2011 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships

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2011 IIHF World U20 Championship
Tournament details
Host country United States
DatesDecember 26, 2010 – January 5, 2011
Teams10
Final positions
Champions  Russia (4th title)
Runner-up  Canada
Third place  United States
Fourth place Sweden
Tournament statistics
Games played31
Goals scored201 (6.48 per game)
Attendance329,687 (10,635 per game)
Scoring leader(s)Canada Brayden Schenn (18 points)
MVPCanada Brayden Schenn
← 2010
2012 →

The 2011 IIHF World U20 Championship, commonly referred to as the 2011 World Junior Hockey Championships (2011 WJHC), was the 35th edition of the Ice Hockey World Junior Championship and was hosted by the United States.[1] The games were played in Western New York, at HSBC Arena in Buffalo and Niagara University's Dwyer Arena in Lewiston.[2] Russia won the gold medal with a 5–3 victory over Canada in the championship game, after completing the biggest comeback in the WJHC history; being down 3–0 after two periods, the Russians scored five goals in the third period to capture their first WJHC gold medal since 2003. The host team, the United States, won the bronze medal with a 4–2 win over Sweden.

Bid process

Co-host of the 2005 tournament, Grand Forks, North Dakota, also submitted a bid to host the 2011 tournament.[3] In addition, Detroit was mentioned as a possible host city.[2][4]

Venues

HSBC Arena
Capacity: 18,690
Dwyer Arena
Capacity: 2,100
 United States – Buffalo  United States – Lewiston

Summary

Exhibition games

A series of five exhibition games were held between several of the teams at Sports Centre at MCC in Brighton, New York and the Jamestown Savings Bank Ice Arena in Jamestown, New York[5] in conjunction with, and immediately prior to, the tournament.

Preliminary round

The Preliminary Round robin consisted of two pools of five teams each, played in a round robin format. The United States (Pool A) and Sweden (Pool B) went undefeated to finish first in their respective pools and earn an automatic berth in the semifinals. To qualify for the quarterfinals, Canada and Russia finished second and third in Pool B while Finland and Switzerland did likewise in Pool A. The remaining teams, Slovakia, Germany, Czech Republic and Norway, were sent to the relegation round.

Relegation round

In the relegation round, Slovakia and Norway played in the first game, with Slovakia winning 5–0. The Czech Republic defeated Germany 3–2 in the second game. After the first day of action, the final results were decided and the remaining games were meaningless. Germany lost to Norway 3–1 and the Czech Republic defeated Slovakia 5–2 in the final relegation games. Norway and Germany were relegated to Division I for the 2012 tournament.[6]

Medal round

Quarterfinals

The first quarterfinal game saw Russia take on Finland. Russia trailed by two goals late in the game, but scored twice to tie and send it to overtime. Evgeny Kuznetsov scored the game-winning goal in overtime.[7] In the other quarterfinal, Canada easily defeated Switzerland 4–1.

Semifinals

The first semi-final featured Russia and Sweden. Controversy erupted in the second period as an apparent icing call on Russia was waved off by the on-ice officials, allowing the Russians to score and take a 2–0 lead. The Swedish team protested the non-call, but the goal stood. The Swedes did forge a comeback and took a 3–2 lead in the third period, but the Russians scored late to force overtime for the second consecutive game. The game went to a shootout with Russia winning, 4–3.[8] The second semifinal was a highly anticipated rematch of the previous year's gold medal game between Canada and the United States, the defending champions. In front of a mainly Canadian crowd that made the trip to Buffalo, Canada earned a berth in the final with a 4–1 victory over their American rivals.[9]

Fifth place game

The fifth place game featured the losing teams of the quarter-final games. Switzerland defeated Finland 3–2 in a shootout to take fifth place.[6]

Bronze medal game

The United States defeated Sweden 4–2 to win the bronze medal, its first ever WJHC medal on home ice.[10]

Gold medal game

The gold medal game was between Canada and Russia. The game marked Canada's tenth consecutive appearance in the final. The Russians had lost their three previous gold medal games to Canada. Canada led 3-0 after two periods. However, the Russians scored five unanswered goals in the third period, including two in a span of 13 seconds, to win the game 5–3 and capture the gold medal. It was Russia's first gold medal since 2003 and Canada's second straight silver medal finish. Brayden Schenn of Canada was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player.[11]

The game delivered one of the largest television audiences in Canadian history, with an average of 6.88 million viewers watching on TSN and another 652,000 watching the French-language broadcast on RDS. An estimated half of Canadians watched a portion or all of the game.[12]

Top division

Rosters

Preliminary round

Group A

Team GP W OTW OTL L GF GA Pts Advanced to
 United States 4 3 1 0 0 15 4 11 Semifinals
 Finland 4 3 0 1 0 17 4 10 Quarterfinals
  Switzerland 4 2 0 0 2 11 13 6 Quarterfinals
 Slovakia 4 0 1 0 3 7 19 2 Relegation round
 Germany 4 0 0 1 3 5 15 1 Relegation round

All times local (EST/UTC−5)

December 26, 2010
12:30
Germany 3–4
(0–4, 1–0, 2–0)
  SwitzerlandHSBC Arena
Attendance: 13,629
Game reference
Philipp Grubauer
Niklas Treutle
GoaliesBenjamin ConzReferees:
Finland Antti Boman
United States Keith Kaval
0–104:31 – I. Pestoni (G. Hofmann)
0–209:21 – N. Niederreiter (PP)
0–309:48 – R. Loeffel (N. Niederreiter) (PP)
0–413:25 – L. Camperchioli (I. Pestoni, G. Hofmann) (PP)
M. Noebels (M. Plachta, D. Bittner) (PP) – 24:221–4
M. Plachta (B. Hüfner, M. Höfflin) (PP) – 50:102–4
C. Mapes (N. Hauner, D. Orendorz) – 53:193–4
34 minPenalties14 min
35Shots21
December 26, 2010
20:00
Finland 2 – 3 OT
(0–1, 1–1, 1–0)
(OT: 0–1)
 United StatesHSBC Arena
Attendance: 14,093
Game reference
Joni OrtioGoaliesJack CampbellReferees:
Germany Stephan Bauer
Germany Georgij Jablukow
0–118:54 – J. Faulk (J. Merrill, C. Kreider) (PP)
J. Nättinen (T. Rajala) – 33:501–1
1–235:08 – J. Zucker
I. Pakarinen (E. Haula, T. Pulkkinen) – 52:592–2
2–363:08 – N. Bjugstad (OT)
8 minPenalties2 min
34Shots30
December 27, 2010
19:00
Slovakia 2 – 1 OT
(0–0, 1–1, 0–0)
(OT: 1–0)
 GermanyHSBC Arena
Attendance: 12,942
Game reference
Dominik RiečickýGoaliesPhilipp GrubauerReferees:
Sweden Pehr Claesson
Russia Rafail Kadyrov
R. Pánik (A. Jánošík, M. Preisinger) – 20:081–0
1–136:46 – N. Hauner (C. Mapes)
M. Hrivík (R. Pánik, A. Kudrna) (PP) – 63:39 (OT)2–1
14 minPenalties12 min
39Shots48
December 28, 2010
12:30
Switzerland 0–4
(0–1, 0–1, 0–2)
 FinlandHSBC Arena
Attendance: 13,518
Game reference
Benjamin ConzGoaliesJoni OrtioReferees:
Russia Rafail Kadyrov
Sweden Patrik Sjöberg
0–119:41 – J. Nättinen (T. Rajala, J. Jokipakka)
0–224:37 – J. Turtiainen (J. Jokipakka, J. Donskoi)
0–344:37 – T. Pulkkinen (E. Haula) (PP)
0–447:51 – J. Junttila (H. Tuominen, J. Donskoi)
4 minPenalties10 min
15Shots38
December 28, 2010
20:00
United States 6–1
(2–0, 4–1, 0–0)
 SlovakiaHSBC Arena
Attendance: 12,750
Game reference
Jack CampbellGoaliesDominik Riečický
Juraj Hollý
Referees:
Czech Republic Martin Frano
Finland Jari Levonen
K. Palmieri (C. Coyle, C. Kreider) – 04:311–0
K. Palmieri (J. Merrill, C. Coyle) (PP) – 08:022–0
C. Coyle (J. Faulk, K. Palmieri) (PP) – 23:563–0
C. Brown (B. Dumoulin, N. Leddy) (PP) – 31:474–0
4–132:26 – T. Jurčo (J. Majdan)
D. Shore – 33:325–1
E. Etem (N. Bjugstad, R. Bourque) – 36:576–1
4 minPenalties58 min
57Shots18
December 29, 2010
15:30
Finland 5–1
(1–0, 3–0, 1–1)
 GermanyHSBC Arena
Attendance: 14,362
Game reference
Joni OrtioGoaliesPhilipp Grubauer
Niklas Treutle
Referees:
Canada Matt Kirk
Canada Pat Smith
J. Armia (T. Kivistö, T. Rajala) – 15:591–0
M. Salomäki (J. Donskoi, J. Junttila) – 26:232–0
J. Donskoi (J. Junttila) – 33:473–0
J. Virtanen (T. Pulkkinen) – 35:194–0
4–143:28 – T. Rieder (M. Noebels)
E. Haula (T. Pulkkinen, S. Vatanen) – 56:075–1
18 minPenalties16 min
44Shots29
December 30, 2010
15:00
Switzerland 6–4
(3–1, 1–1, 2–2)
 SlovakiaHSBC Arena
Attendance: 12,731
Game reference
Benjamin ConzGoaliesDominik Riečický
Juraj Hollý
Referees:
Canada Matt Kirk
Sweden Patrik Sjoberg
G. Hofmann (N.Steiner, J. Vermin) – 8:151–0
1–19:18 – P. Šišovský (M. Vandas)
D. Schlumpf (D. Trutmann) – 11:502–1
S. Bärtschi (D. Trutmann, I. Pestoni) (PP) – 18:523–1
3–221:29 – M. Hrivík (M. Vandas, A. Šťastný)
N. Niederreiter – 30:154–2
4–345:30 A. Šťastný (M. Vandas)
4–452:08 R. Pánik (H. Jaborník, A. Jánošík)
S. Walser (Y. Herren, R. Engler) – 54:065–4
I. Pestoni (ENG) – 59:296–4
14 minPenalties12 min
37Shots33
December 30, 2010
19:00
Germany 0–4
(0–2, 0–2, 0–0)
 United StatesHSBC Arena
Attendance: 15,276
Game reference
Niklas TreutleGoaliesJack Campbell
Andy Iles
Referees:
Finland Antti Boman
Slovakia Daniel Konc
0–112:37 – C. Coyle (J. Merrill) (PP)
0–213:25 – J. D'Amigo
0–327:54 – J. Merrill (N. Bjugstad, R. Bourque)
0–433:10 – C. Kreider (K. Palmieri, C. Coyle) (PP)
12 minPenalties6 min
14Shots48
December 31, 2010
12:30
Slovakia 0–6
(0–3, 0–3, 0–0)
 FinlandHSBC Arena
Attendance: 13,371
Game reference
Juraj Hollý
Dominik Riečický
GoaliesJoni Ortio
Sami Aittokallio
Referees:
Germany Georgij Jablukov
United States Keith Kaval
0–101:40 – M. Salomäki (J. Junttila)
0–206:32 – J. Jokipakka (T. Rajala, J. Virtanen) (PP)
0–310:36 – E. Haula (S. Vatanen, T. Pulkkinen) (PP)
0–426:45 – J. Donskoi (T. Pulkkinen, J. Armia) (PP)
0–528:40 – E. Haula (SH)
0–637:39 – V. Virkkunen (T. Tallberg, J. Turtiainen)
8 minPenalties12 min
17Shots43
December 31, 2010
20:00
United States 2–1
(1–1, 1–0, 0–0)
  SwitzerlandHSBC Arena
Attendance: 13,417
Game reference
Jack CampbellGoaliesBenjamin ConzReferees:
Sweden Pehr Claesson
Canada Pat Smith
0–107:01 – I. Pestoni (G. Hofmann, D. Trutmann)
C. Kreider (C. Coyle, J. Faulk) – 10:151–1
M. Callahan (J. D'Amigo, B. Nelson) – 33:532–1
2 minPenalties16 min
42Shots26

Group B

Team GP W OTW OTL L GF GA Pts Advanced to
 Sweden 4 3 1 0 0 21 9 11 Semifinals
 Canada 4 3 0 1 0 28 12 10 Quarterfinals
 Russia 4 2 0 0 2 19 13 6 Quarterfinals
 Czech Republic 4 1 0 0 3 10 21 3 Relegation round
 Norway 4 0 0 0 4 4 27 0 Relegation round

All times local (EST/UTC−5)

December 26, 2010
16:00
Russia 3–6
(1–1, 2–2, 0–3)
 CanadaHSBC Arena
Attendance: 18,690
Game reference
Igor BobkovGoaliesOlivier RoyReferees:
Slovakia Daniel Konc
Finland Jari Levonen
Y. Urychev (D. Orlov, V. Tarasenko) – 03:571–0
1–117:55 – M. Foligno (L. Leblanc, C. de Haan) (PP)
1–230:35 – R. Ellis
N. Dvurechensky (A. Voronin, D. Orlov) – 31:512–2
2–335:15 – E. Gudbranson (Q. Howden, S. Couturier)
D. Sobchenko (V. Tarasenko, Y. Urychev) (PP) – 36:523–3
3–443:46 – R. Johansen (J. Schwartz) (PP)
3–546:14 – B. Schenn (Z. Kassian, J. Schwartz) (PP)
3–659:33 – C. Hamilton (B. Schenn)
10 minPenalties6 min
27Shots42
December 26, 2010
16:00
Norway 1–7
(0–2, 0–2, 1–3)
 SwedenDwyer Arena
Attendance: 1,320
Game reference
Lars VoldenGoaliesFredrik Petterson-WentzelReferees:
Czech Republic Martin Fraňo
Canada Matt Kirk
0–100:57 – J. Klingberg (S. Wännström, K. Dahlbeck)
0–205:29 – O. Lindberg (S. Wännström)
0–324:09 – P. Cehlin (A. Lander)
0–439:43 – P. Cehlin (G. Landeskog, A. Lander)
0–540:49 – J. Klingberg (J. Fasth, O. Lindberg)
0–642:01 – G. Landeskog (P. Cehlin, A. Lander)
E. Børresen (S. Brekke, T. Skaarberg) – 52:041–6
1–757:16 – C. Klingberg (J. Larsson, F. Styrman)
4 minPenalties6 min
11Shots46
December 27, 2010
19:00
Czech Republic 2–0
(0–0, 1–0, 1–0)
 NorwayDwyer Arena
Attendance: 1,381
Game reference
Marek MazanecGoaliesSteffen SøbergReferees:
Slovakia Daniel Konc
Canada Pat Smith
T. Rachůnek (A. Honejsek) – 33:551–0
A. Honejsek (SH) – 44:572–0
18 minPenalties10 min
38Shots21
December 28, 2010
16:00
Canada 7–2
(2–1, 3–0, 2–1)
 Czech RepublicHSBC Arena
Attendance: 17,919
Game reference
Olivier RoyGoaliesFilip NovotnýReferees:
Finland Antti Boman
Germany Georgij Jablukow
0–100:49 – A. Honejsek
B. Schenn (R. Johansen, R. Ellis) (PP) – 14:431–1
J. Schwartz (B. Schenn, R. Ellis) (PP) – 16:402–1
L. Leblanc (B. Schenn) (SH) – 29:203–1
R. Ellis (B. Schenn, C. Ashton) – 33:094–1
C. Eakin (C. Cizikas, E. Gudbranson) – 39:435–1
T. Barrie (B. Schenn, R. Ellis) (PP2) – 49:366–1
J. Cowen (T. Barrie, L. Leblanc) (PP2) – 49:597–1
7–255:26 – J. Jeřábek (M. Pláňek) (PP)
33 minPenalties35 min
39Shots19
December 28, 2010
19:00
Sweden 2–0
(2–0, 0–0, 0–0)
 RussiaDwyer Arena
Attendance: 1,400
Game reference
Robin LehnerGoaliesDmitri ShikinReferees:
United States Keith Kaval
Slovakia Daniel Konc
A. Lander (F. Styrman, P. Cehlin) – 10:491–0
J. Fasth (C. Järnkrok) – 14:112–0
22 minPenalties8 min
38Shots30
December 29, 2010
19:30
Norway 1–10
(1–6, 0–1, 0–3)
 CanadaHSBC Arena
Attendance: 17,061
Game reference
Steffen Søberg
Lars Volden
GoaliesMark VisentinReferees:
Germany Stephan Bauer
Sweden Pehr Claesson
0–102:01 – C. Cizikas (B. Connolly)
0–204:50 – B. Schenn (R. Johansen, D. Olsen)
0–310:45 – E. Gudbranson (B. Schenn, R. Ellis)
0–413:27 – L. Leblanc (M. Foligno)
R. Juell – 13:351–4
1–514:34 – B. Schenn (Q. Howden, E. Gudbranson)
1–618:00 – M. Foligno (L. Leblanc)
1–720:44 – B.Schenn (Q. Howden, R. Ellis)
1–856:35 – B. Schenn (T. Barrie)
1–957:18 – S. Couturier (B. Connolly, S. Després)
1–1059:31 – E. Gubranson (R. Johansen, R. Ellis)
6 minPenalties2 min
32Shots41
December 30, 2010
15:00
Sweden 6–3
(3–1, 2–2, 1–0)
 Czech RepublicDwyer Arena
Attendance: 1,388
Game reference
Fredrik Petterson-WentzelGoaliesMarek Mazanec
Filip Novotný
Referees:
Germany Stephan Bauer
Finland Jari Levonen
0–13:09 – M. Hlinka (J. Orsava, P. Holík) (PP)
J. Larsson (J. Sundström, C. Järnkrok (PP) – 5:531–1
M. Friberg (R. Rakell, A. Lander) (PP) – 15:592–1
J. Fasth (A. Larsson) – 17:093–1
S. Wännström (K. Dahlbeck, O. Lindberg) – 24:594–1
J. Fasth (C. Järnkrok, J. Larsson) (PP) – 25:425–1
5–228:07 – M. Frk (J. Culek, J. Jeřábek)
5–334:51 – M. Frk (J. Jeřábek, P. Straka) (PP)
C. Järnkrok (J. Thörnberg) – 45:486–3
14 minPenalties16 min
45Shots21
December 30, 2010
19:00
Russia 8–2
(2–2, 1–0, 5–0)
 NorwayDwyer Arena
Attendance: 1,382
Game reference
Dmitri ShikinGoaliesLars VoldenReferees:
Czech Republic Martin Fraňo
Germany Georgij Jablukov
N. Dvurechenski (A. Voronin, N. Pivtsakin) – 6:581–0
1–111:59 – N. Weberg
D. Sobchenko (D. Orlov, Y. Urychev – 12:542–1
2–215:59 – J. Oppøyen (M. Olsen, R. Andersen) (PP)
V. Tarasenko (G. Berdyukov, S. Valuiski) (PP) – 24:033–2
D. Sobchenko (V. Tarasenko, D. Orlov) – 40:184–2
M. Kitsyn (E. Kuznetsov, D. Orlov) – 48:295–2
A. Sergeyev (M. Berezin) – 51:576–2
E. Kuznetsov (N. Dvurechensky, M. Ignatovich) – 55:187–2
A. Voronin (N. Dvurechensky, G. Berdyukov) – 55:378–2
12 minPenalties22 min
55Shots24
December 31, 2010
16:00
Canada 5 – 6 GWS
(3–2, 1–2, 1–1)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 0–1)
 SwedenHSBC Arena
Attendance: 17,761
Game reference
Olivier RoyGoaliesRobin LehnerReferees:
Czech Republic Martin Frano
Russia Rafail Kadyrov
S. Couturier – 00:581–0
1–102:14 – M. Friberg (R. Rakell) (PP)
1–214:55 – C. Klingberg (S. Wännström)
Q. Howden (R. Johansen, C. de Haan) – 15:382–2
C. Hamilton (R. Johansen) – 19:593–2
3–320:52 – C. Klingberg
3–422:44 – J. Thörnberg (P. Nemeth)
C. Hamilton (B. Schenn, S. Després) (SH) – 24:374–4
B. Schenn (R. Johansen, C. de Haan) (PP) – 43:225–4
5–551:43 – P. Cehlin (T. Erixon, F. Styrman)
R. Ellis MISS
B. Schenn MISS
ShootoutGOAL O. Lindberg
MISS C. Järnkrok
GOAL A. Lander
8 minPenalties6 min
34Shots42
December 31, 2010
19:00
Czech Republic 3–8
(1–4, 1–4, 1–0)
 RussiaDwyer Arena
Attendance: 1,400
Game reference
Marek Mazanec
Filip Novotný
GoaliesDmitri ShikinReferees:
Finland Jari Levonen
Sweden Patrik Sjöberg
J. Orsava (M. Hlinka, P. Holík) – 01:531–0
1–102:57 – D. Orlov (V. Tarasenko, D. Sobchenko)
1–206:23 – E. Kuznetsov (A. Burdasov, N. Dvurechensky)
1–308:30 – D. Golubev (V. Tarasenko, A. Panarin)
1–410:48 – V. Tarasenko (D. Orlov, D. Sobchenko)
P. Straka (A. Nestrasil, J. Jeřábek) (PP) – 22:332–4
2–524:28 – G. Berdyukov (M. Kitsyn) (PP)
2–626:28 – D. Sobchenko (V. Tarasenko, D. Orlov) (PP)
2–730:22 – S. Bocharov (A. Panarin)
2–831:00 – M. Kitsyn (E. Kuznetsov)
M. Hlinka (M. Frk) (PP2) – 51:013–8
18 minPenalties36 min
34Shots29

Relegation round

The results from matches between teams from the same group in the preliminary round were carried forward to this round.

Team GP W OTW OTL L GF GA Pts
 Czech Republic 3 3 0 0 0 10 4 9
 Slovakia 3 1 1 0 1 9 6 5
 Norway 3 1 0 0 2 3 8 3
 Germany 3 0 0 1 2 4 8 1

All times local (EST/UTC−5)

January 2, 2011
15:30
Slovakia 5–0
(2–0, 0–0, 3–0)
 NorwayDwyer Arena
Attendance: 1,189
Game reference
Juraj HollýGoaliesLars VoldenReferees:
Germany Stephan Bauer
Sweden Pehr Claesson
R. Pánik (M. Preisinger, A. Jánošík) (PP) – 12:251–0
R. Pánik (D. Bortňák, A. Jánošík) (PP2) – 13:032–0
J. Majdan (R. Pánik, D. Bortňák) – 51:013–0
R. Pánik – 53:294–0
R. Pánik (ENG) – 55:055–0
8 minPenalties18 min
31Shots37
January 2, 2011
19:30
Czech Republic 3–2
(0–0, 1–1, 2–1)
 GermanyDwyer Arena
Attendance: 1,171
Game reference
Filip NovotnýGoaliesPhilipp GrubauerReferees:
Russia Rafail Kadyrov
Slovakia Daniel Konc
0–122:54 – N. Hauner (T. Brandl, M.Ohmann)
M. Hlinka (J. Jeřábek, M. Frk) (PP) – 28:041–1
1–246:21 – M. Möchel (B. Keil)
O. Palát (R. Horák, J. Jeřábek) – 50:442–2
O. Palát (P. Straka) – 59:003–2
4 minPenalties6 min
40Shots31
January 4, 2011
15:30
Germany 1–3
(0–1, 1–0, 0–2)
 NorwayDwyer Arena
Attendance: 1,108
Game reference
Niklas TreutleGoaliesSteffen Kent SobergReferees:
Russia Rafail Kadyrov
Slovakia Daniel Konc
0–101:14 – N. Weberg
T. Kühnhackl (T. Rieder, B. Hüfner) – 22:151–1
1–248:31 – H.K. Hollstedt
1–359:51 – P. Roste Fossen (J. Oppoyen (EN)
30 minPenalties12 min
30Shots14
January 4, 2011
19:30
Czech Republic 5–2
(2–0, 3–2, 0–0)
 SlovakiaDwyer Arena
Attendance: 1,080
Game reference
Filip NovotnýGoaliesJuraj Hollý
Dominik Riečický
Referees:
Finland Antti Boman
Sweden Pehr Claesson
P. Holík (O. Palát, J. Jeřábek) (PP) – 16:221–0
J. Culek (D. Tuma) (PP) – 19:132–0
T. Rachůnek (M. Frk, A. Honejsek) – 20:243–0
A. Nestrasil (J. Orsava) – 20:544–0
4–123:41 – R. Pánik (D. Riečický) (PP)
M. Frk (J. Jeřábek, A. Nestrasil) (PP2) – 34:435–1
5–238:05 – R. Pánik (A. Jánošík) (PP)
8 minPenalties18 min
45Shots21

 Norway and  Germany were relegated to Division I for the 2012 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships.

Final round

Template:6TeamBracket-with 3rd

* Decided in Overtime.

** Decided in Shootout.

Quarterfinals

January 2, 2011
15:30
Canada 4–1
(1–1, 1–0, 2–0)
  SwitzerlandHSBC Arena
Attendance: 14,890
Game reference
Mark VisentinGoaliesBenjamin ConzReferees:
Finland Antti Boman
United States Keith Kaval
0–101:09 – I. Pestoni (S. Bärtschi)
R. Johansen (B. Schenn, R. Ellis) (PP) – 15:061–1
C. Cizikas (C. Ashton, S. Després) – 37:282–1
L. Leblanc (C. Eakin, B. Schenn) – 44:173–1
Z. Kassian (ENG) – 58:014–1
4 minPenalties32 min
50Shots22
January 2, 2011
19:30
Finland 3 – 4 OT
(1–1, 1–0, 1–2)
(OT: 0–1)
 RussiaHSBC Arena
Attendance: 13,471
Game reference
Joni OrtioGoaliesDmitri ShikinReferees:
Canada Matt Kirk
Canada Pat Smith
0–110:10 – U. Urychev (D. Sobchenko, V. Tarasenko)
T. Pulkkinen (I. Pakarinen) – 12:321–1
J. Junttila (M. Salomäki) – 37:262–1
J. Donskoi (T. Pulkkinen, S. Vatanen) (PP) – 42:243–1
3–256:19 – E. Kuznetsov (M. Kitsyn) (PP)
3–358:22 – M. Kitsyn (E. Kuznetsov, S. Kalinin)
3–466:44 – E. Kuznetsov (M. Kitsyn)
10 minPenalties12 min
41Shots34

Semifinals

January 3, 2011
15:30
Sweden 3 – 4 GWS
(0–1, 1–1, 2–1)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 0–1)
 RussiaHSBC Arena
Attendance: 13,435
Game reference
Robin LehnerGoaliesDmitri ShikinReferees:
Germany Georgij Jablukov
Canada Pat Smith
0–106:37 – V. Tarasenko (S. Valuiski)
0–227:09 – D. Golubev (S. Bocharov, A. Panarin)
A. Larsson (R. Rakell, J. Thörnberg) (PP) – 37:591–2
C. Järnkrok (J. Fasth, A. Larsson) – 41:202–2
P. Cehlin (A. Larsson) (PP) – 56:413–2
3–358:33 – S. Kalinin (M. Kitsyn, D. Orlov)
O. Lindberg MISS
S. Wännström MISS
A. Lander MISS
ShootoutMISS V. Tarasenko
GOAL D. Golubev
6 minPenalties8 min
49Shots32
January 3, 2011
19:30
United States 1–4
(0–2, 0–1, 1–1)
 CanadaHSBC Arena
Attendance: 18,690
Game reference
Jack CampbellGoaliesMark VisentinReferees:
Czech Republic Martin Frano
Finland Jari Levonen
0–102:38 – C. Hamilton (C. Eakin)
0–213:54 – Q. Howden (B. Connolly, M. Visentin)
0–325:59 – R. Johansen (PP)
0–446:02 – Z. Kassian (C. De Haan)
C. Brown (J. Morin, N. Leddy) (PP) – 49:371–4
6 minPenalties8 min
23Shots41

5th place playoff

January 4, 2011
19:30
Finland 2–3 GWS
(2–1, 0–1, 0–0)
(OT: 0–0)
(SO: 0–1)
  SwitzerlandHSBC Arena
Attendance: 14,052
Game reference
Joni OrtioGoaliesBenjamin ConzReferees:
Sweden Patrik Sjoberg
Canada Pat Smith
T. Pulkkinen (E. Haula, I. Pakarinen) – 00:221–0
1–102:56 – I. Pestoni
E. Haula (T. Tallberg) (SH) – 18:032–1
2–225:23 – L. Camperchioli (N. Niederreiter, D. Trutmann) (PP)
2–365:00 – Y. Herren (GWG)
24 minPenalties14 min
23Shots31

Bronze medal game

January 5, 2011
15:30
Sweden 2–4
(0–0, 1–1, 1–3)
 United StatesHSBC Arena
Attendance: 16,104
Game reference
Fredrik Petterson-WentzelGoaliesJack CampbellReferees:
Germany Georgij Jablukov
Canada Matt Kirk
O. Lindberg (C. Klingberg, S. Wännström) – 31:581–0
1–133:32 – C. Kreider (C. Brown, J. Merrill) (PP)
1–240:52 – D. Shore (J. Faulk, K. Palmieri)
1–351:40 – N. Bjugstad (N. Leddy, R. Bourque)
J. Fasth (J. Larsson) – 54:182–3
2–458:07 – C. Kreider (K. Palmieri, B. Dumoulin)
12 minPenalties8 min
36Shots44

Gold medal game

January 5, 2011
19:30
Canada 3–5
(2–0, 1–0, 0–5)
 RussiaHSBC Arena
Attendance: 18,690
Game reference
Mark VisentinGoaliesDmitri Shikin
Igor Bobkov
Referees:
Czech Republic Martin Frano
United States Keith Kaval
R. Ellis (B. Schenn, C. de Haan) (PP) – 04:501–0
C. Ashton (L. Leblanc) – 19:462–0
B. Schenn (M. Foligno) – 26:273–0
3–142:33 – A. Panarin (D. Golubev, M. Berezin)
3–242:46 – M. Kitsyn (E. Kuznetsov, S. Kalinin)
3–347:29 – V. Tarasenko (E. Kuznetsov)
3–455:22 – A. Panarin (V. Tarasenko, D. Golubev)
3–558:44 – N. Dvurechensky (E. Kuznetsov)
4 minPenalties8 min
38Shots27

Scoring leaders

Pos Player Country GP G A Pts +/− PIM
1 Brayden Schenn  Canada 7 8 10 18 +10 0
2 Evgeny Kuznetsov  Russia 7 4 7 11 +7 4
2 Vladimir Tarasenko  Russia 7 4 7 11 +8 0
4 Ryan Ellis  Canada 7 3 7 10 +2 2
5 Richard Pánik  Slovakia 6 8 2 10 +1 12
6 Maxim Kitsyn  Russia 7 5 4 9 +7 0
7 Teemu Pulkkinen  Finland 6 3 6 9 +2 6
8 Ryan Johansen  Canada 7 3 6 9 +4 2
9 Dmitri Orlov  Russia 7 1 8 9 +10 6
10 Jakub Jeřábek  Czech Republic 6 1 7 8 +1 4

GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/− = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalties In Minutes

Source:[13]

Goaltending leaders

(minimum 40% team's total ice time)

Pos Player Country TOI GA GAA Sv% SO
1 Jack Campbell  United States 353:35 10 1.70 94.08 0
2 Joni Ortio  Finland 354:52 11 1.86 93.12 1
3 Niklas Treutle  Germany 186:04 7 2.26 93.00 0
4 Mark Visentin  Canada 239:05 8 2.01 92.31 0
5 Dmitri Shikin  Russia 342:11 16 2.81 92.00 0

TOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); SA = Shots Against; GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = Shutouts

Source:[14]
09:50, 6 January 2011 (UTC)

Tournament awards

Most Valuable Player
All-star team
IIHF best player awards

Final standings

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

Division I

The following teams took part in the Division I tournament. Group A was played in Babruysk, Belarus, between December 13 and December 19, 2010.[15] Group B was played in Bled, Slovenia, between December 12 and December 18, 2010.[16]

Group A

Team GP W OTW OTL L GF GA DIF Pts
 Latvia 5 5 0 0 0 21 3 +18 15
 Belarus 5 4 0 0 1 18 9 +9 12
 Great Britain 5 3 0 0 2 12 10 +2 9
 Italy 5 2 0 0 3 13 8 +5 6
 Japan 5 1 0 0 4 9 15 −6 3
 Ukraine 5 0 0 0 5 4 32 −28 0
Promoted to Top Division Relegated to Division II

Group B

Team GP W OTW OTL L GF GA DIF Pts
 Denmark 5 4 0 0 1 35 14 +21 12
 Slovenia 5 4 0 0 1 31 14 +17 12
 Austria 5 3 1 0 1 24 13 +11 11
 Kazakhstan 5 2 0 0 3 19 24 −5 6
 Croatia 5 1 0 1 3 16 35 −19 4
 Lithuania 5 0 0 0 5 10 35 −25 0
Promoted to Top Division Relegated to Division II

Division II

The following teams took part in the Division II tournament. Group A was played in Tallinn, Estonia.[17] Group B was played in Miercurea-Ciuc, Romania, between December 13 and December 19, 2010.[18]

Group A

Team GP W OTW OTL L GF GA DIF Pts
 France 5 5 0 0 0 49 5 +44 15
 Netherlands 5 3 0 1 1 19 16 +3 10
 Spain 5 3 0 0 2 12 16 −4 9
 Belgium 5 1 1 0 3 17 34 −17 5
 Estonia 5 1 0 0 4 16 29 −13 3
 Iceland 5 1 0 0 4 10 23 −13 3
Promoted to Division I Relegated to Division III

Group B

Team GP W OTW OTL L GF GA DIF Pts
 Poland 5 5 0 0 0 61 10 +51 15
 Hungary 5 4 0 0 1 50 16 +34 12
 South Korea 5 3 0 0 2 27 30 −3 9
 Romania 5 2 0 0 3 16 24 −8 6
 Australia 5 1 0 0 4 21 39 −18 3
 China 5 0 0 0 5 10 66 −56 0
Promoted to Division I Relegated to Division III

Division III

2011 IIHF U20 World Championship
Division III
Tournament details
Host country Mexico
CityMexico City
Venue(s)2 (in 1 host city)
Dates9–18 January 2011
Teams7
← 2010
2012 →

The 2011 World Junior Ice Hockey Championship Division III was an international ice hockey tournament organized by the International Ice Hockey Federation, the fourth level of the 2011 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships. It took place in Mexico City, Mexico, from 9 to 18 January 2011.[19] The top two teams in the tournament were promoted to Division II for the 2012 IIHF World Junior Championship.

Participating teams

Team Qualification
 Mexico Hosts; placed 6th in Division II (Group A) last year and were relegated.
 Serbia Placed 6th in Division II (Group B) last year and were relegated.
 North Korea Placed 3rd in Division III last year.
 New Zealand Placed 4th in Division III last year.
 Chinese Taipei Placed 5th in Division III last year.
 Turkey Placed 6th in Division III last year.
 Bulgaria Placed 7th in Division III last year.

Final standings

Pos Team Pld W OTW OTL L GF GA GD Pts Promotion
1  Mexico (H) 6 6 0 0 0 39 9 +30 18 Promoted to the 2012 Division II B
2  Serbia 6 5 0 0 1 56 8 +48 15
3  North Korea 6 4 0 0 2 37 22 +15 12
4  Turkey 6 3 0 0 3 36 33 +3 9
5  New Zealand 6 2 0 0 4 17 43 −26 6
6  Bulgaria 6 0 1 0 5 13 52 −39 2
7  Chinese Taipei 6 0 0 1 5 16 47 −31 1
Source: IIHF
(H) Host

Match results

All times are local (CSTUTC−6).

9 January 2011
13:30
North Korea 12–4
(3–0, 4–2, 5–2)
 TurkeyLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 150
Game reference
9 January 2011
17:00
New Zealand 5–3
(2–1, 0–0, 3–2)
 Chinese TaipeiLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 100
Game reference
9 January 2011
20:30
Mexico 8–0
(1–0, 4–0, 3–0)
 BulgariaZócalo Square
Attendance: 3,000
Game reference
10 January 2011
13:30
Serbia 17–1
(6–0, 5–0, 6–1)
 BulgariaLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 100
Game reference
10 January 2011
17:00
Chinese Taipei 4–6
(3–0, 1–2, 0–4)
 North KoreaLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 200
Game reference
10 January 2011
20:30
Turkey 5–7
(4–3, 1–2, 0–2)
 MexicoLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 750
Game reference
12 January 2011
13:30
New Zealand 5–2
(1–0, 2–1, 2–1)
 BulgariaLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 100
Game reference
12 January 2011
17:00
Serbia 7–1
(3–1, 0–0, 4–0)
 TurkeyLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 200
Game reference
12 January 2011
20:30
Mexico 9–1
(0–1, 4–0, 5–0)
 Chinese TaipeiLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 1,500
Game reference
14 January 2011
13:30
Bulgaria 1–8
(0–4, 1–3, 0–1)
 North KoreaLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 100
Game reference
14 January 2011
17:00
Turkey 9–1
(3–1, 2–0, 4–0)
 New ZealandLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 220
Game reference
14 January 2011
20:30
Chinese Taipei 0–13
(0–3, 0–3, 0–7)
 SerbiaLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 100
Game reference
15 January 2011
13:30
Turkey 9–3
(2–2, 4–0, 3–1)
 BulgariaLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 200
Game reference
15 January 2011
17:00
Serbia 13–2
(7–0, 4–1, 2–1)
 New ZealandLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 600
Game reference
15 January 2011
20:30
Mexico 6–0
(3–0, 0–0, 3–0)
 North KoreaLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 2,500
Game reference
17 January 2011
13:30
North Korea 0–4
(0–0, 0–4, 0–0)
 SerbiaLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 80
Game reference
17 January 2011
17:00
Bulgaria 6–5 GWS
(1–4, 2–0, 2–1, 0–0, 1–0)
 Chinese TaipeiLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 140
Game reference
17 January 2011
20:30
New Zealand 1–5
(1–0, 0–1, 0–4)
 MexicoLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 2,000
Game reference
18 January 2011
13:30
North Korea 11–3
(2–0, 4–2, 5–1)
 New ZealandLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 100
Game reference
18 January 2011
17:00
Chinese Taipei 3–8
(0–2, 0–3, 3–3)
 TurkeyLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 250
Game reference
18 January 2011
20:30
Serbia 2–4
(0–2, 1–0, 1–2)
 MexicoLomas Verdes Rink
Attendance: 3,000
Game reference

Statistics

Top 10 scorers

Pos Player Country GP G A Pts +/− PIM
1 Aleksa Lukovic  Serbia 6 11 10 21 +16 8
2 Serkan Gumus  Turkey 6 11 8 19 +2 26
3 Yusuf Halil  Turkey 6 7 10 17 +3 18
4 Dimitrije Filipovic  Serbia 6 6 9 15 +13 12
5 Viktor Cengeri  Serbia 6 1 12 13 +14 0
6 Christian Smithers  Mexico 6 6 6 12 +10 6
7 Cuneyt Baykan  Turkey 6 3 9 12 +3 6
8 Mihajlo Korac  Serbia 6 6 5 11 +14 2
9 Hector Carrero  Mexico 6 6 4 10 +11 0
10 Andrija Babic  Serbia 6 5 5 10 +8 18

Goaltending leaders

(minimum 40% team's total ice time)

Pos Player Country MINS GA Sv% GAA SO
1 Allan Cukier  Mexico 225:04 3 95.83 0.80 1
2 Arsenije Rankovic  Serbia 282:31 5 95.65 1.06 1
3 Fikri Atali  Turkey 320:00 26 89.43 4.88 0
4 Pak Il  North Korea 235:46 12 87.88 3.05 0
5 Liao Yu-cheng  Chinese Taipei 294:22 32 85.39 6.52 0

References

  1. ^ "Buffalo, NY to host 2011 IIHF World Junior Championship". Archived from the original on 16 December 2008. Retrieved 15 December 2008.
  2. ^ a b "World Juniors to Buffalo?". WGR 550 Sports Radio. 26 June 2008. Archived from the original on 2008-12-03. Retrieved 2008-07-08.
  3. ^ "GF to bid for 2016 World U-18 hockey tourney". Prairie Business. 23 July 2014. Archived from the original on 2015-01-12. Retrieved 2015-01-15.
  4. ^ "Kind words don't lessen world junior disappointment". Winnipeg Free Press. 8 July 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-08. [dead link]
  5. ^ Emke, Dave (24 December 2010). "High Marks: Players, Team Staffers Give Jamestown Rave Reviews". The Post-Journal. Retrieved 26 December 2013.
  6. ^ a b "Swiss finish fifth with shootout win over Finland". tsn.ca. 5 January 2011.
  7. ^ "Russia rallies to stun Canada 5-3 for WJC gold". nhl.com. 5 January 2011.
  8. ^ "RUSSIA DOWNS SWEDEN IN SO TO ADVANCE TO GOLD MEDAL GAME". tsn.ca. 5 January 2011.
  9. ^ "Canada advances to final with convincing 4–1 win against U.S." nhl.com. 5 January 2011.
  10. ^ "U.S. takes Bronze with 4–2 defeat of Sweden". nhl.com. 5 January 2011.
  11. ^ "Russia rallies to stun Canada 5–3 for WJC gold". nhl.com. 5 January 2011.
  12. ^ "Gold medal game delivers record audience on TSN, RDS". tsn.ca. 5 January 2011.
  13. ^ http://stats.iihf.com/Hydra/236/IHM236000_85B_10_0.pdf
  14. ^ http://stats.iihf.com/Hydra/236/IHM236000_85A_10_0.pdf
  15. ^ "2011 IIHF WORLD U20 CHAMPIONSHIP Div. I Group A". iihf.com.
  16. ^ "2011 IIHF WORLD U20 CHAMPIONSHIP Div. I Group B". iihf.com.
  17. ^ "2011 IIHF WORLD U20 CHAMPIONSHIP Div. II Group A". iihf.com.
  18. ^ "2011 IIHF WORLD U20 CHAMPIONSHIP Div. II Group B". iihf.com.
  19. ^ 2011 World Championship Division III statistics, stats.iihf.com

External links

Rosters

References

External links

Preceded by IIHF World U20 Championship
2011
See also: 2011 World Championships
Succeeded by