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2023 IIHF World Championship





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The 2023 IIHF World Championship was co-hosted by Tampere, Finland, and Riga, Latvia. The tournament was held from 12 to 28 May 2023, organized by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF).

2023 IIHF World Championship
Tournament details
Host countries Finland
 Latvia
Venue(s)2 (in 2 host cities)
Dates12–28 May
Opened bySauli Niinistö
Teams16
Final positions
Champions  Canada (28th title)
Runner-up  Germany
Third place  Latvia
Fourth place United States
Tournament statistics
Games played64
Goals scored354 (5.53 per game)
Attendance442,160 (6,909 per game)
Scoring leader(s)United States Rocco Grimaldi (14 points)
MVPLatvia Artūrs Šilovs
← 2022
2024 →

Canada won its 28th title by beating Germany 5–2 in the final.[1] The silver was Germany's first medal since 1953. Latvia claimed its first IIHF medal after defeating the USA 4–3 in overtime and finishing third.[2]

As in the 2022 edition, the tournament saw several upsets: Kazakhstan's win over Norway, Hungary's win over France, Latvia's first victory over Czechia, Norway’s second win over Canada, as well as Kazakhstan's first victory over Slovakia.[3][4] The playoffs also saw major upsets, as Latvia reached the semi-finals for the first time after defeating favourite Sweden 3–1 in the quarter-finals,[5] Germany upset Switzerland 3–1 and the reigning Olympic and World Champion Finland lost to Canada 4–1. Czechia finished in 8th place after losing to the United States (USA) 3–0 in the quarter-finals, which is that nation's worst placement to date in the history of the World Championship. Germany reached the final for the first time since 1930 after upsetting the fourth-seeded USA 4–3 in overtime.

Host nation bid

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The event was originally planned to be held in Saint Petersburg, Russia, but, in February 2022, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) called for Russia and Belarus to be stripped of hosting rights to all international sporting events due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[6] On 26 April 2022, Russia lost their rights to host the World Championship.[7]

After being promoted to the top division, Slovenia and Hungary bid to co-host the event in Ljubljana and Budapest.[8] The bid was withdrawn due to Hungarian Ice Hockey Federation informing the IIHF that it did not receive the governmental guarantees to host. Finland and Latvia submitted a joint bid, with Nokia ArenainTampere and Arena RigainRiga as potential host venues.[9] On 27 May 2022, the IIHF confirmed that Finland and Latvia would host the tournament, with Finland having also hosted the 2022 IIHF World Championship in Tampere (Nokia Arena) and Helsinki (Helsinki Ice Hall).[10]

Venues

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  Finland
 
 
 
  Latvia
  Tampere   Riga
Nokia Arena
Capacity: 13,455
Arena Riga
Capacity: 10,300
   

Participants

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Qualified as hosts
Automatic qualifier after a top 14 placement at the 2022 IIHF World Championship
Qualified through winning promotion at the 2022 IIHF World Championship Division I

Seeding

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The seedings in the preliminary round are based on the 2022 IIHF World Ranking, as of the end of the 2022 IIHF World Championship, using the serpentine system while allowing the organizer, "to allocate a maximum of two teams to separate groups."[11][12]

Rosters

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Each team's roster consists of at least 15 skaters (forwards, and defencemen) and 2 goaltenders, and at most 22 skaters and 3 goaltenders. All 16 participating nations, through the confirmation of their respective national associations, have to submit a "Long List" no later than two weeks before the tournament, and a final roster by the Passport Control meeting prior to the start of the tournament.

Match officials

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16 referees and linesmen were announced on 6 April 2023.[13][14]

Referees Linesmen
  •   Adam Bloski
  •   Mike Langin
  •   Jan Hribik
  •   Mads Frandsen
  •   Lassi Heikkinen
  •   Mikko Kaukokari
  •   Liam Sewell
  •   Sirko Hunnius
  •   André Schrader
  •   Andris Ansons
  •   Tobias Björk
  •   Christoffer Holm
  •   Stefan Hürlimann
  •   Miroslav Štolc
  •   Sean Fernandez
  •   Sean MacFarlane
    •   David Nothegger
  •   Brett Mackey
  •   Tarrington Wyonzek
  •   Daniel Hynek
  •   Jiří Ondráček
  •   Andreas Krøyer
  •   Onni Hautamäki
  •   Tommi Niittylä
  •   Nicolas Constantineau
  •   Andreas Hofer
  •   Dāvis Zunde
  •   Šimon Synek
  •   Emil Yletyinen
  •   Eric Cattaneo
  •   Nick Briganti
  •   Jake Davis
  • Preliminary round

    edit

    The groups were announced on 29 May 2022,[15] with the schedule being revealed on 8 September 2022.[16]

    Group A

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    A game between France and HungaryinNokia Arena
    Pos Team
  • t
  • e
  • Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
    1   United States 7 6 1 0 0 34 8 +26 20 Quarterfinals
    2   Sweden 7 5 1 1 0 26 7 +19 18
    3   Finland (H) 7 5 0 1 1 28 15 +13 16
    4   Germany 7 4 0 0 3 27 16 +11 12
    5   Denmark 7 2 1 0 4 19 26 −7 8 Qualification for 2024 IIHF World Championship
    6   France 7 0 1 2 4 10 31 −21 4
    7   Austria 7 0 1 1 5 11 27 −16 3[a]
    8   Hungary 7 0 1 1 5 12 37 −25 3[a] Relegation to 2024 Division I A
    Source: IIHF
    Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal difference; 4) head-to-head number of goals scored; 5) result against closest best-ranked team outside tied teams; 6) result against second-best-ranked team outside tied teams; 7) seeding before tournament
    (H) Host
    Notes:
    1. ^ a b Austria 4–3 Hungary
    12 May 2023
    Finland   1–4   United States
    Sweden   1–0   Germany
    13 May 2023
    France   2–1 (OT)   Austria
    Hungary   1–3   Denmark
    Germany   3–4   Finland
    14 May 2023
    United States   7–1   Hungary
    France   3–4 (OT)   Denmark
    Sweden   5–0   Austria
    15 May 2023
    Germany   2–3   United States
    Finland   1–2 (GWS)   Sweden
    16 May 2023
    Denmark   6–2   Austria
    France   2–3 (OT)   Hungary
    17 May 2023
    United States   4–1   Austria
    Finland   5–3   France
    18 May 2023
    Hungary   1–7   Sweden
    Denmark   4–6   Germany
    19 May 2023
    Hungary   1–7   Finland
    Austria   2–4   Germany
    20 May 2023
    United States   3–0   Denmark
    Austria   1–3   Finland
    Sweden   4–0   France
    21 May 2023
    Germany   7–2   Hungary
    United States   9–0   France
    22 May 2023
    Denmark   1–4   Sweden
    Austria   4–3 (GWS)   Hungary
    23 May 2023
    Germany   5–0   France
    Sweden   3–4 (OT)   United States
    Finland   7–1   Denmark

    Group B

    edit
     
    Watching hockey in Dome Square, Riga
     
    Postgame between Sweden and LatviainArena Riga
    Pos Team
  • t
  • e
  • Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
    1    Switzerland 7 6 0 1 0 29 10 +19 19 Quarterfinals
    2   Canada 7 4 1 1 1 25 11 +14 15
    3   Latvia (H) 7 3 2 0 2 21 17 +4 13[a]
    4   Czechia 7 4 0 1 2 22 16 +6 13[a]
    5   Slovakia 7 3 0 2 2 15 15 0 11 Qualification for 2024 IIHF World Championship
    6   Kazakhstan 7 1 2 0 4 14 31 −17 7
    7   Norway 7 1 1 1 4 9 17 −8 6
    8   Slovenia 7 0 0 0 7 9 27 −18 0 Relegation to 2024 Division I A
    Source: IIHF
    Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) head-to-head points; 3) head-to-head goal difference; 4) head-to-head number of goals scored; 5) result against closest best-ranked team outside tied teams; 6) result against second-best-ranked team outside tied teams; 7) seeding before tournament
    (H) Host
    Notes:
    1. ^ a b Czechia 3–4 (OT) Latvia
    12 May 2023
    Slovakia   2–3   Czechia
    Latvia   0–6   Canada
    13 May 2023
    Switzerland   7–0   Slovenia
    Norway   3–4 (GWS)   Kazakhstan
    Slovakia   2–1   Latvia
    14 May 2023
    Slovenia   2–5   Canada
    Norway   0–3    Switzerland
    Czechia   5–1   Kazakhstan
    15 May 2023
    Slovakia   1–2 (GWS)   Canada
    Czechia   3–4 (OT)   Latvia
    16 May 2023
    Slovenia   0–1   Norway
    Switzerland   5–0   Kazakhstan
    17 May 2023
    Latvia   2–1   Norway
    Canada   5–1   Kazakhstan
    18 May 2023
    Czechia   6–2   Slovenia
    Switzerland   4–2   Slovakia
    19 May 2023
    Latvia   3–2   Slovenia
    Kazakhstan   4–3 (GWS)   Slovakia
    20 May 2023
    Norway   0–2   Czechia
    Canada   2–3    Switzerland
    Kazakhstan   0–7   Latvia
    21 May 2023
    Slovenia   0–1   Slovakia
    Czechia   2–4    Switzerland
    22 May 2023
    Canada   2–3 (GWS)   Norway
    Kazakhstan   4–3   Slovenia
    23 May 2023
    Slovakia   4–1   Norway
    Canada   3–1   Czechia
    Switzerland   3–4 (OT)   Latvia

    Playoff round

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    There was a re-seeding after the quarter-finals.[17] If Finland and Latvia were to play in the quarter-finals, there would have been no cross-over for the quarter-finals.

     

    Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal

     

              

     

    25 May

     

     

    1A

      United States
    3

     

    27 May

     

    4B

      Czechia
    0

     

    1

      United States
    3

     

    25 May

     

    8

      Germany (OT)
    4

     

    1B

       Switzerland
    1

     

    28 May

     

    4A

      Germany
    3

     

    8

      Germany
    2

     

    25 May

     

    4

      Canada
    5

     

    2A

      Sweden
    1

     

    27 May

     

    3B

      Latvia
    3

     

    4

      Canada
    4

     

    25 May

     

    6

      Latvia
    2Third place

     

    2B

      Canada
    4

     

    28 May

     

    3A

      Finland
    1

     

    1

      United States
    3

     

     

    6

      Latvia (OT)
    4

     

    Final standings

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    Teams finishing fifth in the preliminary round were ranked ninth and tenth, teams finishing sixth are ranked 11th and 12th, and so on.[18]

    Pos Grp Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Final result
    1 B   Canada 10 7 1 1 1 38 16 +22 24 Champions
    2 A   Germany 10 5 1 0 4 36 25 +11 17 Runners-up
    3 B   Latvia (H) 10 4 3 0 3 30 25 +5 18 Third place
    4 A   United States 10 7 1 2 0 43 16 +27 25 Fourth place
    5 B    Switzerland 8 6 0 1 1 30 13 +17 19 Eliminated in
    Quarter-finals
    6 A   Sweden 8 5 1 1 1 27 10 +17 18
    7 A   Finland (H) 8 5 0 1 2 29 19 +10 16
    8 B   Czechia 8 4 0 1 3 22 19 +3 13
    9 B   Slovakia 7 3 0 2 2 15 15 0 11 Eliminated in
    Group stage
    10 A   Denmark 7 2 1 0 4 19 26 −7 8
    11 B   Kazakhstan 7 1 2 0 4 14 31 −17 7
    12 A   France 7 0 1 2 4 10 31 −21 4
    13 B   Norway 7 1 1 1 4 9 17 −8 6
    14 A   Austria 7 0 1 1 5 11 27 −16 3
    15 A   Hungary 7 0 1 1 5 12 37 −25 3 Relegated to
    2024 IIHF World Championship Division I
    16 B   Slovenia 7 0 0 0 7 9 27 −18 0
    Source: IIHF
    Rules for classification: 1) position in the group; 2) number of points; 3) goal difference; 4) goals scored; 5) seeding before tournament.
    (H) Host

    Statistics

    edit

    Scoring leaders

    edit
     
    Rocco Grimaldi of the United States led the tournament in scoring with 14 points

    List shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.

    Player GP G A Pts +/− PIM POS
      Rocco Grimaldi 10 7 7 14 +8 6 F
      Dominik Kubalík 8 8 4 12 +3 0 F
      JJ Peterka 10 6 6 12 +8 0 F
      Rihards Bukarts 10 3 8 11 +3 8 F
      MacKenzie Weegar 10 3 8 11 +10 6 D
      T. J. Tynan 10 1 10 11 +10 0 F
      Henrik Tömmernes 8 0 10 10 +5 2 D
      Cutter Gauthier 10 7 2 9 +9 2 F
      Lawson Crouse 10 6 3 9 +9 4 F
      Nikolaj Ehlers 7 5 4 9 −3 0 F

    GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/− = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalties in Minutes; POS = Position
    Source: IIHF.com

    Goaltending leaders

    edit

    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.

    Player TOI GA GAA SA Sv% SO
      Stanislav Škorvánek 238:39 5 1.26 108 95.37 1
      Karel Vejmelka 236:26 7 1.78 124 94.35 1
      Sam Montembeault 423:07 10 1.42 163 93.87 1
      Lars Johansson 303:42 8 1.58 120 93.33 2
      Samuel Hlavaj 189:05 7 2.22 103 93.20 0

    TOI = time on ice (minutes:seconds); SA = shots against; GA = goals against; GAA = goals against average; Sv% = save percentage; SO = shutouts
    Source: IIHF.com

    Awards

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    Bronze medal celebration at the foot of the Freedom Monument in Riga
     
    Artūrs Šilovs was named the tournament MVP, best goaltender, and was selected to the tournament all-star team

    The awards were announced on 28 May 2023.[19]

    Individual awards

    edit
    Position Player
    Goaltender   Artūrs Šilovs
    Defenceman   MacKenzie Weegar
    Forward   JJ Peterka

    Media All Stars

    edit
    Position Player
    Goaltender   Artūrs Šilovs
    Defenceman   MacKenzie Weegar
    Defenceman   Moritz Seider
    Forward   JJ Peterka
    Forward   Rocco Grimaldi
    Forward   Dominik Kubalík
    MVP   Artūrs Šilovs

    Broadcasting rights

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    TV studios in Nokia Arena: the Finnish C More (left) and the Swedish SVT (right)
     
    Broadcasting cameras and positions for the commentators in Nokia Arena, Tampere

    These are the broadcasters for the tournament.[20]

    Country Broadcaster
    Austria ORF
    Canada TSN
    RDS
    Czech Republic ČT
    Denmark TV 2 Sport
    Estonia ERR
    Finland MTV
    France Fanseat
    Germany Sport1
    Magenta Sport
    Hungary Sport 1
    Kazakhstan Qazsport
    Latvia LTV
    Tet
    Lithuania LRT
    Norway Viaplay
    Poland TVP
    Russia Match TV
    Slovakia RTVS
    Slovenia RTV
    Šport TV
    Sweden SVT
    Switzerland SRG SSR
    Ukraine XSPORT
    United Kingdom Viaplay Sports
    United States NHL Network
    ESPN+

    References

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    1. ^ Podnieks, Andrew (28 May 2023). "Canada rallies to win gold". IIHF. Retrieved 28 May 2023.
  • ^ Aykroyd, Lucas (28 May 2023). "Latvia wins historic bronze in OT". IIHF. Archived from the original on 28 May 2023. Retrieved 28 May 2023.
  • ^ O'Brien, Derek (15 May 2023). "Latvia wins, Batna the OT hero". IIHF. Archived from the original on 18 May 2023. Retrieved 15 May 2023.
  • ^ Podnieks, Andrew (19 May 2023). "Kazakhs top Slovakia in record shootout". IIHF. Archived from the original on 20 May 2023. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
  • ^ Podnieks, Andrew (25 May 2023). "Brinums (Miracle) in Riga!". IIHF. Archived from the original on 25 May 2023. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  • ^ Iveson, Ali (25 February 2022). "Strip Russia and Belarus of events and do not display their flags, says IOC". Inside the Games. Archived from the original on 26 February 2022. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
  • ^ "IIHF to move 2023 World Championship". iihf.com. Archived from the original on 3 May 2022. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
  • ^ "Slovenia, Hungary mount joint bid to host Ice-Hockey Worlds in 2023". The Slovenia Times. Ljubljana, Slovenia. 9 May 2022. Archived from the original on 23 May 2022. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  • ^ Merk, Martin. "Tampere/Riga candidate for 2023". IIHF. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  • ^ Merk, Martin (27 May 2022). "To Tampere/Riga in '23, to Switzerland in '26". IIHF. Archived from the original on 27 May 2022. Retrieved 27 May 2022.
  • ^ Merk, Martin. "Finland stays #1 in World Ranking". IIHF. Archived from the original on 29 May 2022. Retrieved 29 May 2022.
  • ^ Merk, Martin. "World Championship Schedule Released". IIHF. Archived from the original on 8 September 2022. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  • ^ Aykroyd, Lucas (6 April 2023). "2023 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship Officials Chosen". IIHF. Archived from the original on 6 April 2023. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  • ^ "Competition officials" (PDF). iihf.com. 10 May 2023. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 May 2023. Retrieved 10 May 2023.
  • ^ Merk, Martin (29 May 2022). "Finland stays #1 in World Ranking". IIHF. Archived from the original on 29 May 2022. Retrieved 29 May 2022.
  • ^ Merk, Martin (8 September 2022). "World Championship schedule released". IIHF. Archived from the original on 8 September 2022. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  • ^ "IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship 2023: Preview, schedule, stars involved, how to watch live". olympics.com. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  • ^ "Tournament Format". iihf.com. Archived from the original on 21 May 2023. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  • ^ O'Brien, Derek (28 May 2023). "Silovs MVP, All-Stars named". IIHF. Retrieved 28 May 2023.
  • ^ "Broadcast Partners List" (PDF). IIHF. Archived (PDF) from the original on 7 May 2023. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  • edit

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2023_IIHF_World_Championship&oldid=1231041688"
     



    Last edited on 26 June 2024, at 03:47  





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