Fixtures

FIH Pro League 06/01 11:15 - Great Britain vs Ireland View
FIH Pro League 06/02 11:15 - Great Britain vs India View
FIH Pro League 06/05 12:15 - Great Britain vs Spain View
FIH Pro League 06/06 19:00 - Great Britain vs Ireland View
FIH Pro League 06/08 13:30 - Great Britain vs Australia View
FIH Pro League 06/09 13:30 - Great Britain vs India View

Results

Olümpiamängude kvalifikatsioon 01/21 16:30 1 Germany v Great Britain 1-0
Olümpiamängude kvalifikatsioon 01/20 16:30 2 Great Britain v New Zealand 3-1
Olümpiamängude kvalifikatsioon 01/18 14:30 3 Great Britain v China 6-0
Olümpiamängude kvalifikatsioon 01/16 16:45 2 Malaysia v Great Britain 1-4
Olümpiamängude kvalifikatsioon 01/15 16:45 1 Great Britain v Pakistan 6-1
FIH Pro League 12/11 00:30 - Netherlands v Great Britain 2-1
FIH Pro League 12/10 00:30 - Argentina v Great Britain 5-2
FIH Pro League 12/08 00:30 - Great Britain v Netherlands 3-2
FIH Pro League 12/07 00:30 - Argentina v Great Britain 2-1
FIH Pro League 06/21 16:40 - Great Britain v Spain 2-3
FIH Pro League 06/20 11:10 - Great Britain v Germany 2-3
FIH Pro League 06/18 14:10 - Great Britain v Spain 3-0

The Great Britain men's national field hockey team represents the United Kingdom in some international field hockey tournaments such as the Summer Olympics and the FIH Pro League. The team won gold at the 1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp and the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul. The team won the 2017 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup.

In most other competitions, including the Hockey World Cup, the Commonwealth Games and some editions of the Hockey Champions Trophy, the four home nations compete in their own right: England, Ireland (includes both the Republic and Northern Ireland), Scotland and Wales.

The team was established in 1920 as Great Britain and Ireland, before the independence of most of Ireland as the Irish Free State. They only played one tournament under that name: the 1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp, Belgium, when they won the gold medal. Before 1920 there was only one field hockey tournament at the Olympics, in 1908, when England won the gold, Ireland the silver, and Scotland and Wales the bronze medals.