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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Bids  





2 Venues  





3 Qualified teams  





4 Seeding  





5 Rosters  





6 Officials  





7 Preliminary round  



7.1  Group A  





7.2  Group B  







8 Playoff round  



8.1  Quarterfinals  





8.2  Semifinals  





8.3  Bronze medal game  





8.4  Gold medal game  







9 Final ranking and statistics  



9.1  Final ranking  





9.2  Scoring leaders  





9.3  Goaltending leaders  





9.4  Awards  







10 References  





11 External links  














2018 IIHF World Championship






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


2018 IIHF World Championship
Tournament details
Host country Denmark
Venue(s)2 (in 2 host cities)
Dates4–20 May
Opened byMargrethe II
Teams16
Final positions
Champions  Sweden (11th title)
Runner-up   Switzerland
Third place  United States
Fourth place Canada
Tournament statistics
Games played64
Goals scored384 (6 per game)
Attendance520,481 (8,133 per game)
Scoring leader(s)United States Patrick Kane (20 points)
MVPUnited States Patrick Kane
← 2017
2019 →

The 2018 IIHF World Championship was an international ice hockey tournament hosted by the Danish cities of Copenhagen and Herning, held from 4 to 20 May 2018. The IIHF announced the winning bid on 23 May 2014 in Minsk, Belarus.[1][2] South Korea made its debut at the World Championship, having played in the lower divisions previously.[3]

Sweden went undefeated at the tournament to win their second consecutive and eleventh overall title after defeating Switzerland in the final.[4] The United States won the bronze medal game, defeating Canada 4–1.

The official mascot of the tournament was a swan,[5] inspired by the Danish writer and poet Hans Christian Andersen's fairytale about The Ugly Duckling.[6]

Bids[edit]

There were two bids to host this championship.[7]

Denmark is the only top-ranked IIHF country that has never hosted the tournament. The proposed arenas were the Royal ArenainCopenhagen and the Jyske Bank BoxeninHerning.[2] Both arenas have a capacity of around 12,000 for hockey games.[8]
Latvia hosted the IIHF World Championship in 2006. The proposed arenas were Arena Riga, and a secondary venue to be built.[2]

The decision was announced on 23 May 2014 in Minsk, Belarus. The final tally was 95-12 in favor of Denmark.[1][2]

Venues[edit]

Copenhagen
Herning
Herning
Royal Arena Jyske Bank Boxen
Capacity: 12,500 Capacity: 12,000

Qualified teams[edit]

Mascot: Duckly
Qualified as host
Automatic qualifier after a top 14 placement at the 2017 IIHF World Championship
  •  Canada
  •  Czech Republic
  •  Finland
  •  France
  •  Germany
  •  Latvia
  •  Norway
  •  Russia
  •  Slovakia
  •  Sweden
  •   Switzerland
  •  United States
  • Qualified through winning a promotion at the 2017 IIHF World Championship Division I
  •  South Korea
  • Seeding[edit]

    The seeding in the preliminary round was based on the 2017 IIHF World Ranking, which ended at the conclusion of the 2017 IIHF World Championship.[9]

    Denmark and Sweden played in separate groups, Denmark at the Jyske Bank Boxen while Sweden at the Royal Arena in Copenhagen.[10]

    1 Denmark and France swapped sides so Denmark would not be in the same group as Sweden.

    Rosters[edit]

    Each team's roster consisted 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, had 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 tournament.

    Officials[edit]

    16 referees and linesman were announced on 21 March 2018.[11][12]

    Referees Linesmen
    • Austria Mark Lemelin
  • Canada Oliver Gouin
  • Canada Brett Iverson
  • Czech Republic Jan Hribik
  • Czech Republic Antonín Jeřábek
  • Finland Mikko Kaukokari
  • Finland Aleksi Rantala
  • Germany Gordon Schukies
  • Russia Roman Gofman
  • Russia Konstantin Olenin
  • Switzerland Tobias Wehrli
  • Slovakia Jozef Kubuš
  • Sweden Linus Öhlund
  • Sweden Mikael Sjöqvist
  • United States Timothy Mayer
  • United States Stephen Reneau
    • Belarus Dmitri Golyak
  • Canada Dustin McCrank
  • Canada Nathan Vanoosten
  • Czech Republic Miroslav Lhotský
  • Denmark Rene Jensen
  • Finland Hannu Sormunen
  • Finland Sakari Suominen
  • Germany Lukas Kohlmüller
  • Norway Jon Kilian
  • Russia Alexander Otmakhov
  • Russia Gleb Lazarev
  • Switzerland Nicolas Fluri
  • Slovakia Peter Šefčík
  • Sweden Andreas Malmqvist
  • United States Jake Davis
  • United States Brian Oliver
  • Preliminary round[edit]

    The schedule was released on 8 August 2017.[13]

    Group A[edit]

    Pos Team
  • t
  • e
  • Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
    1  Sweden 7 6 1 0 0 31 9 +22 20 Quarterfinals
    2  Russia 7 5 0 1 1 32 10 +22 16
    3  Czech Republic 7 3 3 0 1 27 15 +12 15
    4   Switzerland 7 3 1 1 2 25 19 +6 12
    5  Slovakia 7 3 0 2 2 19 20 −1 11
    6  France 7 2 0 0 5 13 29 −16 6
    7  Austria 7 1 0 1 5 13 30 −17 4
    8  Belarus (R) 7 0 0 0 7 8 36 −28 0 Relegation to 2019 Division I A[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.
    (R) Relegated
    Notes:
    1. ^ The rules state that "the bottom ranked two teams will be relegated" and the 2019 hosts (Slovakia) cannot be relegated by rule.[14]
    4 May 2018
    Russia  7–0  France
    Sweden  5–0  Belarus
    5 May 2018
    Switzerland  3–2 (OT)  Austria
    France  6–2  Belarus
    Czech Republic  3–2 (OT)  Slovakia
    6 May 2018
    Austria  0–7  Russia
    Sweden  3–2  Czech Republic
    Slovakia  0–2   Switzerland
    7 May 2018
    Belarus  0–6  Russia
    Sweden  4–0  France
    8 May 2018
    Austria  2–4  Slovakia
    Czech Republic  5–4 (GWS)   Switzerland
    9 May 2018
    Switzerland  5–2  Belarus
    Sweden  7–0  Austria
    10 May 2018
    Slovakia  3–1  France
    Czech Republic  4–3 (OT)  Russia
    11 May 2018
    France  5–2  Austria
    Belarus  0–3  Czech Republic
    12 May 2018
    Slovakia  3–4 (OT)  Sweden
    Austria  4–0  Belarus
    Russia  4–3   Switzerland
    13 May 2018
    France  0–6  Czech Republic
    Switzerland  3–5  Sweden
    14 May 2018
    Russia  4–0  Slovakia
    Czech Republic  4–3  Austria
    15 May 2018
    Switzerland  5–1  France
    Belarus  4–7  Slovakia
    Russia  1–3  Sweden

    Group B[edit]

    Pos Team
  • t
  • e
  • Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
    1  Finland 7 5 0 1 1 38 11 +27 16[a] Quarterfinals
    2  United States 7 4 2 0 1 39 16 +23 16[a]
    3  Canada 7 4 1 1 1 32 12 +20 15
    4  Latvia 7 3 1 2 1 16 16 0 13
    5  Denmark (H) 7 3 1 0 3 13 17 −4 11
    6  Germany 7 1 1 2 3 16 20 −4 7
    7  Norway 7 1 1 1 4 13 31 −18 6
    8  South Korea (R) 7 0 0 0 7 4 48 −44 0 Relegation to 2019 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; (R) Relegated
    Notes:
    1. ^ a b Finland 6–2 United States
    4 May 2018
    United States  5–4 (GWS)  Canada
    Germany  2–3 (GWS)  Denmark
    5 May 2018
    Norway  2–3 (OT)  Latvia
    Finland  8–1  South Korea
    Denmark  0–4  United States
    6 May 2018
    South Korea  0–10  Canada
    Germany  4–5 (GWS)  Norway
    Latvia  1–8  Finland
    7 May 2018
    United States  3–0  Germany
    Canada  7–1  Denmark
    8 May 2018
    South Korea  0–5  Latvia
    Finland  7–0  Norway
    9 May 2018
    Germany  6–1  South Korea
    Finland  2–3  Denmark
    10 May 2018
    United States  3–2 (OT)  Latvia
    Norway  0–5  Canada
    11 May 2018
    Denmark  3–0  Norway
    United States  13–1  South Korea
    12 May 2018
    Latvia  3–1  Germany
    Denmark  3–1  South Korea
    Canada  1–5  Finland
    13 May 2018
    Norway  3–9  United States
    Germany  3–2 (OT)  Finland
    14 May 2018
    South Korea  0–3  Norway
    Canada  2–1 (OT)  Latvia
    15 May 2018
    Finland  6–2  United States
    Canada  3–0  Germany
    Latvia  1–0  Denmark

    Playoff round[edit]

     

    QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal

     

              

     

    17 May

     

     

     Sweden3

     

    19 May

     

     Latvia2

     

     Sweden6

     

    17 May

     

     United States0

     

     United States3

     

    20 May

     

     Czech Republic2

     

     Sweden (GWS)3

     

    17 May

     

      Switzerland2

     

     Russia4

     

    19 May

     

     Canada (OT)5

     

     Canada2

     

    17 May

     

      Switzerland3Third place

     

     Finland2

     

    20 May

     

      Switzerland3

     

     United States4

     

     

     Canada1

     

    Quarterfinals[edit]

    17 May 2018
    16:15
    Russia 4–5 OT
    (0–1, 2–1, 2–2)
    (OT: 0–1)
     CanadaRoyal Arena, Copenhagen
    Attendance: 9,017
    Game reference
    Igor ShestyorkinGoaliesDarcy KuemperReferees:
    Austria Mark Lemelin
    Finland Aleksi Rantala
    Linesmen:
    United States Brian Oliver
    Finland Hannu Sormunen
    0–104:45 – Parayko (McDavid, Eberle) (PP)
    0–231:51 – Nugent-Hopkins (McDavid, Parayko) (PP)
    Mikheyev (Anisimov, Zaitsev) – 32:531–2
    Barabanov (Dadonov) (EA) – 37:322–2
    2–347:11 – Turris (Schwartz)
    Andronov (Zaitsev, Soshnikov) – 48:443–3
    3–452:36 – Dubois (Jost)
    Anisimov (Grigorenko, Zaitsev) – 54:344–4
    4–564:57 – O'Reilly (McDavid, Ekblad) (PP)
    8 minPenalties2 min
    30Shots41
    17 May 2018
    16:15
    United States 3–2
    (2–0, 0–2, 1–0)
     Czech RepublicJyske Bank Boxen, Herning
    Attendance: 4,846
    Game reference
    Keith KinkaidGoaliesPavel FrancouzReferees:
    Finland Mikko Kaukokari
    Slovakia Jozef Kubuš
    Linesmen:
    Canada Dustin McCrank
    Finland Sakari Suominen
    Kane (Ryan) – 10:361–0
    Atkinson (Bonino, Gaudreau) – 12:192–0
    2–124:56 – Řepík (Faksa, Gudas)
    2–230:55 – Nečas (Pastrňák, Hronek) (PP)
    Kane (Ryan) – 46:583–2
    10 minPenalties2 min
    31Shots26
    17 May 2018
    20:15
    Sweden 3–2
    (0–0, 1–1, 2–1)
     LatviaRoyal Arena, Copenhagen
    Attendance: 12,490
    Game reference
    Anders NilssonGoaliesElvis MerzļikinsReferees:
    United States Timothy Mayer
    Russia Konstantin Olenin
    Linesmen:
    Germany Lukas Kohlmüller
    Russia Alexander Otmakhov
    Forsberg (Kempe, Ekman-Larsson) – 26:361–0
    1–131:59 – Bļugers (Ri. Bukarts)
    Arvidsson (Ekholm) – 41:492–1
    Ekman-Larsson (Kempe, Rakell) (PP) – 46:273–1
    3–250:21 – Balcers (Ķēniņš)
    10 minPenalties2 min
    34Shots24
    17 May 2018
    20:15
    Finland 2–3
    (1–0, 0–3, 1–0)
      SwitzerlandJyske Bank Boxen, Herning
    Attendance: 5,634
    Game reference
    Harri SäteriGoaliesLeonardo GenoniReferees:
    Czech Republic Antonín Jeřábek
    United States Stephen Reneau
    Linesmen:
    Russia Gleb Lazarev
    Czech Republic Miroslav Lhotský
    Nutivaara (Koivisto, Rantanen) – 07:011–0
    1–129:13 – Corvi (Fiala, Niederreiter)
    1–232:32 – Vermin (Meier)
    1–333:08 – Hofmann (Moser, Fora)
    Rantanen (Savinainen, Aho) (PP) – 48:202–3
    0 minPenalties8 min
    34Shots27

    Semifinals[edit]

    19 May 2018
    15:15
    Sweden 6–0
    (1–0, 3–0, 2–0)
     United StatesRoyal Arena, Copenhagen
    Attendance: 12,490
    Game reference
    Anders NilssonGoaliesKeith KinkaidReferees:
    Russia Roman Gofman
    Canada Oliver Gouin
    Linesmen:
    Canada Dustin McCrank
    Canada Nathan Vanoosten
    Arvidsson (De la Rose, Forsberg) – 14:431–0
    Pääjärvi (Backlund) (SH) – 27:092–0
    Hörnqvist (Backlund, Klingberg) (PP) – 30:053–0
    Janmark-Nylén (Rakell) – 30:164–0
    Arvidsson (Zibanejad) (ENG) – 51:075–0
    Kempe (Backlund) – 57:016–0
    14 minPenalties6 min
    20Shots41
    19 May 2018
    19:15
    Canada 2–3
    (0–1, 1–1, 1–1)
      SwitzerlandRoyal Arena, Copenhagen
    Attendance: 12,166
    Game reference
    Darcy KuemperGoaliesLeonardo GenoniReferees:
    Finland Mikko Kaukokari
    Slovakia Jozef Kubuš
    Linesmen:
    Czech Republic Miroslav Lhotský
    United States Brian Oliver
    0–118:41 – Scherwey (Untersander, Kukan)
    Horvat (Dubois, Pageau) – 27:201–1
    1–229:40 – Hofmann (Fiala, Andrighetto) (PP)
    1–344:14 – Haas (Andrighetto, Diaz) (PP)
    Parayko (McDavid, Schenn) (EA) – 57:532–3
    6 minPenalties2 min
    45Shots17

    Bronze medal game[edit]

    20 May 2018
    15:45
    United States 4–1
    (0–0, 1–1, 3–0)
     CanadaRoyal Arena, Copenhagen
    Attendance: 12,111
    Game reference
    Keith KinkaidGoaliesCurtis McElhinneyReferees:
    Finland Mikko Kaukokari
    Slovakia Jozef Kubuš
    Linesmen:
    Czech Republic Miroslav Lhotský
    Finland Sakari Suominen
    Kreider (Larkin, DeBrincat) (PP) – 26:401–0
    1–138:06 – Vlasic (Horvat, Turris)
    Bonino (Kane) (PP) – 53:212–1
    Lee (McAvoy) (ENG) – 57:453–1
    Kreider (ENG) – 58:184–1
    4 minPenalties14 min
    37Shots25

    Gold medal game[edit]

    20 May 2018
    20:15 (UTC+2)
    Sweden 3–2 GWS
    (1–1, 1–1, 0–0)
    (OT: 0–0)
    (SO: 1–0)
      SwitzerlandRoyal Arena, Copenhagen
    Attendance: 12,490
    Game reference
    Anders NilssonGoaliesLeonardo GenoniReferees:
    Russia Roman Gofman
    Canada Oliver Gouin
    Linesmen:
    Russia Gleb Lazarev
    Canada Nathan Vanoosten
    0–116:38 – Niederreiter (Josi, Fiala)
    Nyquist (Ekholm) – 17:541–1
    1–223:13 – Meier (Corvi, Josi) (PP)
    Zibanejad (Ekman-Larsson) (PP) – 34:532–2
    Zibanejad MISS
    Rakell MISS
    Ekman-Larsson GOAL
    Forsberg GOAL
    ShootoutGOAL Andrighetto
    MISS Fiala
    MISS Corvi
    MISS Haas
    MISS Niederreiter
    4 minPenalties10 min
    38Shots27

    Final ranking and statistics[edit]

    Final ranking[edit]

    Pos Grp Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Final result
    1 A  Sweden 10 8 2 0 0 43 13 +30 28 Champions
    2 A   Switzerland 10 5 1 2 2 33 26 +7 19 Runners-up
    3 B  United States 10 6 2 0 2 46 25 +21 22 Third place
    4 B  Canada 10 4 2 1 3 40 23 +17 17 Fourth place
    5 B  Finland 8 5 0 1 2 40 14 +26 16 Eliminated in
    Quarter-finals
    6 A  Russia 8 5 0 2 1 36 15 +21 17
    7 A  Czech Republic 8 3 3 0 2 29 18 +11 15
    8 B  Latvia 8 3 1 2 2 18 19 −1 13
    9 A  Slovakia 7 3 0 2 2 19 20 −1 11 Eliminated in
    Group stage
    10 B  Denmark (H) 7 3 1 0 3 13 17 −4 11
    11 B  Germany 7 1 1 2 3 16 20 −4 7
    12 A  France 7 2 0 0 5 13 29 −16 6
    13 B  Norway 7 1 1 1 4 13 31 −18 6
    14 A  Austria 7 1 0 1 5 13 30 −17 4
    15 A  Belarus 7 0 0 0 7 8 36 −28 0 2019 IIHF World Championship Division I
    16 B  South Korea 7 0 0 0 7 4 48 −44 0
    Source: IIHF.com
    Rules for classification: 1) position in the group; 2) number of points; 3) goal difference; 4) goals scored; 5) seeding before tournament.[15][16]
    (H) Host

    Scoring leaders[edit]

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

    Player GP G A Pts +/− PIM POS
    United States Patrick Kane 10 8 12 20 −2 0 F
    Finland Sebastian Aho 8 9 9 18 +15 2 F
    Canada Connor McDavid 10 5 12 17 +6 10 F
    Sweden Rickard Rakell 10 6 8 14 +7 6 F
    Finland Teuvo Teräväinen 8 5 9 14 +14 8 F
    United States Cam Atkinson 10 7 4 11 −3 2 F
    Sweden Mika Zibanejad 10 6 5 11 +10 0 F
    Finland Mikko Rantanen 8 5 6 11 +1 6 F
    Sweden Mattias Janmark 10 4 6 10 +8 8 F
    United States Chris Kreider 10 4 6 10 +7 2 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
    Sweden Anders Nilsson 440:00 8 1.09 174 95.40 3
    Denmark Frederik Andersen 362:56 10 1.65 178 94.38 1
    Russia Igor Shestyorkin 204:57 5 1.46 86 94.19 2
    Latvia Elvis Merzļikins 360:35 9 1.50 151 94.04 2
    Finland Harri Säteri 298:31 7 1.41 114 93.86 1

    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[edit]

    Source: IIHF.com

    Source: IIHF.com

    References[edit]

    1. ^ a b "Denmark to host Ice Hockey World Championship in 2018". Archived from the original on 2014-05-27. Retrieved 2014-05-23.
  • ^ a b c d To Denmark in 2018
  • ^ Merk, Martin (29 April 2017). "Korea Promoted!". IIHF. Archived from the original on 10 May 2018. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
  • ^ "Tre Kronor golden again!". IIHF.com. 20 May 2018. Archived from the original on 21 May 2018. Retrieved 20 May 2018.
  • ^ "Introducing Duckly!". IIHF. 19 June 2017. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
  • ^ "IIHF - Home 2018 IIHF ICE HOCKEY WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP".
  • ^ "Two applicants for 2018 : Denmark, Latvia vying to host men's World Championship". IIHF. 20 September 2013. Retrieved 9 April 2014.
  • ^ "IIHF impressed on site visit to Denmark". denmark2018. 9 March 2014. Archived from the original on 13 April 2014. Retrieved 9 April 2014.
  • ^ "Groups for 2018". Archived from the original on 2017-10-29. Retrieved 2017-05-22.
  • ^ "7 events for 2018 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championship". denmark2018. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  • ^ "On-ice officials named". iihf.com. 21 March 2018.
  • ^ Assignments
  • ^ "Worlds schedule released". iihfworlds.com. 8 August 2017.
  • ^ "Statutes and Bylaws (701.3)" (PDF). IIHF. 10 September 2015.
  • ^ 2018 tournament rules
  • ^ IIHF Sport Regulations (pg4)
  • External links[edit]


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