1996 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships

1996 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships
Tournament details
Host country  Austria
Dates 21 April – 5 May
Teams 12
Venue(s) 1 (in 1 host city)
Final positions
Champions   Czech Republic (1st title)
Runner-up   Canada
Third place   United States
Fourth place  Russia
Tournament statistics
Matches played 40
Goals scored 249 (6.23 per match)
Attendance 186,830 (4,671 per match)
Scoring leader(s) Canada Yanic Perreault 9 points
1995
1997

The 1996 Ice Hockey World Championship took place in Austria 21 April - 5 May. The games were played in Vienna. Thirty-six nations competed at four levels, with Slovakia making their first appearance in Group A.

Twelve teams took part in Group A, with the first round split into two groups of six, with the first four from each group advancing to the quarter-finals. This was the 60th World Championship and the Czech Republic beat Canada in the final to become World Champions for the first time. (Czechoslovakia had won the World Championship six times). The final game was tied at two apiece before Martin Procházka scored with nineteen seconds left, an empty net goal sealed the victory.[1] In the bronze medal game, Brian Rolston scored at 4:48 of overtime to win the first medal in 34 years for team USA.[2][3] The unfortunate Russians did not lose a game in regulation time in the entire tournament, but finished fourth.

World Championship Group A (Austria)

Group 1

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Goal difference Points
1  Russia 5 5 0 0 23 - 08 10
2  United States 5 3 0 2 15 - 14 6
3  Canada 5 2 1 2 17 - 15 5
4  Germany 5 2 0 3 12 - 11 4
5  Slovakia 5 1 1 3 13 - 16 3
6  Austria 5 1 0 4 03 - 19 2
21 AprilGermany 1-2
 Russia
21 AprilCanada 3-3
 Slovakia
22 AprilAustria 1-5
 United States
22 AprilRussia 6-2
 Slovakia
23 AprilUnited States 4-2
 Germany
23 AprilAustria 0-4
 Canada
24 AprilGermany 5-1
 Canada
25 AprilAustria 2-1
 Slovakia
25 AprilUnited States 1-3
 Russia
26 AprilAustria 0-3
 Germany
26 AprilRussia 6-4
 Canada
27 AprilUnited States 4-3
 Slovakia
28 AprilAustria 0-6
 Russia
28 AprilCanada 5-1
 United States
29 AprilSlovakia 4-1
 Germany

Group 2

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Goal difference Points
1  Czech Republic 5 4 1 0 27 - 12 9
2  Finland 5 2 2 1 23 - 15 6
3  Sweden 5 2 2 1 14 - 12 6
4  Italy 5 2 1 2 20 - 26 5
5  Norway 5 1 2 2 06 - 11 4
6  France 5 0 0 5 12 - 26 0
21 AprilCzech Republic 3-1
 Sweden
21 AprilFinland 1-1
 Norway
22 AprilFrance 5-6
 Italy
23 AprilItaly 4-0
 Norway
23 AprilFinland 2-4
 Czech Republic
24 AprilSweden 2-1
 France
24 AprilNorway 2-2
 Czech Republic
25 AprilFrance 3-6
 Finland
25 AprilSweden 3-3
 Italy
26 AprilItaly 2-9
 Finland
27 AprilCzech Republic 9-2
 France
27 AprilSweden 3-0
 Norway
28 AprilItaly 5-9
 Czech Republic
28 AprilFinland 5-5
 Sweden
29 AprilNorway 3-1
 France

Quarterfinals

30 AprilUnited States 3-2
 Sweden
30 AprilFinland 1-3
 Canada
1 MayRussia 5-2
 Italy
1 MayCzech Republic 6-1
 Germany

Consolation Round 11-12 Place

1 MayAustria 3-6
 France
2 MayAustria 3-6
 France

Austria was relegated to Group B.

Semifinals

3 MayUnited States 0-5
 Czech Republic
3 MayCanada 3-2 (GWS)
 Russia

Match for third place

4 MayRussia 3-4 (OT)
 United States

Final

5 May
15:00
Czech Republic 4-2
(1-1, 1-1, 2-0)
 CanadaWiener Stadthalle, Wien
Attendance: 9,500

World Championship Group B (Netherlands)

Played 10–20 April in Eindhoven. Latvia won at this level for the first time. In their final game, superb goaltending by Arturs Irbe kept them in it, and a late tying goal by Olegs Znaroks sealed the tournament victory.[3] The final game had high drama for the host crowd, the Japanese and Danish teams among them. If the Netherlands were to lose to Poland, they would finish last and be relegated, a tie and Japan would be last, a win and Denmark would be last. A third period goal by Poland sealed Japan's fate.

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Goal difference Points Tie breaker
H2H Points
13  Latvia 7 6 1 0 41 - 16 13
14   Switzerland 7 5 1 1 37 - 13 11
15  Belarus 7 5 0 2 29 - 18 10
16  Great Britain 7 4 1 2 29 - 23 9
17  Poland 7 1 2 4 18 - 27 4
18  Denmark 7 1 1 5 14 - 32 3 3
19  Netherlands 7 1 1 5 12 - 35 3 2
20  Japan 7 0 3 4 14 - 30 3 1

Latvia was promoted to Group A while Japan was relegated to Group C.

10 AprilLatvia 6-5
 Great Britain
10 AprilPoland 3-3
 Japan
10 AprilNetherlands 0-3
 Denmark
10 AprilSwitzerland  2-4
 Belarus
11 AprilJapan 1-6
 Latvia
11 AprilGreat Britain 2-7
  Switzerland
12 AprilDenmark 3-4
 Poland
12 AprilNetherlands 2-3
 Belarus
13 AprilLatvia 5-3
 Denmark
13 AprilSwitzerland  7-2
 Japan
13 AprilGreat Britain 4-2
 Poland
14 AprilNetherlands 2-6
 Great Britain
14 AprilLatvia 4-1
 Belarus
15 AprilDenmark 1-10
  Switzerland
15 AprilPoland 3-6
 Belarus
15 AprilJapan 1-2
 Netherlands
16 AprilLatvia 4-2
 Poland
16 AprilJapan 3-3
 Great Britain
17 AprilBelarus 6-1
 Denmark
17 AprilSwitzerland  5-1
 Netherlands
18 AprilPoland 2-5
  Switzerland
18 AprilNetherlands 3-15
 Latvia
19 AprilBelarus 7-2
 Japan
19 AprilGreat Britain 5-1
 Denmark
20 AprilBelarus 2-4
 Great Britain
20 AprilDenmark 2-2
 Japan
20 AprilSwitzerland  1-1
 Latvia
20 AprilPoland 2-2
 Netherlands

World Championship Group C (Slovenia)

Played 22–31 March in Jesenice and Kranj. For the fourth year in row the Kazakhs and Ukrainians met in Group C. For the first time the Kazakhs came out on top, and it was the difference in winning the tournament.

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Goal difference Points
21  Kazakhstan 7 6 0 1 51 - 10 12
22  Ukraine 7 6 0 1 40 - 13 12
23  Slovenia 7 5 0 2 41 - 19 10
24  Hungary 7 3 1 3 34 - 25 7
25  Estonia 7 3 1 3 36 - 29 7
26  Romania 7 3 0 4 32 - 27 6
27  China 7 1 0 6 17 - 68 2
28  Croatia 7 0 0 7 11 - 71 0

Kazakhstan was promoted to Group B while Croatia was relegated to Group D.

22 MarchRomania 9-2
 Croatia
22 MarchEstonia 13-2
 China
22 MarchUkraine 4-1
 Hungary
22 MarchSlovenia 2-4
 Kazakhstan
23 MarchHungary 2-7
 Kazakhstan
23 MarchSlovenia 4-1
 Romania
23 MarchChina 2-7
 Ukraine
23 MarchEstonia 10-2
 Croatia
25 MarchSlovenia 6-3
 Estonia
25 MarchUkraine 11-1
 Croatia
25 MarchRomania 3-5
 Hungary
25 MarchKazakhstan 15-0
 China
26 MarchChina 3-11
 Romania
26 MarchKazakhstan 12-0
 Croatia
26 MarchHungary 5-5
 Estonia
26 MarchSlovenia 2-4
 Ukraine
28 MarchRomania 2-3
 Estonia
28 MarchCroatia 4-6
 China
28 MarchKazakhstan 3-2
 Ukraine
28 MarchSlovenia 4-3
 Hungary
29 MarchUkraine 7-2
 Romania
29 MarchCroatia 0-10
 Hungary
29 MarchEstonia 0-7
 Kazakhstan
29 MarchSlovenia 10-2
 China
31 MarchUkraine 5-2
 Estonia
31 MarchSlovenia 13-2
 Croatia
31 MarchRomania 4-3
 Kazakhstan
31 MarchChina 2-8
 Hungary

World Championship Group D (Lithuania)

Played in Kaunas and Elektrenai 25–31 March. To narrow the field of the bottom tier to eight nations, two regional qualifying tournaments were used.

Group 1 (Australia)

Played 5th and 6 November 1995 in Sydney.

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Goal difference Points
1  Australia 2 2 0 0 12 - 02 4
2  New Zealand 2 0 0 2 02 - 12 0
5 November 1995Australia 6-0
 New Zealand
6 November 1995Australia 6-2
 New Zealand

Group 2 (Israel)

Played 27–29 January 1996 in Metulla. The Greek team won both their games, but were found to have an ineligible roster, so both games were declared 5–0 forfeits in favour of the opposing team.[3]

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Points difference Points
1  Israel 2 2 0 0 24 - 00 4
2  Turkey 2 1 0 1 05 - 19 2
3  Greece 2 0 0 2 00 - 10 0
27 January 1996Israel 1-4
5-0 by default

 Greece
28 January 1996Turkey 0-19
5-0 by default

 Greece
29 January 1996Israel 19-0
 Turkey

Group 1

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Goal difference Points
1  Yugoslavia 3 3 0 0 14 - 05 6
2  Spain 3 1 1 1 15 - 06 3
3  South Korea 3 1 1 1 15 - 10 3
4  Australia 3 0 0 3 08 - 31 0
25 MarchYugoslavia 7-1
 Australia
25 MarchSpain 1-1
 South Korea
26 MarchSpain 11-1
 Australia
26 MarchYugoslavia 3-1
 South Korea
27 MarchSouth Korea 13-6
 Australia
27 MarchYugoslavia 4-3
 Spain

Group 2

Ironically, the Israeli team that had qualified for the tournament because of the Greek forfeits, had to forfeit its first two games because they used two Russian players who did not have the proper clearance to play.[3]

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Goal difference Points
1  Lithuania 3 3 0 0 19 - 02 6
2  Belgium 3 2 0 1 10 - 13 4
3  Bulgaria 3 1 0 2 07 - 06 2
4  Israel 3 0 0 3 00 - 15 0
25 MarchBulgaria 3-3
5-0 by default

 Israel
25 MarchLithuania 11-2
 Belgium
26 MarchBelgium 3-2
 Bulgaria
26 MarchLithuania 7-2
5-0 by default

 Israel
27 MarchBelgium 5-0
 Israel
27 MarchLithuania 3-0
 Bulgaria

Final Round 29-32 Place

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Goal difference Points
29  Lithuania 3 3 0 0 25 - 04 6
30  Yugoslavia 3 2 0 1 10 - 08 4
31  Spain 3 1 0 2 10 - 16 2
32  Belgium 3 0 0 3 05 - 22 0

Host Lithuania won all five games to earn promotion to Group C.

29 MarchYugoslavia 5-2
 Belgium
29 MarchLithuania 11-1
 Spain
31 MarchSpain 6-1
 Belgium
31 MarchLithuania 3-1
 Yugoslavia

Consolation Round 33-36 Place

Team Games Won Drawn Lost Goal difference Points
33  South Korea 3 2 1 0 22 - 13 5
34  Bulgaria 3 2 0 1 14 - 10 4
35  Israel 3 1 1 1 10 - 10 3
36  Australia 3 0 0 3 12 - 25 0
28 MarchBulgaria 5-4
 Australia
28 MarchIsrael 3-3
 South Korea
30 MarchIsrael 7-2
 Australia
30 MarchSouth Korea 6-4
 Bulgaria

Ranking and statistics

 


 1996 IIHF World Championship Winners 

Czech Republic
1st title

Tournament Awards

Final standings

The final standings of the tournament according to IIHF:

 Czech Republic
 Canada
 United States
4  Russia
5  Finland
6  Sweden
7  Italy
8  Germany
9  Norway
10  Slovakia
11  France
12  Austria

Scoring leaders

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

Player GP G A Pts +/− PIM POS
Canada Yanic Perreault 8 6 3 9 +4 0 F
Czech Republic Robert Lang 8 5 4 9 +7 2 F
Russia Sergei Berezin 8 4 5 9 +2 2 F
Russia Alexei Yashin 8 4 5 9 +4 4 F
Canada Travis Green 8 5 3 8 +2 8 F
Finland Teemu Selänne 8 5 3 8 +7 0 F
Italy Bruno Zarrillo 6 4 4 8 +4 4 F
Russia Dmitri Kvartalnov 8 4 4 8 0 4 F
Czech Republic Robert Reichel 8 4 4 8 +8 0 F
Czech Republic Pavel Patera 8 3 5 8 +1 2 F

Source:

Leading goaltenders

Only the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played 40% of their team's minutes are included in this list.

Player MIP GA GAA SVS% SO
Norway Rob Schistad 240 6 1.50 .971 0
Russia Andrei Trefilov 310 6 1.16 .956 0
Czech Republic Roman Turek 480 15 1.88 .952 1
Sweden Boo Ahl 300 10 2.00 .942 1
Germany Klaus Merk 299 16 3.21 .938 1

Source:

Citations

  1. Duplacey page 508
  2. Podnieks page 160
  3. 1 2 3 4 Summary at Passionhockey.com

References

See also: World Juniors
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