1992 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships

1992 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships
1991
1993

The 1992 Ice Hockey World Championships took place in Czechoslovakia from the 28 April to 10 May. The games were played in Prague and Bratislava. Twelve teams took part, with the first round consisting of two groups of six, with the four best teams from each group advancing to the quarter-finals. This was the 56th World Championships, and Sweden retained their title, beating Finland 5-2 in the final, and becoming world champions for the sixth time. This was Finland's first medal in a World Championship, but should have come as no surprise with their success in Calgary and the most recent Canada Cup.

The pools were drawn the same as the Olympics in Albertville, but yielded much different results. The Swiss were able to tie both the Russians and the Canadians to earn their way into the quarterfinals. The Germans, after an opening loss to Finland, won four straight to earn a second place finish. More importantly, they earned a single game elimination against Switzerland with the winner going to the semi-finals. The Swiss prevailed, and moved on to meet a Swedish team that had shut-out the Russians. The Swedes led by three after the first and easily moved on to the gold medal game. There was nothing easy about the other semi-final. Tying it at two in the third, the Finns clinched their first World medal in a shootout. The Czechoslovaks, playing for the last time as a unified nation, beat the Swiss to settle for bronze, while Sweden, led by Mats Sundin, beat Finland for gold.[1][2]

A record thirty-two nations competed in 1992, with new entrants Greece, Israel, Luxembourg and Turkey icing teams in a secondary tier of Group C. Yugoslavia made their final World Championship appearance, before their dissolution. Both Slovenia and Croatia began competing for themselves, in Group C qualifiers in 1993, and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia resumed Yugoslavia's former position in Group C in 1995.

Contents

World Championship Group A (Czechoslovakia)

First Round

Group 1

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Points difference Points
1  Finland 5 5 0 0 32 - 08 10
2  Germany 5 4 0 1 30 - 14 8
3  United States 5 2 1 2 14 - 15 5
4  Sweden 5 1 2 2 14 - 12 4
5  Italy 5 1 1 3 10 - 18 3
6  Poland 5 0 0 5 08 - 41 0
28 April Sweden  7-0
 Poland
28 April Germany  3-6
 Finland
28 April Italy  0-1
 United States
29 April Finland  11-2
 Poland
29 April United States  3-5
 Germany
29 April Sweden  0-0
 Italy
01 May Poland  5-7
 Italy
01 May Germany  5-2
 Sweden
01 May United States  1-6
 Finland
03 May United States  5-0
 Poland
03 May Italy  2-6
 Germany
03 May Finland  3-1
 Sweden
04 May Poland  1-11
 Germany
04 May Finland  6-1
 Italy
04 May Sweden  4-4
 United States

Group 2

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Points difference Points
1  Russia 5 4 1 0 23 - 10 9
2  Czechoslovakia 5 4 0 1 18 - 07 8
3  Switzerland 5 2 2 1 12 - 11 6
4  Canada 5 2 1 2 15 - 18 5
5  Norway 5 1 0 4 08 - 16 2
6  France 5 0 0 5 08 - 22 0
28 April Canada  4-3
 France
28 April Switzerland  2-2
 Russia
28 April Czechoslovakia  6-1
 Norway
30 April Canada  1-1
 Switzerland
30 April Czechoslovakia  3-0
 France
30 April Russia  3-2
 Norway
01 May France  5-6
 Switzerland
01 May Norway  3-4
 Canada
01 May Czechoslovakia  2-4
 Russia
03 May Russia  8-0
 France
03 May Switzerland  3-1
 Norway
03 May Czechoslovakia  5-2
 Canada
04 May France  0-1
 Norway
04 May Canada  4-6
 Russia
04 May Czechoslovakia  2-0
 Switzerland

Consolation Round 11-12 Place

06 May France  3-1
 Poland

Poland was relegated to Group B.

Quarterfinals

06 May Finland  4-3
 Canada
06 May Russia  0-2
 Sweden
07 May Germany  1-3
 Switzerland
07 May Czechoslovakia  8-1
 United States

Semifinals

09 May Czechoslovakia  2-2
0-2 s.o.

 Finland
09 May Sweden  4-1
 Switzerland

Match for third place

10 May Czechoslovakia  5-2
 Switzerland

Final

10 May Sweden  5-2
 Finland

World Championship Group B (Austria)

Played in Klagenfurt April 2-12. The hosts went undefeated to return to Group A for the first time since 1957.[1]

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Points difference Points
13  Austria 7 7 0 0 73 - 04 14
14  Netherlands 7 5 1 1 53 - 16 11
15  Japan 7 4 0 3 30 - 24 8
16  Denmark 7 4 0 3 23 - 24 8
17  Bulgaria 7 3 0 4 14 - 38 6
18  Romania 7 1 3 3 13 - 26 5
19  China 7 1 1 5 15 - 50 3
20  Yugoslavia 7 0 1 6 07 - 46 1

Austria was promoted to Group A, while Yugoslavia was relegated to Group C but would not play there until 1995.

02 April Netherlands  12-2
 China
02 April Yugoslavia  3-3
 Romania
02 April Austria  18-0
 Bulgaria
02 April Japan  4-2
 Denmark
03 April China  4-1
 Yugoslavia
03 April Austria  9-0
 Romania
04 April Denmark  0-8
 Netherlands
04 April Japan  2-5
 Bulgaria
05 April Austria  16-0
 China
05 April Japan  5-1
 Romania
05 April Yugoslavia  2-4
 Denmark
06 April Netherlands  7-1
 Bulgaria
06 April China  3-3
 Romania
07 April Yugoslavia  1-4
 Bulgaria
07 April Austria  5-1
 Denmark
08 April Romania  2-2
 Netherlands
08 April China  3-10
 Japan
09 April Bulgaria  1-7
 Denmark
09 April Austria  3-0
 Japan
09 April Yugoslavia  0-11
 Netherlands
10 April Bulgaria  3-1
 China
10 April Romania  2-4
 Denmark
11 April Japan  6-0
 Yugoslavia
11 April Austria  8-3
 Netherlands
12 April Denmark  5-2
 China
12 April Netherlands  10-3
 Japan
12 April Bulgaria  0-2
 Romania
12 April Austria  14-0
 Yugoslavia

World Championship Group C1 (Great Britain)

Played in Hull Great Britain March 18-24. The hosts, led by Scot Tony Hand and Canadian Kevin Conway, won all five games easily.[1]

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Points difference Points
21  Great Britain 5 5 0 0 62 - 10 10
22  North Korea 5 3 0 2 25 - 28 6
23  Australia 5 2 1 2 24 - 26 5
24  Hungary 5 2 0 3 18 - 33 4
25  Belgium 5 2 0 3 17 - 24 4
26  South Korea 5 0 1 4 18 - 43 1

Great Britain was promoted to Group B while no team was relegated.

18 March Belgium  5-4
 North Korea
18 March South Korea  6-10
 Hungary
18 March Great Britain  10-2
 Australia
19 March Hungary  3-1
 Belgium
19 March North Korea  8-3
 Australia
19 March Great Britain  15-0
 South Korea
21 March Australia  5-5
 South Korea
21 March Hungary  1-4
 North Korea
21 March Belgium  3-7
 Great Britain
22 March Hungary  1-8
 Australia
22 March South Korea  4-6
 Belgium
22 March North Korea  2-16
 Great Britain
24 March North Korea  7-3
 South Korea
24 March Australia  6-2
 Belgium
24 March Great Britain  14-3
 Hungary

World Championship Group C2 (South Africa)

Played in Johannesburg March 21-28. Though called 'C2' it was no different than being in 'Group D'. Spain completely dominated, playing against five essentially new hockey nations. Only South Africa had participated before, and they last played in 1966.[1]

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Points difference Points
27  Spain 5 5 0 0 114 - 05 10
28  South Africa 5 4 0 1 49 - 17 8
29  Greece 5 3 0 2 36 - 31 6
30  Israel 5 1 1 3 22 - 42 3
31  Luxembourg 5 1 1 3 20 - 73 3
32  Turkey 5 0 0 5 10 - 83 0

Spain and later South Africa qualified for 1993 Group C. The others had to play in qualification tournaments in November 1992.

21 March South Africa  23-0
 Luxembourg
21 March Turkey  3-15
 Greece
22 March Israel  4-23
 Spain
22 March South Africa  18-1
 Turkey
23 March Luxembourg  5-9
 Greece
24 March Israel  8-2
 Turkey
24 March Spain  10-1
 Greece
25 March South Africa  5-1
 Israel
25 March Luxembourg  0-31
 Spain
26 March Luxembourg  10-5
 Turkey
26 March South Africa  9-4
 Greece
27 March Greece  7-4
 Israel
27 March Turkey  0-38
 Spain
28 March South Africa  0-12
 Spain
28 March Israel  5-5
 Luxembourg

Medal table

1992 World Championships Country
Gold  Sweden
Silver  Finland
Bronze  Czechoslovakia
4  Switzerland
5  Russia
6  Germany
7  United States
8  Canada
9  Italy
10  Norway
11  France
12  Poland

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d Summary at Passionhockey.com
  2. ^ Duplacey page 508

References

See also: World Juniors, Women's Championships