perjantai 31. tammikuuta 2014

NHL ICE HOCKEY: Top 10 NHL Hits of the Year - 2013


NHL ICE HOCKEY: Top 10 Hits of the 2012-13 NHL Season


NHL ICE HOCKEY: NHL Top 10 Saves (Regular Season 2013)


NHL ICE HOCKEY: - TSN's Top 50 NHL Plays Of 2013 !!!


NHL ICE HOCKEY: NHL Top 10 Shootout Goals 2013


Suomi-Ruotsi U20 Loppuottelu 3-2 JA 05.01.2014 - FINLAND IS WORLD CHAMPION!!!:)


Finland National Anthem English lyrics :)


ICE HOCKEY: FINAL GAME :) Sweden v Finland GMG (2-3 OT) - 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship


ICE HOCKEY: 2014 WJC (Bronze): (5/1/2014) CAN-RUS 1-2


Basshunter - Botten Anna [HQ]


ICE HOCKEY: Sweden v Slovakia QF (6-0) - 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship


Jock Jams - Are You Ready For This


ICE HOCKEY: Germany v USA (0-8) - 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship


ICE HOCKEY: Canada v Czech Rep. (4-5 SO) - 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship


ICE HOCKEY: Russia v Switzerland (7-1) - 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship


LOREEN - "EUPHORIA" (Official video)


ICE HOCKEY: Norway v Sweden (0-10) - 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship


Survivor - Eye Of The Tiger


ICE HOCKEY: USA v Russia QF (3-5) - 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship


ICE HOCKEY: Finland v Czech Rep. QF (5-3) - 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship


FUNNY FINNISH MUSIC - SMURFFIJENGI -


ICE HOCKEY: Russia v Finland (1-4) - 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship


ICE HOCKEY: Sweden v Russia SF (2-1) - 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship


ICE HOCKEY: Canada v Finland SF (1-5) - 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship


ICE HOCKEY: Germany v Canada (2-7) - 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship


ICE HOCKEY: Norway v Russia (0-11) - 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship


ICE HOCKEY: Czech Rep. v USA (1-5) - 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship


2014 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships

2014 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships

 
 
2014 IIHF World U20 Championship
2014wjclogo.png
Tournament details
Host country Sweden
DatesDecember 26 – January 5
Teams10
Venue(s)Malmö Arena and Malmö Isstadion (in 1 host city)
Final positions
Champions Gold medal blank.svg Finland (3rd title)
Runner-up Silver medal blank.svg Sweden
Third place Bronze medal blank.svg Russia
Fourth place Canada
Tournament statistics
Matches played31
Goals scored202 (6.52 per match)
Attendance144,268 (4,654 per match)
Scoring leader(s)Finland Teuvo Teräväinen (15 points)
MVPSweden Filip Forsberg
Websitehttp://www.worldjunior2014.com
2013
2015
The 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship (formerly called the IIHF U20 World Championship)[1] was the 38th World Junior Ice Hockey Championships (WJHC), hosted in Malmö, Sweden. The 13,700-seat Malmö Arena was the main venue, with the smaller Malmö Isstadion the secondary venue. It began on December 26, 2013, and ended with the gold medal game on January 5, 2014.[2]
Finland defeated host team Sweden in the final 3–2 in overtime and won their first gold medal since 1998, as well as their third gold medal in total. It was also their first medal in the tournament since 2006. Sweden earned their second consecutive silver medal, their ninth silver medal in total, as well as their third consecutive medal in the tournament.
For the first time since 197981, Canada failed to capture a medal for the second consecutive year by losing the bronze medal game 2–1 to Russia, who captured the team's fourth consecutive medal at the tournament. The 2014 tournament marked the first time since 1998 that all three medalists were European teams.
A total of 144,268 spectators attended the 31 games, setting a new attendance record for IIHF World Junior Championship tournaments hosted in Europe. 12,023 spectators attended the gold medal game, setting a new record for a single IIHF World Junior Championship game in Europe.[3]

Contents

     
     

Venues

Malmö Arena
Capacity: 12,500
Malmö Isstadion
Capacity: 5,800
Malmö Arena 2008.jpgMalmö isstadion 2.jpg
 SwedenMalmö SwedenMalmö

Officials

The IIHF selected 12 referees and 10 linesmen to work the 2014 IIHF Ice Hockey U20 World Championship
They were the following:[4]

Referees
  • Sweden Tobias Björk
  • Finland Antti Boman
  • Denmark Jacob Grumsen
  • Czech Republic Rene Hradil
  • Slovakia Jozef Kubus
  • Sweden Marcus Linde
  • United States Timothy Mayer
  • Canada Steve Papp
  • Canada Devin Piccott
  • Russia Evgeniy Romasko
  • Switzerland Daniel Stricker
  • Switzerland Marc Wiegand
Linesmen
  • Japan Kenji Kosaka
  • Germany Andreas Kowert
  • Canada Benoit Martineau
  • United States Fraser McIntyre
  • Russia Eduard Metalnikov
  • Switzerland Joris Müller
  • Sweden Henrik Pihlblad
  • Finland Joonas Saha
  • Slovakia Peter Sefcik
  • Czech Republic Rudolf Tosenovjan

Format

A new format was implemented for the Top Division. The four best ranked teams from each group of the preliminary round advanced to the quarterfinals, while the last placed teams from each group played a relegation round in a best of three format to determine the relegated team.[5] This format was last used in 2002, except the current tournament will not incorporate playoff games to determine places five through eight.

Player eligibility

A player is eligible to play in the 2014 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships if:[6]
  • the player is of male gender;
  • the player was born at the earliest in 1994, and at the latest, in 1999;
  • the player is a citizen in the country he represents;
  • the player is under the jurisdiction of a national association that is a member of the IIHF.
If a player who has never played in IIHF-organized competition wishes to switch national eligibility, he must have played in competitions for two consecutive years in the new country without playing in another country, as well as show his move to the new country's national association with an international transfer card. In case the player has previously played in IIHF-organized competition but wishes to switch national eligibility, he must have played in competitions for four consecutive years in the new country without playing in another country, he must show his move to the new country's national association with an international transfer card, as well as be a citizen of the new country. A player may only switch national eligibility once.[7]

Top Division

Rosters

Preliminary round

All times are local (UTC+1).
    Team qualified to Quarterfinals
    Teams plays in Relegation round

Group A

TeamGPWOTWOTLLGFGAPtsAdvanced to
 Canada43010191210Quarterfinals
 United States430012179Quarterfinals
 Czech Republic411029135Quarterfinals
 Slovakia4100316163Quarterfinals
 Germany410037243Relegation round
26 December 2013
13:30
Germany 2–7
(2–4, 0–2, 0–1)
 CanadaMalmö Isstadion
Attendance: 1,861
26 December 2013
17:30
Czech Republic 1–5
(0–2, 0–2, 1–1)
 United StatesMalmö Isstadion
Attendance: 1,321
27 December 2013
15:00
Slovakia 9–2
(3–0, 3–1, 3–1)
 GermanyMalmö Isstadion
Attendance: 533
28 December 2013
13:30
United States 6–3
(2–0, 1–2, 3–1)
 SlovakiaMalmö Isstadion
Attendance: 1,658
28 December 2013
17:30
Canada 4–5 GWS
(1–1, 0–1, 3–2)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 1–2)
 Czech RepublicMalmö Isstadion
Attendance: 3,011
29 December 2013
15:00
Germany 0–8
(0–2, 0–4, 0–2)
 United StatesMalmö Isstadion
Attendance: 651
30 December 2013
13:30
Czech Republic 0–3
(0–1, 0–2, 0-0)
 GermanyMalmö Isstadion
Attendance: 1,062
30 December 2013
17:30
Canada 5–3
(1–1, 1–2, 3–0)
 SlovakiaMalmö Isstadion
Attendance: 2,558
31 December 2013
13:30
Slovakia 1–4
(0–2, 1–2, 0–0)
 Czech RepublicMalmö Isstadion
Attendance: 1,259
31 December 2013
17:30
United States 2–3
(0–0, 1–1, 1–2)
 CanadaMalmö Isstadion
Attendance: 3,882

Group B

TeamGPWOTWOTLLGFGAPtsAdvanced to
 Sweden4400022712Quarterfinals
 Finland4201114107Quarterfinals
 Russia420022186Quarterfinals
  Switzerland4110211175Quarterfinals
 Norway400043290Relegation round
26 December 2013
15:00
Norway 0–11
(0–5, 0–5, 0–1)
 RussiaMalmö Arena
Attendance: 4,260
26 December 2013
19:00
Switzerland  3–5
(2–3, 0–0, 1–2)
 SwedenMalmö Arena
Attendance: 11,109
27 December 2013
17:30
Finland 5–1
(1–0, 3–0, 1–1)
 NorwayMalmö Arena
Attendance: 734
28 December 2013
15:00
Sweden 4–2
(1–1, 2–0, 1–1)
 FinlandMalmö Arena
Attendance: 11,604
28 December 2013
19:00
Russia 7–1
(2–1, 3–0, 2–0)
  SwitzerlandMalmö Arena
Attendance: 7,543
29 December 2013
17:30
Norway 0–10
(0–3, 0–3, 0–4)
 SwedenMalmö Arena
Attendance: 11,296
30 December 2013
15:00
Russia 1–4
(1–0, 0–3, 0–1)
 FinlandMalmö Arena
Attendance: 945
30 December 2013
19:00
Switzerland  3–2
(0–1, 1–0, 2–1)
 NorwayMalmö Arena
Attendance: 418
31 December 2013
14:00
Sweden 3–2
(2–0, 0–1, 1–1)
 RussiaMalmö Arena
Attendance: 11,528
31 December 2013
18:00
Finland 3–4 GWS
(1–1, 1–2, 1–0)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 0–1)
  SwitzerlandMalmö Arena
Attendance: 718

Relegation round

The relegation round was a best-of-three series. Norway lost two games and was relegated to Division I for 2015.
January 2, 2014
11:00
Germany 0–3
(0–0, 0–3, 0–0)
 NorwayMalmö Arena
Attendance: 294
January 3, 2014
16:00
Norway 3–4
(1–2, 2–0, 0–2)
 GermanyMalmö Isstadion
Attendance: 463
January 5, 2014
12:00
Germany 3–1
(1–0, 1–0, 1–1)
 NorwayMalmö Isstadion
Attendance: 157

Playoff round

 Quarterfinal          
 1A  Canada4 
 4B   Switzerland1 
Semifinal
   1A  Canada1 
 Quarterfinal 2B  Finland5 
 2B  Finland5
 3A  Czech Republic3    Final
       2B  Finland3
 Quarterfinal      1B  Sweden2
 1B  Sweden6   
 4A  Slovakia0 
Semifinal Bronze medal game
   1B  Sweden2 1A  Canada1
 Quarterfinal 3B  Russia1  3B  Russia2
 2A  United States3
 3B  Russia5 

Quarterfinals

2 January 2014
12:00
United States 3–5
(3–2, 0–2, 0–1)
 RussiaMalmö Isstadion
Attendance: 1,876
2 January 2014
14:30
Finland 5–3
(1–1, 1–2, 3–0)
 Czech RepublicMalmö Arena
Attendance: 4,085
2 January 2014
17:00
Canada 4–1
(1–0, 1–1, 2–0)
  SwitzerlandMalmö Isstadion
Attendance: 2,580
2 January 2014
19:30
Sweden 6–0
(2–0, 2–0, 2–0)
 SlovakiaMalmö Arena
Attendance: 10,857

Semifinals

4 January 2014
15:00
Sweden 2–1(1–0, 0–0, 1–1) RussiaMalmö ArenaAttendance: 11,725
4 January 2014
19:00
Canada 1–5(0–0, 1–3, 0–2) FinlandMalmö ArenaAttendance: 11,544

Bronze medal game

5 January 2014
15:00
Canada 1–2(0–2, 0–0, 1–0) RussiaMalmö ArenaAttendance: 10,713

Final

5 January 2014
19:00
Sweden 2–3 OT(0–1, 1–1, 1–0)
(OT: 0–1)
 FinlandMalmö ArenaAttendance: 12,023

Statistics

Scoring leaders

PosPlayerCountryGPGAPts+/−PIM
1Teuvo Teräväinen Finland721315+112
2Filip Forsberg Sweden74812+32
3Saku Mäenalanen Finland77411+90
4Anthony Mantha Canada75611+60
5Martin Réway Slovakia5461004
6Dávid Gríger Slovakia53710+10
7Jonathan Drouin Canada7369+524
8Elias Lindholm Sweden6279−16
9Mikhail Grigorenko Russia7538+60
10Milan Kolena Slovakia5448−16
GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/− = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalties In Minutes
Source: IIHF.com

Goaltending leaders

(minimum 40% team's total ice time)
PosPlayerCountryTOIGAGAASv%SO
1Juuse Saros Finland344:5391.5794.300
2Andrei Vasilevski Russia327:50101.8393.330
3Oscar Dansk Sweden369:42111.7992.861
4Joachim Svendsen Norway318:01163.0291.531
5Marek Langhamer Czech Republic243:47122.9590.620
TOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = Shutouts
Source: IIHF.com

Tournament awards

 2014 IIHF World Junior Championship Winners 
Flag of Finland.svg
Finland
3rd title
Reference: [1]
Most Valuable Player
All-star team
IIHF best player awards

Final standings


Team
1 Finland
2 Sweden
3 Russia
4th Canada
5th United States
6th Czech Republic
7th  Switzerland
8th Slovakia
9th Germany
10th Norway
Note that due to the lack of playoff games for determining the spots 5–8, these spots were determined by the regulation round records for each team.

Medalists

Gold:Silver:Bronze:
Finland Finland
#1 – Janne Juvonen
#4 – Mikko Lehtonen
#5 – Rasmus Ristolainen
#7 – Esa Lindell
#8 – Saku Mäenalanen
#9 – Julius Honka
#10 – Juuso Ikonen
#11 – Joni Nikko
#12 – Ville Pokka
#13 – Ville-Valtteri Leskinen
#14 – Topi Nättinen
#15 – Juuso Vainio
#18 – Saku Kinnunen
#19 – Mikko Vainonen
#20 – Teuvo Teräväinen
#21 – Aleksi Mustonen
#22 – Henri Ikonen
#25 – Henrik Haapala
#26 – Rasmus Kulmala
#28 – Artturi Lehkonen
#29 – Otto Rauhala
#30 – Ville Husso
#31 – Juuse Saros
Sweden Sweden
#1 – Marcus Högberg
#3 – Robin Norell
#4 – Christian Djoos
#5 – Andreas Johnson
#6 – Jesper Pettersson
#8 – Linus Arnesson
#9 – Jacob de la Rose
#10 – Alexander Wennberg
#13 – Gustav Olofsson
#14 – Robert Hägg
#15 – Sebastian Collberg
#16 – Filip Forsberg
#18 – Andre Burakovsky
#19 – Elias Lindholm
#20 – Lukas Bengtsson
#21 – Filip Sandberg
#23 – Nick Sörensen
#26 – Erik Karlsson
#27 – Anton Karlsson
#28 – Lucas Wallmark
#29 – Oskar Sundqvist
#30 – Jonas Johansson
#35 – Oscar Dansk
Russia Russia
#1 – Igor Ustinski
#4 – Ilya Lyubushkin
#5 – Alexei Bereglazov
#6 – Valeri Vasilyev
#7 – Kirill Maslov
#8 – Nikita Tryamkin
#9 – Anton Slepyshev
#10 – Bogdan Yakimov
#11 – Damir Zhafyarov
#12 – Ivan Barbashev
#14 – Nikolai Skladnichenko
#15 – Georgi Busarov
#16 – Nikita Zadorov
#17 – Eduard Gimatov
#18 – Vyacheslav Osnovin
#19 – Pavel Buchnevich
#20 – Ivan Nalimov
#21 – Alexander Barabanov
#22 – Andrei Mironov
#23 – Valentin Zykov
#25 – Mikhail Grigorenko
#27 – Vadim Khlopotov
#30 – Andrei Vasilevski
Source: 1 2 3

Division I

Group A

The Division I A competition was played in Sanok, Poland, from 15 to 21 December 2013.
Participants
  •  Latviarelegated from Top Division 2013
  •  Belarusfinished 2nd in 2013
  •  Denmarkfinished 3rd in 2013
  •  Sloveniafinished 4th in 2013
  •  Austriafinished 5th in 2013
  •  Polandpromoted from Division I B 2013
Standings
TeamGPWOTWOTLLGFGAPts
 Denmark55000201015
 Latvia5400123712
 Belarus5300223149
 Austria5200310146
 Slovenia5010411282
 Poland500146201
Promoted to Top DivisionRelegated to Division I B

Group B

The Division I B competition was played in Dumfries, Great Britain, from 9 to 15 December 2013.
Participants
  •  Francerelegated from Division I A 2013
  •  Kazakhstanfinished 2nd in 2013
  •  Italyfinished 3rd in 2013
  •  Ukrainefinished 4th in 2013
  •  Great Britainfinished 5th in 2013
  •  Japanpromoted from Division II A 2013
Standings
TeamGPWOTWOTLLGFGAPts
 Italy53200201413
 Kazakhstan54001281612
 France5202115168
 Ukraine5200311156
 Great Britain5111213206
 Japan5000517230
Promoted to Division I ARelegated to Division II A

Division II

Group A

The Division II A competition was played in Miskolc, Hungary, from 15 to 21 December 2013.
Participants
Standings
TeamGPWOTWOTLLGFGAPts
 Hungary5500034715
 Lithuania53101211411
 Netherlands53011221810
 Estonia5200311196
 Romania510048203
 Croatia500058260
Promoted to Division I BRelegated to Division II B

Group B

The Division II B competition will be played in Jaca, Spain, from 11 to 17 January 2014.
Participants
  •  Spainrelegated from Division II A 2013
  •  South Koreafinished 2nd in 2013
  •  Serbiafinished 3rd in 2013
  •  Australiafinished 4th in 2013
  •  Icelandfinished 5th in 2013
  •  Chinapromoted from Division III 2013
Standings
TeamGPWOTWOTLLGFGAPts
 South Korea55000411215
 Spain54001191112
 Serbia5300215159
 Australia5110312195
 Iceland5101320174
 China500059400
Promoted to Division II ARelegated to Division III

Division III

The Division III competition will be played in Izmir, Turkey, from 12 to 18 January 2014.
Participants
Standings
TeamGPWOTWOTLLGFGAPts
 Belgium5500037315
 New Zealand5400129612
 Mexico5210216118
 Turkey5201210247
 South Africa501047262
 Bulgaria500144331