2005 IIHF European Women's Champions Cup

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2005 IIHF European Women's Champions Cup
Tournament details
Host countriesFlag of Sweden.svg  Sweden
Flag of Estonia.svg  Estonia
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany
Flag of Italy.svg  Italy
Venue(s)4 (in 4 host cities)
DatesQualifiers
13–16 October 2005
Finals
2–4 December 2005
Teams13
Final positions
Champions  Gold medal blank.svg Flag of Sweden.svg AIK IF (2nd title)
Runner-up  Silver medal blank.svg Flag of Finland.svg Espoo Blues
Third place  Bronze medal blank.svg Flag of Russia.svg SKIF Moscow
Fourth place Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg EV Zug
Tournament statistics
Scoring leader(s)Finals
Karoliina Rantamäki, Espoo Blues (5 points)
  2004–05
2006–07  

The 2005 IIHF European Women's Champions Cup was the second holding of the IIHF European Women's Champions Cup (EWCC) ice hockey club tournament. AIK IF Solna of Sweden's Riksserien won the tournament for the second consecutive time. [1]

Contents

Each of the Qualification groups and the Super Final were played as single round-robin tournaments. Points were awarded by match outcome: two points for a regulation win, one point for an overtime win or loss, and no points/zero points for a regulation loss. As the defending cup holders, AIK IF progressed directly to the Super Final and did not participate in the qualification round.

Qualification

The qualification round was played in three groups in three host cities during 13–16 October 2005. The team with the highest point total in each round-robin group moved on to the Finals.

Group A

Group A was hosted in Tallinn, Estonia and played during 14–16 October 2005. The Espoo Blues Naiset of Finland's Naisten SM-sarja won the round and progressed to the Final.

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
1 Flag of Finland.svg Espoo Blues 3300541+536
2 Flag of Kazakhstan.svg Aisulu Almaty 3201325+274
3 Flag of Latvia.svg SHK Laima Riga 3102131302
4 Flag of Estonia.svg Dreamland Queens Tallinn 3003181800
Source: [ citation needed ]

Group B

Group B was played during 13–15 October 2005 and hosted in Bolzano, Italy, though no Italian teams participated. SKIF Moscow of the Russian Women's Hockey League won the round and progressed to the Final.

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
1 Flag of Russia.svg SKIF Moscow 3300262+246
2 Flag of Sweden.svg MB Hockey Skärholmen 3201236+174
3 Flag of Denmark.svg HC Rødovre 3102121202
4 Flag of Hungary.svg UTE Marilyn Budapest 3003142410
Source: [ citation needed ]

Group C

Group C was hosted in Unna, Germany, and played during 14–16 October 2005. EV Zug Damen of Switzerland's Leistungsklasse A won the round and progressed to the Final.

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
1 Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg EV Zug 3300284+246
2 Flag of France.svg HC Cergy-Pontoise 3111919103
3 Flag of Germany.svg EC Bergkamen 310271032
4 Flag of Slovakia.svg MHK Martin 3012920111
Source: [ citation needed ]

Super Final

The Super Final was hosted in Solna, Sweden, the same host city as the 2004–05 EWCC Final, and was played during 2–4 December 2005. AIK IF Solna of Sweden's Riksserien won the Cup for the second time. Karoliina Rantamäki of the Espoo Blues was the top scorer of the Super Final with five points (1+4).

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
Gold medal icon.svg Flag of Sweden.svg AIK 330073+46
Silver medal icon.svg Flag of Finland.svg Espoo Blues 320185+34
Bronze medal icon.svg Flag of Russia.svg SKIF Moscow 30125721
4 Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg EV Zug 301261151
Source: [ citation needed ]

Statistics

Top scorers

Abbreviations: GP = games played, G = goals, A = assists, Pts = points, +/- = plus–minus, PIM = penalty infraction minutes; Bold: Best of tournament

PlayerTeamGPGAPts+/−PIM
Karoliina Rantamäki Flag of Finland.svg Espoo Blues 3415+42
Pernilla Winberg Flag of Sweden.svg AIK IF 3224+20
Danijela Rundqvist Flag of Sweden.svg AIK IF 3134+26
Julia Marty Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg EV Zug 3213+10
Daniela Díaz Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg EV Zug 3213−22
Marjo Voutilainen Flag of Finland.svg Espoo Blues 3123+12
Petra Vaarakallio Flag of Finland.svg Espoo Blues 3123+36
Isabella Jordansson Flag of Sweden.svg AIK IF 3033+20

Top goaltenders

Abbreviations: GP = games played, TOI = time on ice (in minutes), GA = goals against, SO = shutouts, SV% = save percentage, GAA = goals against average; Bold: Best of tournament

PlayerTeamGPTOIGASOSV%GAA
Kim Martin Flag of Sweden.svg AIK IF 3180:003197.521.00
Noora Räty Flag of Finland.svg Espoo Blues 3179:105193.061.67
Michelle von Allmen Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg EV Zug 3179:458091.302.67
Nadezhda Alexandrova Flag of Russia.svg SKIF Moscow 2120:005088.892.50

Best Players Selected by the Directorate

AwardNo.PlayerTeam
Best Goalkeeper30 Kim Martin (SWE) Flag of Sweden.svg AIK IF
Best Defenceman10 Emma Laaksonen (FIN) Flag of Finland.svg Espoo Blues
Best Forward4 Daniela Díaz (SUI/SPA) Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg EV Zug

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References

Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de:IIHF European Women Champions Cup 2005; see its history for attribution.

  1. "European Women's Champions Cup (since 2005)". webarchive.iihf.com. IIHF . Retrieved 25 March 2020.

Tournament statistics and data from: