Ice hockey at the 1972 Winter Olympics

Ice hockey at the 1972 Winter Olympics
Tournament details
Host country  Japan
Dates 3-13 February
Teams 11
Final positions
Champions   Soviet Union (4th title)
Runner-up   United States
Third place   Czechoslovakia
Fourth place  Sweden
Tournament statistics
Matches played 30
Goals scored 235 (7.83 per match)
Scoring leader(s) Soviet Union Valeri Kharlamov 16 points

At the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo, Japan, one ice hockey event was competed: men's ice hockey. Games were held at the Makomanai Ice Arena and at the Tsukisamu Dome. The Soviet Union won the tournament over the United States, its third gold medal in ice hockey in a row. Its win was part of a dominant run in hockey at the Olympic Games, where the Soviets medaled in nine consecutive Olympics, with seven coming as gold medals. Czechoslovakia won the bronze. Canada, historically the most successful team in the tournament with six previous titles, failed to send a team to the event for the first time since ice hockey was first competed at the Olympics in 1920, instead competing with and defeating the Soviets in a competition later that year known as the Summit Series.[1] Canada would not send a men's hockey team to the Olympics until 1980.

Teams

Team Canada

For the first time since ice hockey was introduced at the Olympic Games in 1920, Canada failed to send a team to the 1972 Olympics after Canadian Minister of Health and Welfare John Munro announced the withdrawal of the team from all international competitions in response to the International Ice Hockey Federation opposition to allowing professional players at international competitions.[1] Canadian officials were frustrated that their best players, competing in the National Hockey League, were prevented from playing while Soviet players, who played year round for national teams, were allowed to compete.[2] At that point, the Canadian men's ice hockey team was the most successful team in the world, having won six of the eleven tournaments previously competed (although having failed to win gold since 1952). Canada would not compete internationally in hockey until 1977, when the IIHF adopted eligibility rules that allowed for professional players to compete.[1] Instead of competing internationally at the Olympics, Canadian officials helped organize a series of games against the Soviet Union in 1972 known as the Summit Series.

Team USA

While the 1980 team had the celebrated "Miracle on Ice" and the 1960 US team had the "Forgotten Miracle", the 1972 team could be called the "completely overlooked miracle." The U.S. team was expected to finish 5th behind the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, Sweden, and Finland. The Soviet and Czech teams were especially powerful as there was no distinction between amateurs and pros in communist countries; these teams were made up of seasoned professionals and were ranked 1 & 2 in the world. Valeri Kharlamov of the Soviet Union was considered one of the world's best players and experts agree he would have been a star in the NHL. The same can be said for Soviet goaltender Vladislav Tretiak. In fact, this was basically the same Soviet Team that played a Canadian team composed of NHL All Stars in the 1972 Summit Series that Canada narrowly won, 4-3-1.

After qualifying for Group A by beating Switzerland 5-3, the U.S. lost as expected to Sweden, 5-1. Then they pulled off the upset of the tournament when they beat Czechoslovakia, 5-1. This surprising result was nearly as astonishing as the wins over the Soviets in 1960 and 1980. After losing as expected to the Soviet Union, the young Americans upset Finland. In the final games of the competition, the U.S. beat Poland while Finland beat Sweden and the Soviets beat the Czechs (in the game that decided the gold medal); those results boosted the U.S. from 4th to 2nd for a silver medal that was nearly as miraculous as the 1960 and 1980 gold medals.

Medalists

Gold: Silver: Bronze:

 Soviet Union


Vladislav Tretiak
Alexander Pashkov
Vitaly Davydov
Viktor Kuskin
Alexander Ragulin
Gennadiy Tsygankov
Vladimir Lutchenko
Valeri Vasiliev
Igor Romishevsky
Yevgeni Mishakov
Alexander Maltsev
Alexander Yakushev
Vladimir Vikulov
Anatoly Firsov
Valeri Kharlamov
Yury Blinov
Boris Mikhailov
Vladimir Petrov
Vladimir Shadrin
Yevgeni Zimin

 United States
Mike Curran
Pete Sears
Wally Olds
Tom Mellor
Frank Sanders
Jim McElmury
Charles Brown
Dick McGlynn
Ronald Naslund
Robbie Ftorek
Stu Irving
Kevin Ahearn
Henry Boucha
Craig Sarner
Timothy Sheehy
Keith Christiansen
Mark Howe
Tim Regan
Bruce McIntosh
Larry Bader
 Czechoslovakia
Vladimír Dzurilla
Jiří Holeček
Vladimír Bednář
Rudolf Tajcnár
Oldřich Machač
František Pospíšil
Josef Horešovský
Karel Vohralík
Václav Nedomanský
Jiří Holík
Jaroslav Holík
Jiří Kochta
Eduard Novák
Richard Farda
Josef Černý
Vladimír Martinec
Ivan Hlinka
Bohuslav Šťastný

First round

Fourteen nations qualified, but East Germany, Romania and France all chose not to travel for primarily financial reasons. The remaining eleven nations were seeded according to their placement in the 1971 World Championships with first place (USSR) and the five winners to play in Group A to for 1st-6th places. The five losers played in Group B for 7th-11th places. 1971 ranking appears in parentheses.

Final round

First place team wins gold, second silver and third bronze.

Rank Team Pld W L T GF GA Pts
1  Soviet Union 540133139
2  United States 532018156
3  Czechoslovakia 532026136
4  Sweden 522117135
5  Finland 523014244
6  Poland 50509390


Consolation Round

Teams, which lost their games in the qualification round, played in this group.

Rank Team Pld W L T GF GA Pts
7  West Germany 431022106
8  Norway 431016146
9  Japan 421117165
10   Switzerland 40229162
11 Yugoslavia 40319171


Leading scorers

Player GP G A Pts
Valeri Kharlamov (Soviet Union) 59716
Václav Nedomanský (Czechoslovakia) 68311
Craig Sarner (United States) 64610
Kevin Ahearn (United States) 6639
Vladimir Vikulov (Soviet Union) 5538
Aleksandr Maltsev (Soviet Union) 5437
Jiří Kochta (Czechoslovakia) 6437
Anatoli Firsov (Soviet Union) 5257
Yuri Blinov (Soviet Union) 5336
Richard Farda (Czechoslovakia) 6156

Final ranking

  1.  Soviet Union
  2.  United States
  3.  Czechoslovakia
  4.  Sweden
  5.  Finland
  6.  Poland
  7.  West Germany
  8.  Norway
  9.  Japan
  10.   Switzerland
  11.  Yugoslavia

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "1972 Winter Olympic Games". Hockey Canada. Retrieved 18 February 2014.
  2. "Ice Hockey at the 1972 Sapporo Winter Games: Men's Ice Hockey". Sports Reference. Retrieved 18 February 2014.

External Links