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- Harmanpreet Singh goes looking for a mental edge by staking out opponents' mindsets, as stakes turn high in 2026
Feeling fit and sharp, India's drag-flick champion believes mind-mapping international opponents by engaging them in deep conversations can help him unlock how they think.
Written by Mihir Vasavda Mumbai | January 14, 2026 08:21 AM IST
5 min read
He’s spent a decade doing this in senior hockey, but Harmanpreet still calls himself a ‘learner’. (Soorma HC)
Harmanpreet Singh speaks like a spy on a covert mission. Mindset. Observation. What he’s watching — and how he knows they’re watching him.
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During the Hockey India League, the India captain closely studies foreign players. Their body-play, angles and little tricks to gain small but decisive advantages. It is not admiration alone. It is analysis. “How can we develop that? When I go back to the national team, how can I show it to my teammates there?”
Then there’s Vincent Vanasch. The ‘best goalkeeper in the world’, Harmanpreet, one of the world’s best drag-flickers, says. Training sessions between the JSW Sports Soorma HC teammates aren’t merely that. “What is his mindset, what does he observe?” Harmanpreet wonders. “Or when I am playing against any opponent, how do their keepers observe me?”
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Because when Harmanpreet stands over a penalty corner, it’s never just about power. It’s psychological warfare. He wants to know how goalkeepers think — so he can think one move ahead. “I try to have good conversations with them so I know how to play with opponents’ minds,” he says with a chuckle.
He’s spent a decade doing this in senior hockey, but Harmanpreet still calls himself a ‘learner’. And the HIL, this season at least, is a bit of an ‘experiment’.
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The ace drag-flicker talks about developing four different variations — although he won’t describe them (“I’ll reveal at the right time”) — focussing on short sprints to improve mobility, which then helps him being useful with his long and diagonal balls, and improving body balance by strengthening the lower back, shoulders and arms — the three key parts for a powerful flick.
That Harmanpreet is talking about the finer aspects of his skill will come as a relief because for a major part of the last year-and-a-half, he’d been nursing an injury of one kind or another. At the Asian Champions Trophy in 2024, it was hamstring and lower back; an ankle injury during the Hockey India League last season; a wrist injury in the home swing of the FIH Pro League and then, a damaged finger tissue in the European leg of the competition.
“Touchwood,” interjects Harmanpreet, “Body-wise, fitness-wise, I am good. Flicking-wise, I am feeling very good.”
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A fully fit Harmanpreet is a massive boost for Craig Fulton’s side, because India tend to hum when their captain is pulling the strings. A quick look at the past two major tournaments tells the story. At the 2023 World Cup, Harmanpreet went through one of the most difficult phases of his career — his drag-flicks refused to find the net despite repeated attempts — and India bowed out in the quarterfinals after a shock defeat to New Zealand. Fast forward to Paris a year later, and Harmanpreet was unstoppable, scoring 10 of India’s 15 goals at the Olympics as the team finished on the podium.
The 2023 World Cup triggers such a strong sense of trauma that Harmanpreet doesn’t want to talk about it. But navigating that barren spell marked the biggest change he has noticed in himself during his decade-long stint with the national team. “Maturity,” he says.
“There were a lot of expectations in 2023, and I was struggling to score in the first few crucial matches,” he adds. “The positivity from my teammates and the coaching staff helped me get through that phase. It was a tough period, but I never really felt the pressure because of the support around me. Coming back from that to score 10 goals at the Olympics reinforced my belief that there will always be highs and lows, and not everything comes together at the same time.”
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In a packed year, starting with the ongoing HIL followed by the Pro League and then the World Cup and Asian Games, Harmanpreet says ‘taking care of our health’ will be the top-most priority. Managing workload is something even coach Craig Fulton had told The Indian Express in a recent interview, hinting at the prospect of fielding two different teams for the Pro League next month so that the players get enough rest.
“Let’s hope everything goes well and I stay fit and healthy because it is an important year. There are a lot of responsibilities and a lot of dreams, which we have to achieve as a team,” he says.
He has mapped his opponents’ minds — now it’s about staying one step ahead.
Over the course of a 18-year-long career, Mihir Vasavda has covered 2010 FIFA World Cup; the London 2012, Tokyo 2020 and Paris 2024 Olympic Games; Asian Games in 2014 and 2022; Commonwealth Games in 2010 and 2018; Hockey World Cups in 2018 and 2023 and the 2023 ODI Cricket World Cup. ... Read More
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