Misplaced Pages

1998 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from 1998 IIHF World U20 Championship) International ice hockey competition
1998 IIHF World U20 Championship
Tournament details
Host country Finland
Venue(s)2 (in 2 host cities)
DatesDecember 25, 1997 – January 3, 1998
Teams10
Final positions
Champions  Finland (2nd title)
Runner-up  Russia
Third place   Switzerland
Fourth place Czech Republic
Tournament statistics
Games played34
Goals scored219 (6.44 per game)
Attendance139,680 (4,108 per game)
Scoring leader(s)United States Jeff Farkas (10 points)
← 19971999 →

The 1998 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships (1998 WJHC) were held in Helsinki and Hämeenlinna, Finland. The championships began on December 25, 1997, and finished on January 3, 1998. Home team Finland was the winner, defeating Russia 2–1 in the gold medal game, thanks to the goaltending of Mika Noronen and the overtime heroics of Niklas Hagman. Switzerland defeated the Czech Republic 4–3 to capture the bronze medal, their first and only medal in the Ice Hockey World Junior Championship.

Canada had its five-year title streak broken with its worst placing to date (8th). Canada would miss out on gold seven years in a row before beginning their 2005–2009 streak of five straight championships. It was the only tournament from 1993 to 2012 in which Canada failed to medal.

This tournament attracted 139,680 fans to 34 games for an average of 4,108 per game. This set a record for the highest-attended World Junior tournament in Europe until the 2016 tournament, which was also held in Finland, attracted 215,225 spectators.

The playoff round was expanded to eight teams, with group leaders not getting a bye to the semifinals.

Championship results

All times are local. (Eastern European TimeUTC+2)

Pool A

Group A

Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
 Finland 4 3 0 1 17 10 +7 7
 Czech Republic 4 2 1 1 16 12 +4 5
 Sweden 4 2 2 0 16 6 +10 4
 Canada 4 2 2 0 9 7 +2 4
 Germany 4 0 4 0 1 24 −23 0
Source: Hockey Canada
December 25, 1997
18:30
Finland 3–2
(0–0, 1–1, 2–1)
 CanadaHartwall Arena, Helsinki
Attendance: 9,000 (approx.)
Game reference
Mika NoronenGoaliesMathieu GaronReferee:
Sweden Ulf Radbjer
Linesmen:
United States Allen Stensland
Sweden Kent Thuden
0–130:02 - Ward
Kauppinen (Vallin, Kalto) - 33:011–1
Somervuori (Jokinen) (PP) - 47:272–1
2–251:39 - Dumont (Tkaczuk)
Hagman (Somervuori, Jokinen) - 56:203–2
10 minPenalties21 min
38Shots18
December 25, 1997
15:00
Czech Republic 2–1 SwedenHämeenlinna
December 26, 1997
18:30
Sweden 4–0
(2–0, 1–0, 1–0)
 CanadaHartwall Arena, Helsinki
Attendance: 2,523
Game reference
Johan HolmqvistGoaliesRoberto LuongoReferee:
Finland Rami Savolainen
Linesmen:
United States Allen Stensland
United States Dino Casgrande
Nilson (Forsander) (PP) - 6:561–0
Hedin - 17:322–0
D. Sedin (H. Sedin) - 22:553–0
Cannerheim (Nilson) - 46:454–0
14 minPenalties20 min
December 26, 1997
18:30
Finland 5–0 GermanyHämeenlinna
December 27, 1997
15:00
Germany 1–9 Czech RepublicHartwall Arena, Helsinki
December 28, 1997
15:00
Canada 5–0
(2–0, 3–0, 0–0)
 Czech RepublicHartwall Arena, Helsinki
Attendance: 7,500 (approx.)
Game reference
Mathieu GaronGoaliesAdam Svoboda, Vlastimil Lakosil (15:46 second)Referee:
United States Scott Hansen
Linesmen:
Germany Alfred Hascher
Sweden Kent Thuden
Holden (Corso) - 10:101–0
Cooke (Sarich) (PP) - 11:102–0
Tanguay (McLean) - 26:453–0
McLean (Tanguay, Brewer) (SH) - 30:404–0
Holden (Corso) - 38:055–0
12 minPenalties14 min
December 28, 1997
18:30
Sweden 3–4 FinlandHartwall Arena, Helsinki
December 29, 1997
18:30
Germany 0–8 SwedenHartwall Arena, Helsinki
December 30, 1997
15:00
Canada 2–0
(0–0, 1–0, 1–0)
 GermanyHartwall Arena, Helsinki
Attendance: 8,933
Game reference
Mathieu GaronGoaliesBjörn LeonhardtReferee:
Sweden Ulf Radbjer
Linesmen:
United States Dino Casagrande
Switzerland Nadir Mandioni
Bradley (Cooke, Lecavalier) -28:051–0
Lecavalier (Bradley) - 54:592–0
26Shots17
December 30, 1997
18:30
Czech Republic 5–5 FinlandHartwall Arena, Helsinki

Group B

Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
 Russia 4 3 0 1 22 6 +16 7
  Switzerland 4 2 1 1 14 8 +6 5
 United States 4 2 2 0 17 12 +5 4
 Kazakhstan 4 1 3 0 8 29 −21 2
 Slovakia 4 1 3 0 9 15 −6 2
Source: Hockey Canada
December 25, 1997
15:00
Russia 12–1 KazakhstanHämeenlinna
December 25, 1997
15:00
Slovakia 6–3 United StatesHartwall Arena, Helsinki
December 26, 1997
15:00
Kazakhstan 2–8 United StatesHartwall Arena, Helsinki
December 26, 1997
15:00
Slovakia 1–3  SwitzerlandHämeenlinna
December 27, 1997
18:30
Switzerland 3–3 RussiaHartwall Arena, Helsinki
December 28, 1997
15:00
Kazakhstan 5–2 SlovakiaHämeenlinna
December 28, 1997
18:30
United States 2–3 RussiaHämeenlinna
December 29, 1997
18:30
Switzerland 7–0 KazakhstanHämeenlinna
December 30, 1997
15:00
Russia 4–0 SlovakiaHämeenlinna
December 30, 1997
18:30
United States 4–1  SwitzerlandHämeenlinna

Final round

Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
         
B1  Russia 2
A4  Canada 1
QF1  Russia 5
QF2  Czech Republic 1
A2  Czech Republic 4
B3  United States 1
SF1  Russia 1
SF2  Finland 2
A1  Finland 14
B4  Kazakhstan 1
QF3  Finland 2 Bronze medal game
QF4   Switzerland 1
B2   Switzerland 2 SF1   Switzerland 4
A3  Sweden 1 SF2  Czech Republic 3
Quarterfinals
December 31, 1997
15:00
Russia 2–1 (OT)
(1–0, 0–0, 0–1, 1–0)
 CanadaHämeenlinna
Attendance: 2,877
Game reference
Denis KhlopotnovGoaliesMathieu GaronReferee:
Finland Rami Savolainen
Linesmen:
Finland Riku Peltonen
Sweden Kent Thuden
Vlasenkov (Lyashenko) - 18:011-0
1-142:31 - Tkaczuk (Willsie, Blanchard)
Afinogenov (Balmochnykh) - 69:212-1
21Shots18
December 31, 1997
15:00
Finland 14–1
(6–1, 5–0, 3–0)
 KazakhstanHartwall Arena, Helsinki
December 31, 1997
18:30
Switzerland 2 – 1 GWS
(0–0, 0–0, 1–1, 0–0, 5–4)
 SwedenHartwall Arena, Helsinki
December 31, 1997
18:30
Czech Republic 4–1
(0–0, 3–0, 1–1)
 United StatesHämeenlinna
Semifinals
January 1, 1998
16:00
Russia 5–1
(0–0, 3–1, 2–0)
 Czech RepublicHartwall Arena, Helsinki
January 1, 1998
20:00
Switzerland 1–2
(0–1, 0–0, 1–1)
 FinlandHartwall Arena, Helsinki
David AebischerGoaliesJean-Marc Pelletier
Placement games
January 2, 1998
15:00
Canada 0–3
(0–1, 0–1, 0–1)
 United StatesHämeenlinna
Game reference
Mathieu GaronGoaliesJean-Marc PelletierReferee:
Czech Republic Petr Bolina
Linesmen:
Finland Riku Peltonen
Switzerland Nadir Mandioni
0-15:59 - York (Mottau) (PP)
0-239:31 - Dusbabek (Mara)
0-359:25 - Farkas (EN)
12 minPenalties8 min
15Shots40
January 2, 1998
18:30
Sweden 5–1
(1–0, 2–0, 2–1)
 KazakhstanHämeenlinna
7th place game
January 3, 1998
12:00
Canada 3–6
(0–2, 0–2, 3–2)
 KazakhstanHämeenlinna
Attendance: 169
Game reference
Mathieu Garon, Roberto Luongo (14:00 second)GoaliesRoman KrivomazovReferee:
Czech Republic Petr Bolina
Linesmen:
Russia Vyacheslav Bulanov
Dariusz Sudol
0-13:45 - Troshchinsky (Antropov)
0-213:14 - Alexandrov (Troshchinsky, Antropov) (PP)
0-331:47 - Troshchinsky (Alexandrov, Novopashin) (SH)
0-434:00 - Troshchinsky (Antropov)
Holden (Blanchard) (PP) - 47:251-4
Holden (Ference, Corso) (PP) - 50:102-4
2-558:21 - Komissarov (Ksandopulo)
2-659:20 - Rifel (EN)
Tkaczuk (Willsie, Brewer) - 59:573-6
19 minPenalties20 min
43Shots17
5th place game
January 3, 1998
16:00
United States 4–3
(1–2, 2–0, 1–1)
 SwedenHämeenlinna
Bronze medal game
January 3, 1998
15:00
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Switzerland 4 – 3 GWS
(2–0, 0–2, 1–1, 0–0, 2–0)
 Czech RepublicHartwall Arena, Helsinki
Gold medal game
January 3, 1998
18:30
1st place, gold medalist(s) Finland 2–1 (OT)
(0–0, 0–1, 1–0, 1–0)
 Russia 2nd place, silver medalist(s)Hartwall Arena, Helsinki
Attendance: 13,655
Mika NoronenGoaliesDenis Khlopotnov
0–137:10 − Vlassenkov
Puistola (PP) - 43:251–1
Hagman (Jokinen, Petriläinen) - 73:412–1
45Shots26

Relegation round

January 1, 1998Germany 0–9
(0–1, 0–4, 0–4)
 SlovakiaHartwall Arena, Helsinki
January 3, 1998Slovakia 8–3
(0–1, 3–2, 5–0)
 GermanyHartwall Arena, Helsinki

 Germany lost the two game total goal series 17–3 and was relegated for the 1999 World Juniors

Final ranking

Rank Country
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Finland
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Russia
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)   Switzerland
4  Czech Republic
5  United States
6  Sweden
7  Kazakhstan
8  Canada
9  Slovakia
10  Germany

Scoring leaders

Player Country GP G A Pts
Jeff Farkas  United States 7 6 4 10
Olli Jokinen  Finland 7 4 6 10
Eero Somervuori  Finland 7 3 6 9
Ladislav Nagy  Slovakia 6 6 2 8
Brian Gionta  United States 7 5 3 8
Marián Hossa  Slovakia 6 4 4 8
Timo Vertala  Finland 7 4 4 8
Andrej Podkonický  Slovakia 6 3 5 8
Marcus Nilson  Sweden 7 3 5 8
Maxim Balmochnykh  Russia 7 2 6 8
Kamil Piroš  Slovakia 7 2 6 8

Tournament awards

IIHF Directorate Awards Media All-Star Team
Goaltender Switzerland David Aebischer Switzerland David Aebischer
Defencemen Czech Republic Pavel Skrbek Sweden Pierre Hedin
Russia Andrei Markov
Forwards Finland Olli Jokinen Russia Maxim Balmochnykh
Finland Olli Jokinen
Finland Eero Somervuori

Pool B

The second tier was held in Sosnowiec and Tychy Poland, from December 28 to January 4. Two groups of four played round robins, and then the top three played each of the top three teams from the other group. All scores carried forward except the results against the lone eliminated team from each group.

Preliminary round

Group A
Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
 Hungary 3 1 0 2 10 9 +1 4 3–2 2–2 5–5
 Latvia 3 2 1 0 15 10 +5 4 2–3 5–2 8–5
 France 3 1 1 1 12 9 +3 3 2–2 2–5 8–2
 Japan 3 0 2 1 12 21 −9 1 5–5 5–8 2–8
Source:
Group B
Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
 Poland 3 2 1 0 13 11 +2 4 7–3 1–4 5–4
 Ukraine 3 1 1 1 13 10 +3 3 3–7 2–2 8–1
 Belarus 3 1 1 1 6 6 0 3 4–1 2–2 0–3
 Norway 3 1 2 0 8 13 −5 2 4–5 1–8 3–0
Source:

Final round

Pos Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
1  Belarus 5 4 0 1 22 8 +14 9 2–2 4–1 3–1 8–0 5–4
2  Ukraine 5 3 1 1 23 12 +11 7 2–2 3–7 5–1 4–1 9–1
3  Poland 5 3 2 0 24 13 +11 6 1–4 7–3 2–3 8–0 6–3
4  Latvia 5 2 3 0 12 15 −3 4 1–3 1–5 3–2 2–3 5–2
5  Hungary 5 1 3 1 6 24 −18 3 0–8 1–4 0–8 3–2 2–2
6  France 5 0 4 1 12 27 −15 1 4–5 1–9 3–6 2–5 2–2
Source:

 Belarus was promoted to Pool A for 1999.

Relegation round

Norway 6–4 Japan
Norway 3 – 4 ot Japan
Norway 4–1 Japan

 Japan lost two games to one and was relegated to Pool C for 1999.

Pool C

Played in Tallinn and Kohtla-Järve Estonia from December 28 to January 1.

Preliminary round

Group A
Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
 Italy 3 2 0 1 20 6 +14 5 4–4 11–1 5–1
 Austria 3 2 0 1 18 6 +12 5 4–4 8–1 6–1
 Estonia 3 1 2 0 5 20 −15 2 1–11 1–8 3–1
 Great Britain 3 0 3 0 3 14 −11 0 1–5 1–6 1–3
Source:
Group B
Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
 Denmark 3 3 0 0 26 8 +18 6 5–4 8–1 13–3
 Slovenia 3 2 1 0 15 8 +7 4 4–5 4–1 7–2
 Croatia 3 1 2 0 6 14 −8 2 1–8 1–4 4–2
 Romania 3 0 3 0 7 24 −17 0 3–13 2–7 2–4
Source:

Placement games

 Denmark was promoted to Pool B, and  Romania was relegated to Pool D for 1999.

Pool D

Played in Kaunas and Elektrenai Lithuania from December 30 to January 3.

Preliminary round

Group A
Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
 Netherlands 3 3 0 0 58 4 +54 6 7–1 19–2 32–1
 Spain 3 2 1 0 18 9 +9 4 1–7 6–2 11–0
 Bulgaria 3 1 2 0 17 29 −12 2 2–19 2–6 13–4
 Turkey 3 0 3 0 5 56 −51 0 1–32 0–11 4–13
Source:
Group B
Team Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts
 Lithuania 3 3 0 0 33 2 +31 6 5–1 14–0 14–1
 Yugoslavia 3 2 1 0 23 7 +16 4 1–5 13–0 9–2
 Mexico 3 1 2 0 3 28 −25 2 0–14 0–13 3–1
 South Africa 3 0 3 0 4 26 −22 0 1–14 2–9 1–3
Source:

Placement games

 Lithuania was promoted to Pool C for 1999.

References

  1. Merk, Martin (2016-01-06). "215225 fans in Helsinki". WorldJunior2016.com. Retrieved 2016-01-22.

External links

IIHF World Junior Championships
Current champions (2024):  United States
2025 Championship teams
Championships
Rosters
Division I
Division II
Division III
Categories: