1993 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships

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1993 IIHF World U20 Championship
Tournament details
Host country  Sweden
Dates December 26 - January 4
Teams 8
Venue(s) (in 7 host cities)
Final positions
Champions Gold medal blank.svg  Canada (6th title)
Runner-up Silver medal blank.svg  Sweden
Third place Bronze medal blank.svg Template:Country data Czech Republic and Slovakia (Combined team)
Fourth place  United States
Tournament statistics
Matches played 28
Goals scored 242 (8.64 per match)
Scoring leader(s) Sweden Peter Forsberg (31 points)
1992
1994

The 1993 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships (1993 WJHC) was the 17th edition of the World Junior Ice Hockey Championships and was held in Gävle, Sweden. Canada[1] won the gold medal, its sixth championship, while Sweden won silver, and the combined team of the Czech and Slovak Republics won bronze. Peter Forsberg of Sweden scored a tournament record 31 points, while teammate Markus Naslund's 13 goals also set a tournament record.

Final standings

The 1993 tournament was a round-robin format, with the top three teams winning gold, silver and bronze medals respectively. As the tournament was ongoing, the nation of Czechoslovakia was dissolved into two separate nations, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, on New Years Day, 1993. The team remained unified throughout the tournament, however the Czechoslovakian flag and anthem were replaced with the flag and anthem of the International Ice Hockey Federation after January 1.[2] Meanwhile, the former Soviet Union, which had competed in 1992 as the Commonwealth of Independent States was replaced in this tournament by Russia.

Rank Team GP W L T GF GA PTS
1st  Canada 7 6 1 0 37 17 12
2nd  Sweden 7 6 1 0 53 15 12
3rd Czech and Slovak Republics 7 4 2 1 38 27 9
4  United States 7 4 3 0 32 23 8
5  Finland 7 3 3 1 31 20 7
6  Russia 7 2 3 2 26 20 6
7  Germany 7 1 6 0 16 37 2
8  Japan 7 0 7 0 9 83 0

Japan was relegated to Pool B for 1994.

Results

December 26, 1992  Canada 3 – 0
 United States Gävle
December 26, 1992  Russia 16 – 0
 Japan Falun
December 26, 1992  Finland 5 – 2
 Czechoslovakia Bollnas
December 26, 1992  Sweden 4 – 2
 Germany Gävle
December 27, 1992  Canada 5 – 4
 Sweden Gävle
December 27, 1992  Russia 4 – 0
 Germany Falun
December 27, 1992  Finland 7 – 0
 Japan Gävle
December 27, 1992  Czechoslovakia 6 – 5
 United States Uppsala
December 29, 1992  Canada 9 – 1
 Russia Gävle
December 29, 1992  Finland 11 – 0
 Germany Hofors
December 29, 1992  United States 12 – 2
 Japan Falun
December 29, 1992  Sweden 7 – 2
 Czechoslovakia Gävle
December 30, 1992  Canada 3 – 2
 Finland Uppsala
December 30, 1992  Czechoslovakia 1 – 1
 Russia Gävle
December 30, 1992  Sweden 20 – 1
 Japan Gävle
December 30, 1992  United States 4 – 3
 Germany Bollnas
January 1, 1993  Canada 5 – 2
 Germany Gävle
January 1, 1993 Czech and Slovak Republics 14 – 2
 Japan Skutskar
January 1, 1993  Finland 1 – 1
 Russia Gävle
January 1, 1993  Sweden 4 – 2
 United States Uppsala
January 2, 1993  Canada 8 – 1
 Japan Hudiksvall
January 2, 1993  Sweden 9 – 2
 Finland Gävle
January 2, 1993 Czech and Slovak Republics 6 – 3
 Germany Uppsala
January 2, 1993  United States 4 – 2
 Russia Gävle
January 4, 1993 Czech and Slovak Republics 7 – 4
 Canada Gävle
January 4, 1993  Germany 6 – 3
 Japan Hofors
January 4, 1993  Sweden 5 – 1
 Russia Gävle
January 4, 1993  United States 5 – 3
 Finland Gävle

Leading scorers

  GP G A Pts PIM
Sweden Peter Forsberg 7 24 31
Sweden Markus Näslund 13 11 24
Czechoslovakia David Výborný 6 9 15
Sweden Niklas Sundström 10 4 14
Finland Jere Lehtinen 6 8 14

Tournament all-stars

Pool B

Eight teams contested the second tier this year in Lillehammer and Hamar Norway from December 27 to January 5. It was played in a simple round robin format, each team playing seven games.[3]

Standings
Rank Team GP W L T GF GA PTS Switzerland Norway Italy Austria France Poland Romania Netherlands
1   Switzerland 7 6 0 1 39 13 13 5 - 4 5 - 1 7 - 1 6 - 4 4 - 2 1 - 1 11 - 0
2  Norway 7 6 1 0 49 11 12 4 - 5 5 - 0 7 - 0 8 - 4 7 - 1 9 - 1 9 - 0
3  Italy 7 4 2 1 23 18 9 1 - 5 0 - 5 3 - 1 6 - 3 0 - 0 7 - 3 6 - 1
4  Austria 7 4 3 0 26 23 8 1 - 7 0 - 7 1 - 3 2 - 1 6 - 3 9 - 1 7 - 1
5  France 7 3 4 0 26 30 6 4 - 6 4 - 8 3 - 6 1 - 2 4 - 3 5 - 2 5 - 3
6  Poland 7 1 5 1 17 28 3 2 - 4 1 - 7 0 - 0 3 - 6 3 - 4 5 - 3 3 - 4
7  Romania 7 1 5 1 16 37 3 1 - 1 1 - 9 3 - 7 1 - 9 2 - 5 3 - 5 5 - 1
8  Netherlands 7 1 6 0 10 46 2 0 - 11 0 - 9 1 - 6 1 - 7 3 - 5 4 - 3 1 - 5

Switzerland was promoted to Pool A and the Netherlands was relegated to Pool C for 1994.

Qualification for Pool C

Nine countries played a qualification tournament from November 10 to 15, for a spot in the C Pool. Five teams played in Riga Latvia while the remaining four played in Minsk Belarus, with the first place teams playing each other in Riga. Greece was the only competitor who was not making their debut.

Riga Group
Team GP W L T GF GA PTS Latvia Slovenia Estonia Croatia Greece
 Latvia 4 4 0 0 71 5 8 2 - 1 12 - 3 10 - 0 47 - 1
 Slovenia 4 3 1 0 46 6 6 1 - 2 4 - 3 11 - 0 30 - 1
 Estonia 4 2 2 0 46 21 4 3 - 12 3 - 4 6 - 3 34 - 2
 Croatia 4 1 3 0 24 27 2 0 - 10 0 - 11 3 - 6 21 - 0
 Greece 4 0 4 0 4 132 0 1 - 47 1 - 30 2 - 34 0 - 21
Minsk Group
Team GP W L T GF GA PTS Ukraine Kazakhstan Belarus Lithuania
 Ukraine 3 3 0 0 24 0 6 1 - 0 3 - 0 20 - 0
 Kazakhstan 3 2 1 0 17 1 4 0 - 1 4 - 0 13 - 0
 Belarus 3 1 2 0 19 7 2 0 - 3 0 - 4 19 - 0
 Lithuania 3 0 3 0 0 52 0 0 - 20 0 - 13 0 - 19

Qualification Game

November 15, 1992 Latvia  1 – 2
(0–1, 0–0, 1–1)
 Ukraine Riga

 Ukraine won the right to participate in Pool C.

Pool C

Eight teams were divided into two round robin groups, with placement games to follow (1st played 1st, etc.). The tournament took place from December 30 to January 3, in Odense and Esbjerg Denmark.

Preliminary Round

Group A
Team GP W L T GF GA PTS Ukraine Hungary North Korea Spain
 Ukraine 3 3 0 0 38 3 6 9 - 2 16 - 1 13 - 0
 Hungary 3 1 1 1 15 15 3 2 - 9 5 - 5 8 - 1
 North Korea 3 0 1 2 9 24 2 1 - 16 5 - 5 3 - 3
 Spain 3 0 2 1 4 24 1 0 - 13 1 - 8 3 - 3
Group B
Team GP W L T GF GA PTS Denmark Bulgaria United Kingdom South Korea
 Denmark 3 2 0 1 23 10 5 9 - 1 5 - 5 9 - 4
 Bulgaria 3 1 1 1 12 17 3 1 - 9 6 - 3 5 - 5
 Great Britain 3 1 1 1 15 12 3 5 - 5 3 - 6 7 - 1
 South Korea 3 0 2 1 10 21 1 4 - 9 5 - 5 1 - 7

Placement Games

 Ukraine was promoted to Pool B for 1994.

References

  1. 1993 World Junior Hockey Championships coverage by TSN
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. 1993 full results

External links