Host country Sweden Teams 12 Champions Finland (1st title) | Dates 23 April – 7 May Venue(s) 2 (in 2 host cities) Runner-up Sweden | |
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The 1995 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships was played in Stockholm and Gävle Sweden, from 23 April to 7 May 1995. In the tournament finals, Finland won the gold medal by winning over Sweden 4–1 at the Globen arena in Stockholm. The Finnish goals were scored by Timo Jutila and Ville Peltonen, who scored a hat trick.
Contents
- Consolation round 1112 place
- Final
- World Championship Group B Slovakia
- World Championship Group C1 Bulgaria
- Final round 2123 place
- Consolation round 2729 place
- World Championship Group C2 South Africa
- Group 1
- Group 2
- Final round 3033 place
- Consolation round 3437 place
- Final standings
- Scoring leaders
- Leading goaltenders
- References
The gold medal was the first in Finland's history. Sweden had written a fight song, "Den glider in", which also was intended to be the official song of the championships. After the finals, the song became very popular in Finland.
Because of the 1994–95 NHL lockout, it originally created a dream scenario for the tournament hosts. With a cancelled NHL season, all NHL players free from injuries would have been available. But when the NHL season began in late January 1995, it instead created a scenario where less NHL players than usual became available. The Canadian and American teams would logically be hit the hardest, but the Americans found a way to lead their group in the first round. The Canadians, who struggled in the early tournament, beat the Americans in the quarter-finals, lost in overtime to the Swedes, and then beat the Czechs for the bronze. Andrew McKim, playing in the minors for the Adirondack Red Wings ended up being the tournament scoring leader.
Consolation round 11–12 place
Switzerland was relegated to Group B.
Final
Time is local (UTC+2).
World Championship Group B (Slovakia)
Played in Bratislava, 12–21 April. The hosts bettered their Group C record of the previous year, this time winning all their games. Thirty-eight-year-old Peter Stastny led the tournament in scoring.
Slovakia was promoted to Group A while Romania was relegated to Group C.
World Championship Group C1 (Bulgaria)
Played in Sofia 20–26 March. Nine teams took part this year because Yugoslavia was given the right to return to the group that they had last played in as the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. The consequence was that two teams were relegated. They played in three groups of three where the first place teams contested promotion and the third place teams contested relegation. Two years after failing to qualify for Group C, Belarus got a rematch against Ukraine and Kazakhstan, this time coming out on top.
Final round 21–23 place
Belarus was promoted to Group B.
Consolation round 27–29 place
Both Yugoslavia and Bulgaria were relegated to group C2.
World Championship Group C2 (South Africa)
Played in Johannesburg and Krugersdorp in South Africa from 21–30 March. Two groups of five played round robins where the top two from each contested promotion. The bottom five teams were relegated to qualification tournaments for 1996 Group D. Belgian player Joris Peusens was only fifteen years old.
Group 1
Greece was relegated to Group D qualification.
Group 2
New Zealand was relegated to Group D qualification.
Final round 30–33 place
Croatia only needed to tie Lithuania in their final game to earn promotion to Group C1, and they did so.
Consolation round 34–37 place
Israel, Australia, and South Africa, all were relegated to Group D qualification.
Final standings
The final standings of the tournament according to IIHF:
Scoring leaders
List shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals.
Source: [1]
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.
Source: [2]