star Emma Finucane Proud After Leading New-Look GB Team to Silver at World Championships

Wales’ Emma Finucane has spoken of her pride after guiding a youthful Great Britain team to silver in the women’s team sprint at the UCI Track Cycling World Championships in Santiago, Chile.

Gareth James | Oct 23, 2025