2008 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship
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Tournament details |
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Host country |
Slovakia |
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Dates |
21 June 21 – 28 June 2008 |
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Teams |
8 |
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Venue(s) |
1 (in 1 host city) |
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Final positions |
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Champions |
Sweden (4th title) |
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Runner-up |
Slovakia |
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Third place |
Germany |
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Fourth place |
United States |
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Tournament statistics |
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Matches played |
24 |
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Goals scored |
263 (10.96 per match) |
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Attendance |
18,619 (776 per match) |
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Scoring leader(s) |
Pat Lee (18 pts) |
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MVP |
Dick Axelsson |
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The 2008 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship was the 12th IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship, an international inline hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation. The World Championship runs alongside the 2008 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I tournament and took place between 21 and 28 June 2008 in Bratislava, Slovakia. The tournament was won by Sweden, earning their second straight World Championship title and fourth overall. Slovakia finished in second place and Germany in third after defeating the United States in the bronze medal match. Austria, after losing the 7th place game against Slovenia was relegated to Division I for 2009.
Seeding and groups
The seeding in the preliminary round was based on the final standings at the 2007 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship.[1] The World Championship groups are named Group A and Group B while the 2008 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Division I tournament uses Group C and Group D, as both tournaments were held in Bratislava, Slovakia.[1] The teams were grouped accordingly by seeding at the previous year's tournament (in parenthesis is the corresponding seeding):[1]
Preliminary round
Eight participating teams were placed in the following two groups. After playing a round-robin, the top three teams in each group advance to the playoff round. The last team in each group compete in the qualifying round where they face-off against the top ranked teams of Group C and Group D from the Division I tournament for a chance to participate in the Top Division playoffs.[1]
All times are local (UTC+2).
Group A
Team |
GP |
W |
OTW |
OTL |
L |
GF |
GA |
DIF |
PTS |
Slovenia | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 19 | 7 | 12 | 9 |
Sweden | 3 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 16 | 9 | 7 | 6 |
Slovakia | 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 9 | 13 | –4 | 3 |
Austria | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 7 | 22 | –15 | 0 |
21 June 2008 18:00 | Austria | 4 – 6 (1–1, 0–2, 2–2, 1–1) | Slovakia | Main Arena, Bratislava Attendance: 1,125 |
Game reference |
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Heimo Lindner (1) 6:13 (ES) Martin Mairitsch (1) 32:21 (ES) Heimo Lindner (2) 35:48 (ES) Martin Mairitsch (2) 36:39 (ES) | Goals | Peter Staron (1) 10:10 (SH) Andrej Szoke (1) 16:52 (ES) Richard Kapus (1) 18:47 (PP) Henrich Ruckay (1) 26:09 (ES) Henrich Ruckay (2) 34:56 (ES)(GWG) Roman Simunek (1) 47:59 (ENG) |
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6.0 min | Penalties | 6.0 min |
34 | Shots | 25 |
Game reference |
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Harry Lange (1) 13:04 (PP) | Goals | Jaka Zupanc (1) 1:17 (ES) Rok Bavdaz (1) 10:21 (ES)(GWG) Jure Stopar (1) 28:59 (SH) Jan Loboda (1) 35:37 (ES) Jaka Zupanc (2) 38:11 (ES) Nejc Sotlar (1) 42:09 (ES) Rok Bavdaz (2) 45:40 (ES) Matic Kralj (1) 46:08 (ES) |
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16.0 min | Penalties | 10.5 min |
35 | Shots | 64 |
Game reference |
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Linus Klasen (2) 32:35 (ES) Fredrick Eriksson (1) 34:59 (PP) Simon Olsson (1) 46:06 (PP) | Goals | Jure Stopar (2) 10:11 (PP) Dejan Zemva (1) 14:28 (ES) Tadej Nabergoj (1) 14:53 (ES) Rok Bavdaz (3) 24:35 (ES) Matic Kralj (2) 27:49 (PP) Tadej Nabergoj (2) 28:55 (ES) Nejc Sotlar (2) 44:32 (SH) |
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12.0 min | Penalties | 21.0 min |
63 | Shots | 47 |
Game reference |
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Nejc Sotlar (3) 11:12 (ES) Nejc Sotlar (4) 18:51 (ES) Nejc Sotlar (5) 27:35 (ES) Jure Stopar (3) 39:46 (ES) | Goals | Andrej Szoke (2) 23:40 (ES) Peter Staron (2) 41:01 (PP) Martin Galik (1) 47:29 (PP) |
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18.0 min | Penalties | 15.0 min |
54 | Shots | 53 |
24 June 2008 20:00 | Sweden | 8 – 2 (3–0, 0–1, 3–1, 2–0) | Austria | Main Arena, Bratislava Attendance: 300 |
Group B
Game reference |
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Michael Wolf (1) 3:23 (ES) Steffen Tolzer (1) 18:20 (ES) Michael Wolf (2) 24:39 (PP) | Goals | James Beilsten (1) 2:23 (ES) James Beilsten (2) 7:13 (SH) Dan Comrie (1) 16:29 (PP) Kyle Gouge (1) 17:25 (PP)(GWG) James Beilsten (3) 22:39 (ES) Lee Sweatt (1) 34:23 (ES) Christopher Peterson (1) 39:15 (PP) Kyle Gouge (2) 41:05 (ES) Pat Lee (2) 45:47 (ES) |
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10.5 min | Penalties | 13.5 min |
27 | Shots | 46 |
Game reference |
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Tommy Bruce (1) 6:20 (ES) Kyle Gouge (3) 9:09 (ES) Lee Sweatt (2) 20:02 (ES) Pat Lee (3) 29:33 (ES) Tommy Bruce (2) 31:36 (ES) Kyle Gouge (4) 42:24 (ES)(GWG) | Goals | Tommi Heinonen (1) 1:50 (ES) Jani Lyytinen (1) 8:00 (ES) Kari Lohtander (1) 8:13 (ES) Aki Tuominen (2) 43:50 (PP) Sami Markkanen (1) 45:05 (ES) |
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22.0 min | Penalties | 20.0 min |
48 | Shots | 64 |
Game reference |
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Tuomas Valosaari (2) 27:53 (PP) Tuomas Valosaari (3) 29:16 (ES) Ossi Pellinen (1) 35:00 (ES) Sami Markkanen (2) 35:39 (ES) Tuomas Valosaari (4) 53:00 (SO)(GWG) | Goals | Daniel Menge (1) 1:11 (ES) Thomas Greilinger (2) 3:56 (PP) Michael Wolf (4) 44:42 (PP) Thomas Greilinger (3) 47:44 (ES) |
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16.5 min | Penalties | 6.0 min |
39 | Shots | 73 |
Qualifying round
Austria and Germany advanced to the qualifying round after finishing last in Group A and Group B respectively.[2] Austria faced off against Great Britain, who finished first in Group C of the Division I tournament, and Germany was drawn against Canada, who finished first in Group D of the Division I tournament, for a chance to participate in the Top Division playoffs.[3][4] Both Austria and Germany won their matches and advanced to the Top Division playoffs, while Great Britain and Canada advanced to the Division I playoffs.[4]
All times are local (UTC+2).
Game reference |
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Steffen Tolzer (1) 2:12 (PP) Henrick Holscher (1) 5:59 (PP) Martin Ortolf (1) 10:49 (ES) Thomas Greilinger (1) 13:10 (ES)(GWG) Miachel Wolf (1) 14:38 (PP) Miachel Wolf (2) 24:53 (PP) Daniel Menge (1) 34:45 (PP) Daniel Menge (2) 35:12 (ES) Patrick Reimer (1) 41:53 (PP) Christian Wichert (1) 44:51 (ES) Patrick Reimer (2) 46:17 (PP) | Goals | David Hammond (1) 15:41 (PP) Mitchell Vevang (1) 25:50 (PP) David Hammond (2) 44:22 (ES) |
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27.5 min | Penalties | 18.0 min |
54 | Shots | 48 |
Playoff round
Germany and Austria advanced to the playoff round after winning their qualifying round matches. They were seeded alongside the six other teams of the tournament based on their results in the preliminary round. The four winning quarterfinalists advanced to the semifinals while the losing teams moved on to the placement round.[5] Austria was relegated to Division I for 2009 after losing the 7th place game against Slovenia, while the Czech Republic finished fifth after defeating Finland in the 5th place game.[5][6] In the semifinals the Slovakia defeated Germany and Sweden beat the United States, both advancing to the gold medal game.[5] After losing the semifinals the United States and Germany played off for the bronze medal with Germany winning 8–7.[5] Sweden defeated Slovakia 7–3 in the gold medal game, earning their second straight World Championship title and fourth overall.[7][8]
Draw
Quarterfinals
Game reference |
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Pat Lee (3) 00:26 (ES) Derek Kern (1) 01:31 (ES)(GWG) James Beilsten (4) 05:14 (PP) Steven Oleksy (2) 05:34 (ES) Lee Sweatt (4) 12:54 (ES) Kyle Gouge (7) 18:28 (ES) James Beilsten (5) 19:32 (ES) Pat Lee (4) 22:53 (PP) Itan Chavira (1) 23:59 (ES) Tommy Bruce (3) 27:36 (ES) Dan Comrie (4) 29:28 (ES) Itan Chavira (2) 29:39 (ES) Kevin De Vergilio (1) 31:43 (SH) Dan Comrie (5) 38:28 (ES) Kevin De Vergilio (2) 40:44 (PP) Sam Ftorek (1) 44:21 (PP) Kyle Gouge (8) 44:44 (ES) | Goals | Georg Privoznik (1) 17:29 (ES) |
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1.5 min | Penalties | 23.5 min |
74 | Shots | 22 |
Placement round
5th place game
7th place game
27 June 2008 16:00 | Slovenia | 9 – 2 (2–0, 3–2, 3–0, 1–0) | Austria | Main Arena, Bratislava Attendance: 317 |
Game reference |
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Dejan Zemva (2) 07:14 (PP) Eric Pance (1) 10:46 (ES) Tadej Nabergoj (4) 21:19 (PP) Rok Bavdaz (4) 22:31 (ES) Jaka Zupanc (3) 23:10 (ES) Marjan Manfreda (1) 28:10 (ES) Jure Stopar (4) 32:58 (ES) Nejc Sotlar (6) 34:37 (ES) Jure Stopar (5) 40:53 (ES) | Goals | Youssef Riener (1) 20:56 (SH) Alexander Holler (2) 23:44 (ES) |
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13.5 min | Penalties | 12.0 min |
56 | Shots | 35 |
Semifinals
Bronze medal game
Gold medal game
Ranking and statistics
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2008 IIHF Inline Hockey World Championship Winners |
Sweden 4th title |
Tournament awards
- Best players selected by the directorate:[7]
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Final standings
The final standings of the tournament according to IIHF:[5]
Scoring leaders
Sweden's
Dick Axelsson recorded 16 points in six and was named the tournaments most valuable player
List shows the top 10 skaters sorted by points, then goals. If the list exceeds 10 skaters because of a tie in points, all of the tied skaters are left out. Games from the qualifying round do not count towards the Division I statistics.[9]
Leading goaltenders
Sasu Hovi of Finland finished third among the goaltenders after finishing with a save percentage of 91.30
Only the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played at least 40% of their team's minutes are included in this list. Games from the qualifying round do not count towards the Division I statistics.[10]
References
External links