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1992 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships

1992 edition of the Men's World Ice Hockey Championships


1992 edition of the Men's World Ice Hockey Championships

FieldValue
year1992
countryCzechoslovakia
dates28 April – 10 May
num_teams12
venues2
cities2
typeih
winnersSweden
count6
secondFinland
thirdCzechoslovakia
fourthSwitzerland
games39
goals242
attendance249748
scoring_leaderFIN Jarkko Varvio 10 points
prevseason[1991](1991-men-s-ice-hockey-world-championships)
nextseason[1993](1993-men-s-ice-hockey-world-championships)

The 1992 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships was the 56th such event sanctioned by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF). Teams representing a record 32 countries participated in several levels of competition. The competition also served as qualifications for group placements in the 1993 competition.

The top Championship Group A tournament took place in Czechoslovakia from 28 April to 10 May 1992, with games played in Prague and Bratislava. This would be the last championship held in that nation before the dissolution of Czechoslovakia eight months later. Twelve teams took part, with the first round being split into two groups of six, with the four best teams from each group advancing to the quarter-finals. Sweden retained their title, beating Finland 5–2 in the final, and becoming world champions for the sixth time. This was Finland's first medal in a World Championship.

The Championship Group A pools were drawn the same as the 1992 Olympics in Albertville two months earlier, but yielded much different results. Switzerland was able to tie both Russia and Canada to earn a spot in the quarter-finals. Germany, after an opening loss to Finland, won four straight to also advance to the quarter-finals, where they faced Switzerland. The Swiss prevailed, making the top 4 for the first time since 1953, and moved on to meet a Swedish team that had shut-out the Russians. The Swedes led by three after the first and easily moved on to the gold medal game. There was nothing easy about the other semi-final, where the Finns had to come from behind to tie Czechoslovakia in the third period, then advanced to the finals with a shootout win. The Czechoslovaks, playing for the last time as that nation, beat the Swiss to settle for bronze, while Sweden, led by Mats Sundin, beat Finland for gold.

New entrants Greece, Israel, Luxembourg and Turkey iced teams in a secondary tier of Group C. South Africa appeared for the first time since 1966. In Group B, the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia made their final World Championship appearance before the breakup of that nation. The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia resumed Yugoslavia's former position in Group C in 1995, while breakaway nations Croatia and Slovenia would appear in the qualifiers for Group C of the 1993 World Championship.

World Championship Group A (Czechoslovakia)

Venues

[[File:Tipsport arena - panoramio (1).jpg180px]][[File:2014 Slovnaft arena - panoramio.jpg180px]]

First round

Group 1

Group 2

Consolation Round 11–12 Place

Poland was relegated to Group B.

Playoff round

|6 May||0||2 |7 May||1||3 |7 May||8||1 |6 May||4||3 |9 May||4||1 |9 May||2| (GWS)|3 |10 May||5||2 |10 May||5||2

Quarterfinals

Semifinals

Match for third place

Final

2-0 3-0 4-0 4-1 4-2 5-2 Mikael Andersson Roger Hansson Lars Karlsson Arto Blomsten

Timo Peltomaa Timo Jutila

Ranking and statistics

Tournament Awards

  • Best players selected by the directorate:
    • Best Goaltender: SWE Tommy Söderström
    • Best Defenceman: CSK Róbert Švehla
    • Best Forward: SWE Mats Sundin
  • Media All-Star Team:
    • Goaltender: FIN Markus Ketterer
    • Defence: CSK František Musil, FIN Timo Jutila
    • Forwards: CSK Petr Hrbek, SWE Mats Sundin, FIN Jarkko Varvio

Final standings

The final standings of the tournament according to IIHF:

12

Scoring leaders

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

PlayerGPGAPts+/−PIMPOS
FIN Jarkko Varvio891**10**+34F
FIN Mikko Mäkelä828**10**+110F
GER Dieter Hegen672**9**+310F
CSK Tomáš Jelínek845**9**+1010F
CSK Róbert Švehla844**8**+1214D
FIN Mika Nieminen835**8**+52F
SWE Mats Sundin826**8**+58F
FIN Timo Saarikoski834**7**+44F
FIN Rauli Raitanen725**7**+82F
FIN Timo Jutila825**7**+1610D

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
SWE Tommy Söderström30071.40.9362
ITA David Delfino14972.82.9321
FIN Markus Ketterer309132.52.9270
CSK Petr Bříza490121.47.9212
CAN Ron Hextall273132.86.9090

World Championship Group B (Austria)

Played in Klagenfurt Austria 2–12 April. The hosts went undefeated to return to Group A for the first time since 1957.

Austria was promoted to Group A, while Yugoslavia was relegated to Group C but would not play there until 1995.

World Championship Group C1 (Great Britain)

Played in Hull Great Britain 18–24 March. The hosts, led by Scot Tony Hand and Canadian Kevin Conway, won all five games easily.

Great Britain was promoted to Group B while no team was relegated.

World Championship Group C2 (South Africa)

Played in Johannesburg South Africa 21–28 March. Though called 'C2' it was no different from being in 'Group D'. Spain completely dominated, playing against five essentially new hockey nations. Only South Africa had participated before, and they last played in 1966.

Spain and later South Africa qualified for 1993 Group C. The others had to play in qualification tournaments in November 1992.

Citations

References

References

  1. [http://www.passionhockey.com/hockeyarchives/mondial1992.htm Summary at Passionhockey.com]
  2. Duplacey page 508
  3. (14 December 2020). "Najstarší zimný štadión na Slovensku otvorili pred 80 rokmi". [[News Agency of the Slovak Republic.
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