Pearne-Webb helps Team GB rally to hockey bronze

Team GB beat India in a 4-3 thriller to claim Olympic bronze and keep their proud place on the women's hockey podium.

Goals from Ellie Rayer, Sarah Robertson, Hollie Pearne-Webb and Grace Balsdon held off a spirited India comeback.

With Team GB having won bronze at London 2012 and gold at Rio 2016, Mark Hager's side have now created their own moment in the record books.

It was the nation's 52nd medal in Tokyo, meaning Team GB have now exceeded the 51 they won at Beijing 2008.

“I’m incredibly proud of this squad. We’ve got 16 here who are going to get a medal, our reserves and those back at home and we’ve really relied on everyone in this squad," said captain Pearne-Webb.

“I wish every single one of them was able to get a medal, that’s why we’re here, that’s why we’ve achieved it.

“It’s been a tough five years. Really, really tough. We’re all still here because we all had that little bit of belief deep, deep down.

“There have been times over the years where we’ve doubted if we could achieve this, I’m just so pleased and proud of everyone that we have.

“After winning and achieving the biggest dream, that in itself is the biggest challenge. To bring a group of girls that have watched that, altogether, there have been so many challenges along the way.

“That’s both collectively as a team and as the individuals as well.

“Olympic bronze, even just a few months ago, was in our wildest dreams. I’m so proud of all the girls, the whole squad, the whole support staff that have been involved.”

And they sealed it in a pulsating bronze medal match that sparked into life in five frantic second-quarter minutes, producing four goals.

Two Gurjit Kaur goals from penalty corners inside 100 seconds cancelled out Rayer's scrappy opener and Robertson's fine reverse stick effort.

India took a 3-2 half-time lead through Vandana Katariya but Britain bossed the second-half, skipper Pearne-Webb slapping home a ninth international goal and Balsdon converting a penalty corner to wrap up the win.

It was a third Olympic medal for Laura Unsworth and a second for Pearne-Webb, Susannah Townsend, Giselle Ansley, Shona McCallin, Lily Owsley and double shoot-out hero Maddie Hinch.