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1991 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships

1991 edition of the Men's World Ice Hockey Championships


1991 edition of the Men's World Ice Hockey Championships

FieldValue
year1991
imageTurkuhalli.jpg
captionThe main venue of the 1991 World Ice Hockey Championships; Turkuhalli.
countryFinland
dates19 April – 4 May
num_teams8
venues3
cities3
typeih
winnersSweden
count5
secondCanada
thirdUSSR
fourthUSA
games40
goals272
attendance310627
scoring_leaderSWE Mats Sundin 14 points
prevseason[1990](1990-men-s-ice-hockey-world-championships)
nextseason[1992](1992-men-s-ice-hockey-world-championships)

The 1991 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships was the 55th such event sanctioned by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF), and at the same time served as the 66th and last Ice Hockey European Championships. Teams representing 25 countries participated in several levels of competition. The competition also served as qualifications for group placements in the 1992 competition.

The top Championship Group A tournament took place in Finland from 19 April to 4 May 1991, with games played in Turku, Helsinki and Tampere. Eight teams took part, with each team playing each other once. The four best teams then played each other once more. Sweden became world champions for the fifth time, and the Soviet Union won their 27th European title. In the European Championships, only matches between European teams in the first round were counted towards scoring.

There were three significant 'lasts' in this year's championships. This would be the last year that a separate European title would be awarded, which the Soviets captured in their last appearance before the dissolution of the Soviet Union seven months later. Their position in Group A would be inherited by Russia, while newly independent former Soviet member states Belarus, Estonia, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania, and Ukraine began play in 1993 in qualification tournaments for Group C. The tournament itself would change significantly after this year as well. This was the last time the top level was contested by eight teams; beginning in 1992 it would expand to twelve, requiring both Groups B and C to promote four nations each.

The final round of four teams was a very tight battle, except for the United States. Getting only a tie against the last place Germans, the Americans only advanced to the final round by narrowly defeating the host Finns. The USA were easily defeated by the three other teams in the final round, but were involved in a controversial finish. The Canadians, having tied both the Swedes and the Soviets, needed to win their game against the US by five goals, then hope that the Swedes and Soviets tied, ensuring Canada the gold. Winning 7–4 in the final minute, and despite playing short-handed, they scored the two goals they needed. American coach Tim Taylor, trailing 9–4, pulled his goalie in the final minute, later claiming that he was trying to score the necessary number of goals to win the bronze medal. It was the last of many questionable finishes over the years that hastened the IIHF to change the format of the tournament.

The Soviets and Swedes took a 1–1 tie into the third period of the last game, which would have given the gold medal to Canada had it held up. However, Mats Sundin scored at 9:37, and the Swedes held on to capture gold.

World Championship Group A (Finland)

First round

Final Round

Consolation round

No team was relegated because of the expansion to twelve teams.

World Championship Group B (Yugoslavia)

Played in Ljubljana, Bled and Jesenice 28 March to 7 April. With the expansion of Group A impending, promotion was available to the top four finishers. As well, the top three qualified directly for the Olympics, with fourth place needing to defeat the winner of Group C.

Italy, Norway, France, and Poland all were promoted to Group A, no one was relegated.

World Championship Group C (Denmark)

Played in Brøndby 23 March to 3 April. With the expansion of Group A, four openings in Group B were available. In addition, the winner got to play off for the last Olympic spot against the fourth place Group B finisher.

Denmark, China, Romania and Bulgaria were all promoted. With no Group D in existence at this time, there was no relegation.

Ranking and statistics

Tournament Awards

  • Best players selected by the directorate:
    • Best Goaltender: FIN Markus Ketterer
    • Best Defenceman: CAN Jamie Macoun
    • Best Forward: URS Valeri Kamensky
  • Media All-Star Team:
    • Goaltender: CAN Sean Burke
    • Defence: URS Viacheslav Fetisov, URS Alexei Kasatonov
    • Forwards: URS Valeri Kamensky, FIN Jari Kurri, SWE Thomas Rundqvist

Final standings

The final standings of the tournament according to IIHF:

8

European championships final standings

The final standings of the European championships according to IIHF:

6

Scoring leaders

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

PlayerGPGAPts+/−PIMPOS
SWE Mats Sundin1075**12**+212F
FIN Jari Kurri1066**12**+12F
URS Valeri Kamensky1065**11**+810F
CAN Joe Sakic1065**11**+60F
FIN Teemu Selänne1065**11**+82F
USA Jeremy Roenick956**11**+48F
FIN Mika Nieminen1056**11**+32F
URS Pavel Bure1038**11**+52F
FIN Christian Ruuttu1073**10**+310F
USA Danton Cole1064**10**+114F
SWE Thomas Rundqvist1064**10**+24F

Leading goaltenders

Only the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played 50% of their team's minutes are included in this list.

PlayerMIPGAGAASVS%SO
FIN Markus Ketterer420121.71.9392
CAN Sean Burke479212.63.9230
SUI Renato Tosio420273.86.8950
CSK Petr Bříza480232.88.8930
SWE Rolf Ridderwall479212.63.8920

Citations

References

References

  1. [http://www.passionhockey.com/hockeyarchives/mondial1991.htm Summary at Passionhockey.com]
  2. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Mwv1qLgytk&t=1h22m55s video of Sundin's goal]
  3. [http://www.passionhockey.com/hockeyarchives/QualifJO1992.htm Olympic Qualifier]
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