Jump to content

Finland women's national goalball team

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Monkbot (talk | contribs) at 15:55, 29 January 2021 (Task 18 (cosmetic): eval 6 templates: hyphenate params (8×);). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Finland women's national goalball team is the women's national team of Finland. It takes part in international goalball competitions.

Paralympics

The team competed at the 1992 Summer Paralympics in Barcelona, where they finished first.[1] At the 1996 Summer Paralympics in Atlanta, Georgia, the team finished second.[1] The team competed at the 2000 Summer Paralympics in Sydney, where they finished fourth.[1] At the 2004 Summer Paralympics in Athens, Greece, the team finished fourth.[1]

World championships

The 1986 World Championships were held in Roermond, the Netherlands. The team was one of ten teams participating, and they finished fourth overall.[1] The 1990 World Championships were held in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. The team was one of seven teams participating, and they finished third overall.[1] The 1994 World Championships were held in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The team was one of nine teams participating, and they finished first overall.[1] The 1998 World Championships were held in Madrid, Spain. The team was one of eleven teams participating, and they finished first overall.[1]

European championships

The 1985 European Championships were held in Olsztyn, Poland with six teams competing. The team finished third.[1] The 2001 European Championships were held in Neerpelt, Belgium with six teams competing. The team finished second.[1] In 2005, the European Championships were held in Neerpelt, Belgium. With ten teams competing, the team finished sixth.[1] The Turkish Blind Sports Federation hosted the 2007 IBSA Goalball European Championships in Anyalya, Turkey with 11 teams contesting the women's competition. The team finished first.[2] Munich, Germany hosted the 2009 European Championships with eleven teams taking part. The team finished the event in third place. Senni Posio was the only team member to play and not score a goal.[3]

The team competed at the 2013 European Championships in Turkey, where they finished fourth.[4]

IBSA World Games

The 2003 IBSA World Games were held in Quebec City, Canada with 10 teams competing. The first stage was pool play with 5 teams per pool and the top two teams in each pool advancing to the next round. The team made it out of the round robin round. Finland finished first after winning 1 to 0 in over time against Brazil.[5] The 2007 IBSA World Championships and Games were held in Brazil. The women's goalball competition included thirteen teams, including this one. The competition was a 2008 Summer Paralympics qualifying event. Páiri Tolpanen was fourth in the competition in scoring with 18 points. Katja Heikkinen was ninth in the competition in scoring with 12 points.[6]

Goal scoring by competition

Player Goals Competition Notes Ref
Páiri Tolpanen 20 2009 IBSA Goalball European Championships [3]
Katja Heikkinen 20 2009 IBSA Goalball European Championships [3]
Páiri Tolpanen 18 2007 IBSA World Championships and Games [6]
Katja Heikkinen 12 2007 IBSA World Championships and Games [6]
Krista Leppanen 1 2007 IBSA World Championships and Games [6]
Heidi Koivunen 1 2007 IBSA World Championships and Games [6]
Krista Leppanen 1 2009 IBSA Goalball European Championships [3]
Senni Posio 0 2009 IBSA Goalball European Championships Played in all but one game and did not play in finals [3]

Competitive history

The table below contains individual game results for the team in international matches and competitions.

Year Event Opponent Date Venue Team Team Winner Ref
2003 IBSA World Championships and Games  Turkey 7 August Quebec City, Canada 11 1  Finland [5]
2003 IBSA World Championships and Games  Sweden 7 August Quebec City, Canada 2 1  Finland [5]
2003 IBSA World Championships and Games  Japan 7 August Quebec City, Canada 6 6 [5]
2003 IBSA World Championships and Games  South Korea 7 August Quebec City, Canada 8 1  Finland [5]
2003 IBSA World Championships and Games  Spain 10 August Quebec City, Canada 2 1  Finland [5]
2003 IBSA World Championships and Games  Brazil 10 August Quebec City, Canada 1 OT 0 OT  Finland [5]
2007 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Sweden 25 April OHEP Koleji Spor Salonu, Anyalya, Turkey 2 5  Finland [2]
2007 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Russia 25 April OHEP Koleji Spor Salonu, Anyalya, Turkey 1 11  Finland [2]
2007 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Denmark 26 April OHEP Koleji Spor Salonu, Anyalya, Turkey 2 0  Finland [2]
2007 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Greece 26 April OHEP Koleji Spor Salonu, Anyalya, Turkey 2 0  Greece [2]
2007 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Ukraine 27 April OHEP Koleji Spor Salonu, Anyalya, Turkey 1 2  Finland [2]
2007 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Denmark 28 April OHEP Koleji Spor Salonu, Anyalya, Turkey 1 3  Finland [2]
2007 IBSA World Championships and Games  Iran 31 July Brazil 7 5  Finland [6]
2007 IBSA World Championships and Games  Greece 1 August Brazil 0 3  Finland [6]
2007 IBSA World Championships and Games  Sweden 2 August Brazil 6 3  Sweden [6]
2007 IBSA World Championships and Games  Italy 2 August Brazil 1 11  Finland [6]
2007 IBSA World Championships and Games  Germany 3 August Brazil 2 3  Germany [6]
2007 IBSA World Championships and Games  Great Britain 4 August Brazil 3 4  Great Britain [6]
2007 IBSA World Championships and Games  Brazil 5 August Brazil 3 4  Brazil [6]
2009 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Israel 24 August Munich, Germany 1 4  Finland [3]
2009 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Great Britain 24 August Munich, Germany 10 3  Finland [3]
2009 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Germany 25 August Munich, Germany 4 2  Finland [3]
2009 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Turkey 26 August Munich, Germany 5 10  Finland [3]
2009 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Spain 27 August Munich, Germany 7 1  Finland [3]
2009 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Sweden 28 August Munich, Germany 7 3  Finland [3]
2009 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Great Britain 29 August Munich, Germany 7 5  Great Britain [3]
2009 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Greece 29 August Munich, Germany 4 1  Finland [3]
2013 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Sweden 1–11 November Konya, Turkey 2 8  Finland [4]
2013 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Ukraine 1–11 November Konya, Turkey 5 0  Finland [4]
2013 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Russia 1–11 November Konya, Turkey 5 5 [4]
2013 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Great Britain 1–11 November Konya, Turkey 9 3  Finland [4]
2013 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Spain 7 November Konya, Turkey 9 3  Finland [4]
2013 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Turkey 7 November Konya, Turkey 5 4  Turkey [4]
2013 IBSA Goalball European Championships  Israel 8 November Konya, Turkey 3 5  Israel [4]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Final Ranking in Paralympic Games". Madrid, Spain: International Blind Sports Association. Retrieved 9 February 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "2007 IBSA Goalball European Championships" (PDF). Madrid, Spain: International Blind Sports Association. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "2009 IBSA Goalball European Championships" (PDF). Madrid, Spain: International Blind Sports Association. Retrieved 17 February 2014.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h "GOALBALL EUROPAN CHAMPIONSHIP". Turkey: International Blind Sports Association Goalball Turkey. Archived from the original on 23 February 2014. Retrieved 13 February 2014.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g "IBSA World Games Brazil 2003 Results". Madrid, Spain: International Blind Sports Association. Retrieved 13 February 2014.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "IBSA World Games Brazil 2007 (Paralympic Qualifying tournament)". Madrid, Spain: International Blind Sports Association. Retrieved 9 February 2014.