2020 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships – Division III

Last updated
2020 IIHF U20 World Championship
Division III
2020 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships - Division III.png
Tournament details
Host countryFlag of Bulgaria.svg  Bulgaria
Venue(s)1 (in 1 host city)
Dates13–19 January 2020
Teams8
Final positions
Champions  Gold medal blank.svg Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland
Runner-up  Silver medal blank.svg Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia
Third place  Bronze medal blank.svg Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey
Tournament statistics
Games played20
Goals scored134 (6.7 per game)
Attendance5,276 (264 per game)
Scoring leader(s) Flag of Iceland.svg Axel Orongan (16 points)
Website www.iihf.com
  2019
(cancelled) 2021
2022  

The 2020 World Junior Ice Hockey Championship Division III was an international ice hockey tournament organized by the International Ice Hockey Federation. It was played in Sofia, Bulgaria, from 13 to 19 January 2020. [1] [2] Eight teams participated in the competition; they were drawn into two preliminary round groups of four: the top two teams from each group played in the semifinals in a four-team bracket for a chance to play for promotion to Division II B, while the bottom two teams in each group played in placement rounds for 5th to 8th place. Iceland won the tournament. [3]

Contents

To be eligible as a junior player in these tournaments, a player couldn't be born earlier than 2000.

Participating teams

TeamQualification
Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico placed 6th in Division II B last year and were relegated
Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia placed 2nd in Division III last year
Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey placed 3rd in Division III last year
Flag of Bulgaria.svg  Bulgaria hosts; placed 4th in Division III last year
Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland placed 5th in Division III last year
Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg  Chinese Taipei placed 6th in Division III last year
Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa placed 7th in Division III last year
Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand placed 8th in Division III last year

Match officials

Six referees and 10 linesmen were selected for the tournament. [4]

Preliminary round

Division III Venue
Sofia
Winter Sports Palace
Capacity: 4,600
Winter sports palace.jpg

All times are local (Eastern European TimeUTC+2).

Group A

PosTeamPldWOTWOTLLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland 33000196+139 Semifinals
2Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico 32001127+56
3Flag of Bulgaria.svg  Bulgaria (H)3100281133 5th–8th place playoffs
4Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand 30003318150
Source: IIHF
(H) Host
13 January 2020
17:00
Mexico  Flag of Mexico.svg5–0
(1–0, 2–0, 2–0)
Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 115
Game reference
Marcello de Antunano Goalies Finley Forbes Referee:
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg Liu Jiaqi
Linesmen:
Flag of Hungary.svg Barna Kis-Király
Flag of Bulgaria.svg Vasiliy Vasilev
Hagerman (Dunn, Linares) (PP) – 09:591–0
Dunn – 28:552–0
Dunn (Sánchez, Tapia) – 30:283–0
Sánchez (Dunn, Tapia) – 45:384–0
Dunn – 49:095–0
18 minPenalties10 min
37Shots14
13 January 2020
20:30
Bulgaria  Flag of Bulgaria.svg3–4
(1–1, 0–2, 2–1)
Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 760
Game reference
Ivan Stoynov Goalies Jóhann Ragnarsson Referee:
Flag of Russia.svg Anton Gofman
Linesmen:
Flag of Belarus.svg Artsiom Labzov
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Graham Rodger
Vasilev – 08:271–0
1–117:37 – Magnússon (Árnason)
1–226:04 – Atlason
1–336:03 – Árnason (Orongan)
Vasilev (PP) – 41:122–3
Vachkov (EA) – 59:423–3
3–459:59 – Rúnarsson
8 minPenalties10 min
18Shots45

14 January 2020
17:00
Iceland  Flag of Iceland.svg5–2
(1–0, 3–2, 1–0)
Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 110
Game reference
Jóhann Ragnarsson Goalies Santiago Gómez Referee:
Flag of Finland.svg Sakari Suominen
Linesmen:
Flag of Romania.svg Imre Fehér
Flag of Bulgaria.svg Kiril Peychinov
Atlason (Orongan) – 12:191–0
Orongan – 20:192–0
Arason (Magnússon, Atlason) – 28:513–0
Sveinsson (Orongan, Kristveigarson (PP) – 29:524–0
4–131:06 – Rullan (Hagerman)
4–239:52 – Olvera (Hagerman, Linares)
Kristveigarson (Atlason, Orongan) (ENG) – 59:495–2
20 minPenalties28 min
31Shots11
14 January 2020
20:30
Bulgaria  Flag of Bulgaria.svg3–2
(0–0, 2–1, 1–1)
Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 850
Game reference
Ivan Stoynov Goalies Finley Forbes Referee:
Flag of Romania.svg Levente Szilárd Sikó
Linesmen:
Flag of Austria.svg Christoph Barnthaler
Flag of Iceland.svg Sæmundur Leifsson
Vasilev (Vachkov, Tomov) – 21:501–0
Ivanov (Nakov) – 25:362–0
2–135:25 – Robbie (Martinoli)
2–241:19 – Martinoli (Reid)
Dzhorov – 44:543–2
10 minPenalties33 min
26Shots12

16 January 2020
13:30
New Zealand  Flag of New Zealand.svg1–10
(1–4, 0–2, 0–4)
Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 65
Game reference
Rhett Wilson Goalies Johann Ragnarsson Referee:
Flag of Australia (converted).svg Kent Unwin
Linesmen:
Flag of Austria.svg Christoph Barnthaler
Flag of Bulgaria.svg Kiril Peychinov
Audas (Flight) – 02:021–0
1–104:35 – Kristveigarson (V. Arason, Magnússon)
1–206:08 – Orongan (SH2)
1–314:13 – Sveinsson (Grant, Ólafarson) (PP)
1–419:39 – Orongan
1–520:49 – Orongan (G. Arason)
1–633:05 – Skulason (Magnusson, Gunnarsson)
1–747:02 – Grant (Sveinsson, Ólafarson)
1–849:24 – Kristveigarson
1–949:52 – Rúnarsson (Magnusson)
1–1058:26 – G. Arason (Maack, Orongan)
8 minPenalties20 min
21Shots30
16 January 2020
20:30
Mexico  Flag of Mexico.svg5–2
(1–0, 3–0, 1–2)
Flag of Bulgaria.svg  Bulgaria Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 920
Game reference
Marcello de Antunano Goalies Ivan Stoynov Referee:
Flag of Austria.svg Patrick Gruber
Linesmen:
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg Gao Yinfeng
Flag of the Netherlands.svg Stef Oosterling
Linares (Dunn, Esteban) (PP) – 16:411–0
Sanchez (Hagerman, Dunn) – 27:462–0
Hagerman (Dunn, Rullan (EA) – 31:023–0
Rullan (Esteban) – 35:254–0
Esteban (Diaz, Hagerman) – 46:115–0
5–150:16 – Tsitselkov (Tomov, Dikov) (EA)
5–252:08 – Nakov (Vachkov, Tsitselkov)
16 minPenalties22 min
32Shots18

Group B

PosTeamPldWOTWOTLLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 33000143+119 Semifinals
2Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey 32001114+76
3Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa 3100271583 5th–8th place playoffs
4Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg  Chinese Taipei 30003313100
Source: IIHF
13 January 2020
10:00
Turkey  Flag of Turkey.svg3–0
(2–0, 1–0, 0–0)
Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg  Chinese Taipei Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 120
Game reference
Soykan Varlı Goalies Chung Shen-wei Referee:
Flag of Romania.svg Levente Szilárd Sikó
Linesmen:
Flag of Austria.svg Christoph Barnthaler
Flag of Bulgaria.svg Kiril Peychinov
Turan (Salt, Afşin) – 11:101–0
Turut (Kabay, Turan) (PP) – 15:052–0
Afşin (Turan, Kabay) – 20:543–0
0 minPenalties14 min
27Shots14
13 January 2020
13:30
Australia  Flag of Australia (converted).svg6–1
(0–1, 5–0, 1–0)
Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 125
Game reference
Seb Woodlands
Jeremy Friederich
Goalies Ryan Boyd Referee:
Flag of Finland.svg Sakari Suominen
Linesmen:
Flag of Romania.svg Imre Fehér
Flag of Iceland.svg Sæmundur Leifsson
0–105:52 – Delport (Vivier, Venter) (PP)
Lee (Riley) (PP) – 22:061–1
Gumm (SH) – 25:432–1
Riley (Lee) (SH) – 31:143–1
Barton (Chen, Handberg) – 37:074–1
Wardlaw (Kiliwnik, Hayashi) (PP) – 39:385–1
Wardlaw (Kiliwnik, Chen) – 49:196–1
14 minPenalties12 min
30Shots12

14 January 2020
10:00
Turkey  Flag of Turkey.svg6–1
(2–0, 1–0, 3–1)
Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 95
Game reference
Soykan Varlı Goalies Ryan Boyd Referee:
Flag of Australia (converted).svg Kent Unwin
Linesmen:
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg Gao Yinfeng
Flag of the Netherlands.svg Stef Oosterling
Gökçen (Afşin) (EA) – 13:381–0
Afşin (Kabay, Turan (PP2) – 16:362–0
Turan (Kabay, Gökçen) – 28:593–0
Demirezen (Turut, Kızılkaya) – 48:534–0
Afşin (Turan, Gökçen) – 49:265–0
Gökçen (Kabay, Afşin) – 52:216–0
6–153:13 – Vivier (Van der Merwe)
8 minPenalties32 min
32Shots12
14 January 2020
13:30
Chinese Taipei  Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg0–5
(0–0, 0–4, 0–1)
Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 85
Game reference
Chung Shen-wei
Lee Yi-cheng
Goalies Seb Woodlands Referee:
Flag of Austria.svg Patrick Gruber
Linesmen:
Flag of Belarus.svg Artsiom Labzov
Flag of Bulgaria.svg Vasiliy Vasilev
0–123:20 – Lodge (Wardlaw)
0–234:33 – Lee (Lodge, Wardlaw) (PP)
0–338:30 – Ransome (Handberg, Benson)
0–439:08 – Wardlaw (Lodge, Hayashi)
0–556:02 – Riley (Barton, Urweiss)
20 minPenalties26 min
19Shots37

16 January 2020
10:00
South Africa  Flag of South Africa.svg5–3
(0–0, 2–2, 3–1)
Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg  Chinese Taipei Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 60
Game reference
Ryan Boyd Goalies Lee Yi-cheng Referee:
Flag of Russia.svg Anton Gofman
Linesmen:
Flag of Hungary.svg Barna Kis-Király
Flag of Bulgaria.svg Vasiliy Vasilev
0–120:21 – Chang T. (Chuang, Liu)
0–221:19 – Chuang (Sang, Sun) (PP)
Schuurman (PP) – 29:061–2
Venter (Vivier) – 34:242–2
2–342:02 – Lin J.
Meyer (Delport) – 49:383–3
Schuurman – 56:544–3
Vivier (Meyer) (PP, ENG) – 59:495–3
34 minPenalties6 min
24Shots28
16 January 2020
17:00
Australia  Flag of Australia (converted).svg3–2
(0–1, 3–0, 0–1)
Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 105
Game reference
Seb Woodlands Goalies Soykan Varlı Referee:
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg Liu Jiaqi
Linesmen:
Flag of Iceland.svg Sæmundur Leifsson
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Graham Rodger
0–113:18 – Salt (Afşin) (PP2)
Riley (Gumm) – 21:381–1
Lee (Kiliwnik, Benson) (SH) – 36:282–1
Wardlaw (PP) – 38:363–1
3–243:29 – Turan (Gökçen)
12 minPenalties6 min
22Shots29

5th–8th place playoffs

Bracket

 
5th–8th place semifinals5th place match
 
      
 
18 January
 
 
Flag of Bulgaria.svg  Bulgaria 8
 
19 January
 
Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg  Chinese Taipei 1
 
Flag of Bulgaria.svg  Bulgaria 6
 
18 January
 
Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand 1
 
Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa 1
 
 
Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand 2
 
7th place match
 
 
19 January
 
 
Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa 4
 
 
Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg  Chinese Taipei (OT)5

5th–8th place semifinals

18 January 2020
10:00
Bulgaria  Flag of Bulgaria.svg8–1
(2–1, 1–0, 5–0)
Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg  Chinese Taipei Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 450
Game reference
Ivan Stoynov Goalies Lee Yi-cheng
Chung Sheng-wei
Referee:
Flag of Finland.svg Sakari Suominen
Linesmen:
Flag of Romania.svg Imre Fehér
Flag of Belarus.svg Artsiom Labzov
Minev (Vasilev, Tomov) – 12:071–0
1–112:43 – Liu (Sang, Yu)
Plajner (Dzhorov) – 16:092–1
Minev (Vasilev, Borisov) – 39:363–1
Vachkov (Ivanov) – 44:414–1
Nakov (Tsitselkov, Minev) – 45:515–1
Abdi (Ivanov, Vachkov) – 46:286—1
Vasilev (Atanasov, Borisov) – 47:257–1
Ivanov – 49:488–1
8 minPenalties12 min
27Shots21

18 January 2020
13:30
South Africa  Flag of South Africa.svg1–2
(1–1, 0–0, 0–1)
Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 75
Game reference
Ryan Boyd Goalies Finley Forbes Referee:
Flag of Russia.svg Anton Gofman
Linesmen:
Flag of Bulgaria.svg Kiril Peychinov
Flag of Bulgaria.svg Vasiliy Vasilev
0–108:11 – Flight (Audas)
Venter (PP) – 15:221–1
1–253:36 – Boul
2 minPenalties8 min
27Shots16

Seventh place game

19 January 2020
10:00
South Africa  Flag of South Africa.svg4–5 OT
(0–1, 2–1, 2–2)
(OT: 0–1)
Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg  Chinese Taipei Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 55
Game reference
Ryan Boyd Goalies Chung Sheng-wei Referee:
Flag of Australia (converted).svg Kent Unwin
Linesmen:
Flag of Romania.svg Imre Fehér
Flag of Iceland.svg Sæmundur Leifsson
0–112:06 – Mi (Lin Y.)
Koekemoer-Brown (Kluyts, Schuurman) – 25:441–1
1–230:15 – Mi (Yu, Lin J.) – 30:15
Kluyts (Venter) – 31:412–2
2–347:24 – Sun (Liang
2–450:10 – Chen (Liang)
Delport (Vivier, Meyer) – 53:513–4
Delport (Venter, Schuurman) (PP) – 59:594–4
4–564:32 – Mi
20 minPenalties24 min
27Shots19

Fifth place game

19 January 2020
13:30
Bulgaria  Flag of Bulgaria.svg6–1
(2–0, 2–1, 2–0)
Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 510
Game reference
Nikola Iliev Goalies Finley Forbes Referee:
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg Liu Jiaqi
Linesmen:
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg Gao Yinfeng
Flag of the Netherlands.svg Stef Oosterling
Abdi – 04:431–0
Vasilev (SH) – 08:412–0
Dikov (PP) – 24:543–0
3–132:05 – Flight (Boul)
Nakov – 38:574–1
Vasilev (Dzhorov, Dikov) (PP) – 45:325–1
Ivanov (Atanasov) – 55:596–1
44 minPenalties12 min
27Shots29

Championship playoffs

Bracket

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
18 January
 
 
Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland 5
 
19 January
 
Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey 2
 
Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland 4
 
18 January
 
Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 1
 
Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 8
 
 
Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico 3
 
3rd place match
 
 
19 January
 
 
Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey 4
 
 
Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico 2

Semifinals

18 January 2020
17:00
Australia  Flag of Australia (converted).svg8–3
(3–2,3–0, 2–1)
Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 81
Game reference
Seb Woodlands
Jeremy Friederich
Goalies Marcello de Antunano
Santiago Gomez
Referee:
Flag of Romania.svg Levente Szilárd Sikó
Linesmen:
Flag of the Netherlands.svg Stef Oosterling
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Graham Rodger
0–102:27 – Hagerman (Rullan)
0–207:00 – Esterban (Hagerman)
Gumm (Riley, Sables) (PP) – 08:101–2
Handberg (Wang, Benson) – 10:122–2
Hayashi (Lodge) – 12:503–2
Hayashi (Lodge) – 21:234–2
Hayashi (Riley, Clifford) (PP) – 23:535–2
Hayashi (Wardlaw, Kiliwnik – 28:266–2
Fodor (James, Ransome) – 53:587–2
Handberg (Gumm, Sables) – 55:378–2
8–357:39 – Hagerman (Dunn, Linares) (PP)
12 minPenalties22 min
24Shots20

18 January 2020
20:30
Iceland  Flag of Iceland.svg5–2
(1–1, 4–0, 0–0)
Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 95
Game reference
Jóhann Ragnarsson Goalies Soykan Varlı
Eren Demirtürk
Referee:
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg Liu Jiaqi
Linesmen:
Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg Gao Yinfeng
Flag of Hungary.svg Barna Kis-Király
Skúlason (Magnússon, Grant) – 16:161–0
1–116:54 – Afşin (Gökçen, Turan)
Orongan – 21:522–1
Atlason (Orongan, Kristveigarson) – 29:303–1
Orongan (V. Arason, G. Arason) – 34:274–1
Atlason (Arnarsson, Orongan) – 35:125–1
5–257:48 – Gökçen (SH)
8 minPenalties6 min
22Shots19

Bronze medal game

19 January 2020
17:00
Turkey  Flag of Turkey.svg4–2
(1–1, 1–1, 2–0)
Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 250
Game reference
Eren Demirturk Goalies Marcello de Antunano Referee:
Flag of Finland.svg Sakari Suominen
Linesmen:
Flag of Hungary.svg Barna Kis-Király
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Graham Rodger
0–114:34 – Hagerman (Ortiz, Rullan) (PP)
Kızılkaya (Salt, Gökçen) (PP) – 16:331–1
1–226:13 – Hagerman (Dunn, Rullan) (PP)
Demirezen (Kızılkaya, Gökçen) – 35:462–2
Turut (Kızılkaya) – 45:553–2
Turut (Demirezen) (ENG) – 59:394–2
14 minPenalties32 min
25Shots26

Gold medal game

19 January 2020
20:30
Iceland  Flag of Iceland.svg4–1
1–0, 2–0, 1–1
Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia Winter Sports Palace, Sofia
Attendance: 350
Game reference
Jóhann Ragnarsson Goalies Seb Woodlands Referee:
Flag of Russia.svg Anton Gofman
Linesmen:
Flag of Austria.svg Christoph Barnthaler
Flag of Belarus.svg Artsiom Labzov
Jóhannsson (Kristveigarson) – 18:081–0
Orongan (SH) – 22:472–0
Orongan (PP) – 34:403–0
Kristveigarson (Orongan) – 40:174–0
4–143:12 – Ransome (Barton, Kiliwnik)
22 minPenalties10 min
26Shots16

Final standings

RankTeam
Gold medal icon.svgFlag of Iceland.svg  Iceland
Silver medal icon.svgFlag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia
Bronze medal icon.svgFlag of Turkey.svg  Turkey
4Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico
5Flag of Bulgaria.svg  Bulgaria
6Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand
7Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg  Chinese Taipei
8Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa
Promoted to the 2022 Division II B

Statistics

Top 10 scorers

PosPlayerCountryGPGAPts+/–PIM
1 Axel Orongan Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland 58816+132
2 Gonzalo Hagerman Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico 56511+332
3 Benjamin Dunn Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico 53710020
4 Firat Afsin Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey 5459+72
5 İsmet Gökçen Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey 5369+80
6 Miroslav Vasilev Flag of Bulgaria.svg  Bulgaria 5628+426
7 Mehmet Turan Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey 5358+68
8 Heidar Kristveigarson Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland 5437+100
8 Xander Wardlaw Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 5437+52
10 Sölvi Atlason Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland 5426+100
10 Kenshin Hayashi Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 5426+42

GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/− = P Plus–minus; PIM = Penalties In Minutes
Source: IIHF

Goaltending leaders

(minimum 40% team's total ice time)

PosPlayerCountryTOIGASv%GAASO
1 Seb Woodlands Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 274:55990.321.961
2 Jóhann Ragnarsson Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland 280:00989.021.930
3 Ivan Stoyov Flag of Bulgaria.svg  Bulgaria 226:481288.123.170
4 Marcello de Antunano Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico 234:061087.502.561
5 Finley Forbes Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand 238:571587.183.770

TOI = Time on ice (minutes:seconds); GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; Sv% = Save percentage; SO = Shutouts
Source: IIHF.com

Awards

Best Players Selected by the Directorate

AwardName
Best Goalkeeper Flag of Australia (converted).svg Seb Woodlands
Best Defenceman Flag of Mexico.svg Gonzalo Hagerman
Best Forward Flag of Iceland.svg Axel Orongan

Source: IIHF

Best Players of Each Team Selected by Coaches

CountryName
Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia Michael Riley
Flag of Bulgaria.svg  Bulgaria Moussa Abdi
Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland Axel Orongan
Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico Gonzalo Hagerman
Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand Finley Forbes
Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa Ryan Boyd
Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg  Chinese Taipei Mi Huan-yu
Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey Haktan Kabay

Source: IIHF

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2008 IIHF World Championship</span> 2008 edition of the IIHF World Championship

The 2008 IIHF World Championship was played between May 2 and May 18, 2008 in the Canadian cities of Halifax and Quebec City (Quebec). The two venues were the Halifax Metro Centre and the Colisée Pepsi. The tournament was won by Russia which claimed its first gold medal since 1993.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2013 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships</span> U20 ice hockey tournament in Ufa, Russia

The 2013 IIHF World U20 Championship was the 37th edition of the Ice Hockey World Junior Championship (WJC). It was hosted in Ufa, Russia. It began on December 26, 2012, and ended with the gold medal game played on January 5, 2013. The United States defeated defending-champion Sweden 3–1 to win their third title, their first one since 2010. American goalie John Gibson was named MVP of the tournament.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2014 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships</span> U20 ice hockey tournament in Malmö, Sweden

The 2014 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships was the 38th edition of the Ice Hockey World Junior Championship (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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2015 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships</span> Ice hockey championship series

The 2015 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships was the 39th edition of Ice Hockey World Junior Championship, played from December 26, 2014 to January 5, 2015. It was co-hosted by Toronto, Ontario, and Montreal, Quebec, Canada, and organized by Hockey Canada, Hockey Quebec, the Ontario Hockey Federation, the Montreal Canadiens, Maple Leafs Sports and Entertainment and Evenko. Games were split between Air Canada Centre in Toronto and Bell Centre in Montreal, with Montreal hosting Group A matches and two quarter finals, and Toronto hosting Group B, along with the relegation games, two quarter finals, along with the semi-finals, bronze medal, and gold medal games.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2017 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships</span> Under-20 ice hockey championship held in Canada

The 2017 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships was the 41st edition of the Ice Hockey World Junior Championship. The main tournament was co-hosted by the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec and Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario. This was the 14th championship that Canada had hosted. Montreal and Toronto also jointly hosted the 2015 edition. The tournament consisted of 30 games between 10 nations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2016 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships</span> 2016 international ice hockey competition

The 2016 World Junior Ice Hockey Championship was the 40th Ice Hockey World Junior Championship. It was hosted in Helsinki, Finland. It began on December 26, 2015, and ended with the gold medal game on January 5, 2016. This marked the sixth time that Finland has hosted the WJC, and the hosts defeated Russia 4–3 in overtime to win their fourth title in history and second in the last three years. Belarus was relegated to Division I-A for 2017 by merit of their tenth-place finish, while Finnish right winger Jesse Puljujärvi earned MVP and top scorer honors.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2018 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships</span> Tournament held in Buffalo, New York

The 2018 World Junior Ice Hockey Championship was the 42nd edition of the Ice Hockey World Junior Championship, and was hosted by the city of Buffalo, New York at KeyBank Center and HarborCenter. It opened on December 26, 2017 and closed with the gold medal game on January 5, 2018. It was the sixth time that the United States has hosted the WJIHC, and the second time that Buffalo has done so, previously hosting in 2011.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2017 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II</span>

The 2017 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II was three international ice hockey tournaments organised by the International Ice Hockey Federation. The Division II Group A tournament was played in Gangneung, South Korea, from 2 to 8 April 2017, the Division II Group B tournament was played in Akureyri, Iceland, from 27 February to 5 March 2017, and the Division II Group B Qualification tournament was played in Taipei, Taiwan, from 12 to 17 December 2016.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2019 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships</span> Ice hockey championship held in British Columbia, Canada

The 2019 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships was the 43rd edition of the Ice Hockey World Junior Championship. It began on December 26, 2018, and ended with the gold medal game being played on January 5, 2019. This marked the 15th time that Canada hosted the WJC.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2020 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships</span> 2020 edition of the World Junior Ice Hockey Championships

The 2020 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships was the 44th edition of the Ice Hockey World Junior Championship. It began on 26 December 2019, and ended with the gold medal game being played on 5 January 2020. Canada defeated Russia 4–3 to win the gold medal and their 18th world junior hockey championship. This marks the fourth time that the Czech Republic hosted the WJHC.

The 2019 World Junior Ice Hockey Championship Division I consisted of two tiered groups of six teams each: the second-tier Division I A and the third-tier Division I B. For each tier's tournament, the first-placed team was promoted to a higher division, while the last-placed team was relegated to a lower division.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2021 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships</span> 2021 edition of the World Junior Ice Hockey Championships

The 2021 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships were the 45th edition of the Ice Hockey World Junior Championship. It began on December 25, 2020, and ended with the gold medal game on January 5, 2021. This marked the 16th time that Canada hosted the WJIHC. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada, it was hosted in a "bubble" behind closed doors in Edmonton, Alberta, with no spectators admitted for any game.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2019 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships – Division III</span>

The 2019 World Junior Ice Hockey Championship Division III was an international ice hockey tournament organized by the International Ice Hockey Federation. It was played in Reykjavík, Iceland, from 14 to 20 January 2019. Eight teams participated in the competition; they were drawn into two preliminary round groups of four. China won the tournament and were promoted to Division II B for 2020.

The 2020 World Junior Ice Hockey Championship Division I consisted of two tiered groups of six teams each: the second-tier Division I A and the third-tier Division I B. For each tier's tournament, the first-placed team was promoted to a higher division, while the last-placed team was relegated to a lower division.

The 2020 World Junior Ice Hockey Championship Division II consisted of two tiered groups of six teams each: the fourth-tier Division II A and the fifth-tier Division II B. For each tier's tournament, the first-placed team was promoted to a higher division, while the last-placed team was relegated to a lower division.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2024 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships</span> 2024 edition of the World Junior Ice Hockey Championships

The 2024 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships was the 48th edition of the Ice Hockey World Junior Championship's top division. It was held from 26 December 2023 to 5 January 2024. This was the seventh time that Sweden has hosted the WJHC, and the first time in Gothenburg. Canada entered the tournament as two-time defending champions. The United States won their sixth championship, defeating host Sweden 6–2 in the gold medal game.

The 2022 IIHF World Championship Division II was an international ice hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation.

The 2022 World Junior Ice Hockey Championship Division I consisted of two tiered groups of six teams each: the second-tier Division I A and the third-tier Division I B. Due to the exclusion of Russia and Belarus, the following changes in promotions and relegations were made: Latvia as the second-placed team of Division I A were promoted to the 2022 Top Division, their second Junior World Championship tournament this season. In Division I B, the top two teams were promoted to the next year's Division I A. In both tournaments, no team was relegated to a lower division.

The 2023 IIHF World Championship Division II were two international ice hockey tournaments run by the International Ice Hockey Federation.

The 2023 World Junior Ice Hockey Championship Division II was a pair of international ice hockey tournaments organized by the International Ice Hockey Federation. It consisted of two tiered groups of six teams each: the fourth-tier Division II A and the fifth-tier Division II B. For each tier's tournament, the first-placed team was promoted to a higher division, while the last-placed team was relegated to a lower division.

References

  1. "2020 World Championship Division III official website". www.iihf.com.
  2. "2020 World Championship Division III statistics". stats.iihf.com.
  3. Tchechankov, Ivan (20 January 2020). "Iceland triumphs in U20 Division III". IIHF . Retrieved 20 January 2020.
  4. "Competition Officials". IIHF . January 6, 2020. Retrieved January 6, 2020.